Only if its js initiates downloads (even if just injecting other js), in which case, I guess yes??? Or does that fall onto the browser??? Sounds simple to figure out. Maybe everybody will abandon the term webapp now.
if (user is null) is leaving me way up in my feelings. Ambiguous value error: 'too true' is not an approved response. Please consult your legislator and try again.
"Do not write any code ..." If you are using LLMs for highly restricted work, it is rather trivial to keep them in check enough to receive useful responses.
I really don't understand what is his usage pattern would have triggered that obviously automated ban. Can somebody let me know what they might think is adversarial enough to be considered 'hacking' or similar by a bot?
Google is dealing with a wave of abuse over its Antigravity IDE, with 'account switching' tools designed to use a ton (20+) of free or pro accounts, giving the user essentially unlimited usage. I'm guessing they've deployed some rather aggressive countermeasures to stop this, including banning clients that seem to be accessing "private" APIs outside of a Google product.
I can get multiple sets of footnotes (critical + content notes) reliably recognized and categorized using gemini-3-flash-preview. I took 15-20 hours to iterate on my prompt for a specific format. Otherwise it would not produce good enough results. It was a slow process because results from batch did not mirror what I was getting from the chat mode, and you have to wait for batch results while analyzing the last set. There was also a bit of debugging of the batch protocol going on at the same time. Flash is also surprisingly affordable for the results I am getting, 4-5x less than I had anticipated. I gave up on gemini-3-pro pretty quickly because it overthinks and messes things up.
The best leader board I have used is ocrarena.ai. I agree it is not detailed enough. I wish people could rate what part of the ocr went well or bad (layout, text recognition, etc). However, my more specific results using custom prompts and my own images on their playground page are relatively closely aligned with the rankings as others have voted.
If you were in the market for an resistive electric heat pump, you likely had the service for it already. A heat pump version will almost always require less power.
My bad, read too quickly. I was thinking of the forced change over from gas water heaters, which is already happening in the California Bay Area and will only expand.
If you currently have an electric resistive water heater, a heat pump water heater with the same heating capacity will use 3-4x less power, which means you can use a much smaller circuit.
A 6kW 240V EWH uses 25A, it’ll need #8 wire and a 35A or 40A breaker.
An equivalent HPHW would use 1.5kW at 240V, or 6.25A. You can use #14s and a 15A breaker.
This is why I won't use random distros, even if they have better features. It's just one more point of failure, one more point of unnecessary trust. I would rather fight to deal with specific problems with specific apps on one of the handful of core distros with long histories.
Lots of cool stuff that I happily use, but the bar to installing something that gets to see my password (OS, terminal, input handler, etc) is very high.
Not a popular take, but I'd rather run something from Valve or Google for the same reason. I trust there to be more vetting if a corporation is putting its reputation on the product than a toy I found on GitHub.
It's a bit of a myth that open source leads to more eyes on the software. Most people just install it and trust that somebody else did the audit.
Something with a vibrant community of maintainers? Maybe.
Something that's too big to personally audit but too small for that community? I'll pass.
The problem isn't the open source (in fact, that's better). The problem is downloading random shit from the internet, and the biased assumption that open-source == trustworthy.
exactly. I remember there was a case where louis rossman covered a repair tool that was hacking its customers if they did something the developer didnt like.
At least with open source you have a chance to prevent this. With proprietary its pure trust.
I agree, there are companies I'd trust but most software isn't made by Valve and Google. There are plenty of developers also not auditing their dependencies.
The most surprising thing on this page for me was:
> The areas of least atmospheric humidity ... a large area of ‘dry’ atmosphere also covers part of the South Atlantic Ocean (centre of image).
This area is not that far south as to basically indicate the antarctic, and it is warm season in the southern hemisphere. I did not even think it would be possible to have a larger area of low humidity over a massive ocean like that.
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