Personally I prefer simple software without bugs! This security vulnerability highlights a serious issue with React. It’s a SPA framework, a server side framework, and a functional component library all at the same time. And it’s apparently getting so complex that it’s introducing source code exposures.
I’m not interested in flame wars per se, but I can tell you there are better alternatives, and that the closer you stay towards targeting the browser itself the better, because browser APIs are at least an order of magnitude more secure and performant than equivalent JS operations.
It's good to have a local GPU. That's like your dev environment. Prod is much more expensive in AI programming than in web programming. So you want to make sure everything is working before you push!
This is also true that sleep deprivation can act as shock therapy! But it seems to still indicate that depression can be caused by chronic adenosine dysfunction. So temporary sleep deprivation will put the adenosine system in a state it isn't usually in, and alleviate symptoms.
In my experience, you get a few big winners, but since you have to keep placing new trades (e.g. bets) you eventually blow one and lose most of what you made. This is particularly true with options and futures trades. It's a stupid way to speculate with or without AI help doesn't matter and will never matter.
And it's had scapegoats for just as long! Everything is going according to plan really. It's not the tax scheme, or the zoning, or the construction costs, or the concentration of labor opportunities in London. Don't be daft!
Britain seems interested in actively undoing technological progress for some reason. A deindustrial revolution you might call it!
The builtin JavaScript interpreter is such a devious touch. No one blinks an eye at several MBs of extension data. That’s plenty of room to store arbitrary runtimes in, and then all the default browser runtime protections are pointless.
The runtime protections aren’t pointless. The interpreter makes it difficult to inspect the malicious code during execution, but it doesn’t circumvent any sandboxing of the browser.
He's the leading AI researcher at the 3rd largest company in the world in the middle of an AI boom. He's naturally going to have quite the marketing budget behind him!
I’m not interested in flame wars per se, but I can tell you there are better alternatives, and that the closer you stay towards targeting the browser itself the better, because browser APIs are at least an order of magnitude more secure and performant than equivalent JS operations.
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