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Hey AI, I'm looking for a Halloween costume for $100. I need a period appropriate wig, ratty looking pants, an 1800s style blouse, a tricorne hat, and an eye patch. Show me pics of your choices, ensure the price is within budget, then buy it and have it shipped to arrive to me by October 15th.

Exactly!!!

Cursor is built on VSCode.

I took a hybrid approach -- Unifi for everything except the firewall, and a Firewalla for that. I'm overall quite happy with it, although you won't get a single pane of glass for management.

This. I don't use their gateways/ security devices anymore. I run ONSense at every edge which allows me to so some really nice things with respect to remote access for non-home sites.

Try Kagi. You can filter out the shit sites. It's great!

The nice thing is Chopin is only $20 these days, too. There was a massive price drop a few years back that has fortunately stuck.

I'm not advocating to use limited release bourbons, but when 90% of your drink is the base spirit, you'll get a lot of value out of using a traditional top shelf bourbon vs well like Jim. Try a $40 bottle like Eagle Rare or Angel's Envy. There's not much syrup in a good old fashioned -- go with 2oz bourbon, a teaspoon of simple or good maple syrup, and a couple dashes of Angostura. Maybe a dash of black walnut bitters, too. The higher quality whiskey should be apparent.

There's the self-hosted Atlassian Data Center product.

https://www.atlassian.com/enterprise/data-center

They also offer Government Cloud.

https://www.atlassian.com/government


You'll pay through your nose for a Data Center license though, and it doesn't change the fact that Jira is a mess so slow that SAP can appear fast in comparison.


This is correct. Once upon a time, I worked for a company doing this type of disposal. They had 18 wheelers full of equipment show up a couple of times per week. Drives were pulled and put in a pile to be shredded. Everything else was tested and either restored to working order and sold in bulk to organizations in need of cheaper computers, parted out on eBay, or scrapped.


Everything else was tested and either restored to working order and sold in bulk to organizations in need of cheaper computers, parted out on eBay, or scrapped.

Happy to say that my company shreds its old hard drives, then puts new ones in the old laptops and desktops and spruces them up for reuse.

We team up with a local organization to give them to poor children and families each Christmas. IT always sends around a bunch of photos afterward of kids who don't always know where they'll sleep from night to night clinging to a used computer like it's a life ring and they're in the middle of the ocean. I've been told that for some of them, it's the only present they'll receive the entire year.

We don't qualify for a tax break or any other renumeration for this. We do it because it's a nice thing to do.

(I have no idea what happens to servers. Not my department.)


I've seen the innards of data centers but not what happens afterwards...

What happens with the shredded material? Is it recycled? Sent to heavy industries?


I believe the place I worked at sold it as scrap metal.


That's old patched spyware. I'm talking about something entirely different. No device install needed.


> The new Foundation Models framework gives access to developers to start creating their own reliable, production-quality generative AI features with the approximately 3B parameter on-device language model. The ∼3B language foundation model at the core of Apple Intelligence excels at a diverse range of text tasks like summarization, entity extraction, text understanding, refinement, short dialog, generating creative content, and more. While we have specialized our on-device model for these tasks, it is not designed to be a chatbot for general world knowledge. We encourage app developers to use this framework to design helpful features tailored to their apps


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