festus

joined 1 year ago
[–] festus@lemmy.ca 5 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Out of curiosity - what laptop maker is installing Sway by default?

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 months ago

I pay for the Softmaker Office suite, it's pretty good and has Linux native versions.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 months ago

I had a few false starts before, but MS force-updating me to the objectively worse and user-hostile Windows 8 triggered my latest (and successful) switch.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

If I were to play devil's advocate, it would be that capped rent increases is to prevent predatory landlords from increasing rent more than their costs, but that if their costs go up more then they have a way to cover that without losing the property / going bankrupt.

That provision is maybe more acceptable when you're talking about families renting out their basement suite, but I have zero sympathy for investors who took a risk and lost. And even in the case of non-investor landlords, I'm skeptical that it's appropriate to make the tenant shoulder all the increased costs.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 10 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Because they aren't overriding it - the legislation allows for these rent increases in certain circumstances. Not agreeing with the law or the decision, but the arbitrator isn't making up some new power.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 10 points 3 months ago

I switched jobs earlier this year for a 47℅ 'raise' - I'm absolutely loving my new role.

My understanding is that a potential sale of my previous employer fell through because I was basically the brains that developed / maintained the only innovative thing they had done in the past 15 years, and given their lack of investment in anything else there was nothing else of value for the buyer.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 25 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Other way around - the AI is writing a letter "from" the daughter to be sent to the athlete. Still BS though, and I'm sure famous people just love getting spam fan mail where the person couldn't be bothered to draft it themself.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 63 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Maybe the Republicans should do the same thing then and have Trump stop running.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 6 points 3 months ago (1 children)
  • He could be an Arab Israeli
  • He could be ultra-orthodox
  • He could have had a medical exemption
  • He could have received Israeli citizenship later in his adult years after conscription.
  • He may have served but in a role that isn't committing human rights abuses (say working on missle defense)
  • He may have served but his political views have since developed and he's now pro-peace / anti-apartheid.

To generalize and assume that nearly all Israeli men are war criminals is to generalize on the basis of national origin which in most jurisdictions is rightfully assumed to be racist.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 3 points 3 months ago (9 children)

You can't not serve someone because of their country - the hotel doesn't know whether this man is a soldier or not, just that he's Israeli.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 1 points 3 months ago

I think it really strongly depends on what you're programming - I know in some instances Julia's performance can be nearly identical to languages like Rust. I suspect in my case it related to Julia being a garbage collected language, as my algorithm involved creating very large dynamic structures in memory before serializing them, clearing the memory, and building another one. Since Rust has no garbage collector it knew exactly when and what to drop from memory. In my case I had roughly a 10x(!!) speed-up. Funny enough an even earlier version of that algorithm was programmed in Java, and Julia was roughly 10x faster that it, so Julia isn't the worst of the pack.

[–] festus@lemmy.ca 6 points 3 months ago (2 children)

So at my previous employer I developed using Julia a custom ML model which ran, but the performance just wasn't good enough for what I needed despite trying to aggressively optimize. I ended up rewriting in Rust (and calling through R) which ended up being like 10x faster. At my current job I program a mixture of Rust and Python.

If Julia were more peformant then it could potentially be an alternative to Python/R users having to learn Rust - but if you're looking for top performance, some of your codebase is already written in R/Python, and you're already willing to learn another language, then learning something like Rust naturally seems the better choice over Julia.

The one thing I did like about Julia - it took barely anytime at all to build a working prototype.

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