Because of the number of potential words in the dictionary, it’s still fairly secure. I would recommend 5 or 6 words though
Because of the number of potential words in the dictionary, it’s still fairly secure. I would recommend 5 or 6 words though
Whisper AI? https://openai.com/research/whisper
It doesn’t have to be.
One of my experiments, an overlay for a game using camera position API to draw a 3d scene over the game, rendering things as if they were in the game (with some limitations) uses electron and three.js
It’s pretty fast, uses about 100-150mb ram, and works pretty well. A similar overlay using same approach but written in C and opengl take ~200+ mb and a c# one 150-250 mb. The c# one has more features overall so it’s not a complete comparison, but then my overlay can do things the other can’t too.
Perfect for when they took your red stapler
I’m just pretty staunch about not paying for a domain name, they add no value whatsoever
Heh, what a tool. Nothing’s stopping him from just using ip addresses, or the reverse that whoever provides the server ip almost guaranteed have set up. But no, he wants a fancy looking one, so it HAS some value or he wouldn’t need one, and a domain require name servers, and people administrating and maintaining it. He just don’t want to pay for that part. And come on, a domain is like 15 dollars a year?
Or machine learning. There’s at least one ML based project that got a headache out of this yesterday.
My experience too. The few times I’ve been stuck and decided to try chatgpt, it’s been completely unhelpful, at best suggesting basic things that I checked within the first 5 minutes of troubleshooting.
That was the best case. Worst case it’d sprout some plausible looking nonsense that took time to check and dismiss.
With the occasional hostile takeover
This gives me MongoDB flashbacks. Postgres, if properly set up, should easily handle thousands of users.
Because in texts, if something like that is written the request is usually granted