I just bought a new laptop for a family member. It wasn't very expensive, but hardware now is generally amazing. It has Windows 11. My 12 year old laptop running Windows 7 is faster for most tasks, despite far inferior hardware. Plus search actually works in 7, it's better organized, it doesn't come with a ton of junk you need to disable or remove (good god the default start menu on 10 is a mess), and it doesn't look like they designed the UI over the weekend. I kept waiting for the typical MS move of fixing the dumb crap they added, but with 11 it's clear that they're doubling down.
Kethal
I don't know that it's technically harmonization, but sometimes when wolves howl at the same time, they will each choose a different pitch. Presumably it's so the group sounds like it has as many individuals as possible.
That's a very strange title given that MS's CEO said that "out of date" meant "not Microsoft".
Fromt the article: On July 24, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella emailed Bastian as well, according to the letter.
“In fact, it is rapidly becoming apparent that Delta likely refused Microsoft’s help because the IT system it was most having trouble restoring—its crew-tracking and scheduling system—was being serviced by other technology providers, such as IBM, because it runs on those providers’ systems, and not Microsoft Windows or Azure,” the letter said.
There is something called the Power Delivery protocol for use with USB C. If your charger and device both support USB C PD, then everything is fine. The wattage of the charger will limit how fast it can charge, but the PD protocol sorts out the correct voltage. Most laptops, tablets and phones support PD now. You can also buy adapters to go from USB C PD to whatever connector your old laptops use (although watch out for current limits so you don't fry the adapter). I use this charger for everything. https://nekteck.com/products/nekteck-65w-usb-c-charger-gan-ii-pd-3-0pps-fast-charger
On my PD laptop, it complains that it's a "slow charger" because it wants 100 W or something absurd, but 65 is fine. On my old Lenovo, I have an adapter and the adapter itself doesn't support high current, so I can't reasonably use the laptop while charging, but I can charge it while it's off or asleep. I usually use the OEM chargers for those, but for travel it's nice to bring less. For everything else it's perfect.
For those that don't know, you can download the latest APK directly. It takes a while for new versions to make it to repositories and this lets you get it as soon as it's ready.
Edit: someone pointed out that NewPipe hosts their own F-droid repository, so you can add that to F-droid to get faster updates more conveniently.
Seeing your comment I wondered how someone publishing in Nature could have possibly left out the use of statistics for prediction. That would be a wild oversight that only someone with little knowledge of the topic would make, and surely not something that the editors of Nature would miss. Upon clicking the link I see that they mentioned it in the very first sentence and apparently ignore it if someone happens to call the prediction model a machine learning model. Using statistical models for prediction has been used since the start of the field, and renaming things that have been used for decades as "machine learning" doesn't suddenly make them not statistics.
Artificial neural networks are statistical models, with numerous statistical approaches associated with their use, development and interpretation.
"If parameters aren’t neatly interpretable then it’s bad statistics."
Haha, keep going guys. You obviously know a lot about statistics.
"such as neatly interpretable parameters"
Hahaha, hahahahahaha.
Hahahahaha.
Hahaha. People are great.
I used a Logitech Master MX for years, and when that finally broke I got a Master MX 3S. I don't know anything about gaming mice, but I know this isn't one. I only use it for office work, and for that I think it's good. It's comfortable for me. It charges by USB C, and the battery lasts a long time - I'd guess at least a month of daily use. It can use a USB radio transmitter or Bluetooth. I avoid Bluetooth whenever possible, so I don't use that mode, but I assume it works as well as an other Bluetooth device. I like the continuous scrolling mode on the wheel, but you can change it to click.
I have an attic that gets direct sun until the afternoon. It gets quite hot. I had easy access to the rafters so I used radiant barrier, and the difference is very big. As you're putting it up you can tell that it's blocking the heat standing in an a covered vs uncovered area. In subsequent days when it was all up it was obviously cooler. It's still hot but not unbearable.
Radiant barrier is more expensive and fiberglass probably would have worked just as well in this situation, but I didn't know enough about air flow in that space to tell whether fiberglass would impede anything,so I used radiant barrier and left a gap at the bottoms and tops. It is very easy to install. Fiberglass wouldn't be too hard either, but the barrier is daed simple and there's less volume to move around.
In general, my experience say it's going to help, and whether you do fiberglass or radiant barrier is up to you.
I used Firefox when it first came out. Google and Mozzila got into a hot race to make the best browser and they both did well. Somehow I ended up using Chrome a lot more even though I thought that by the time the race ended they were pretty even. Both were very fast and had great plugin libraries. Chrome looked nicer out of the box, but Firefox is highly customizable. Since the end of that race, Chrome has gotten worse and Firefox is about the same. I've switched back fully to Firefox, and the only thing I miss is the "Piss off publisher frames" plugin, that I haven't found a replacement for. It's a nice browser.