only in English is the term Dutch used for the Netherlands
meanwhile in multiple slavic languages pretty much the same word (датчане, данцi, datčáne, ...) refers to Danes.
only in English is the term Dutch used for the Netherlands
meanwhile in multiple slavic languages pretty much the same word (датчане, данцi, datčáne, ...) refers to Danes.
Thou shalt roll back first, even if thou knowest not the root cause
and make everything so worse your angels won't dare ack the alert. Forget not about stateful systems!
I did the math:
Room temperature is often defined as 20 degrees Celsius (although I remember it being 23C in some old textbooks).
20+16.6 is 36.6 which is the normal temperature of a human body.
20+18.6 is 38.6 which is above normal temperature, i.e. fever.
AFAIK ~42.0 degrees is lethal.
Oh, I should've mentioned the location. I'm not talking about the US.
It is widely used by tech people and people from Eastern Europe and Middle East. Effectively everyone I know from Ukraine, Russia, Belarus, Latvia, Turkey and India use it.
In case anyone else thinks the article is made up: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/oct/30/wall-street-morgan-stanley-td-bank-ukraine-israel-hamas-war
Everyone was pissed
as someone who had worked in transparent jurisdictions: everyone should absolutely be pissed about not having this info available publicly always in real time.
Several Dutch people told me that firearms are common on ships under the Dutch flag. Given the number of people owning sea-worthy vessels this might be interesting. Do you know anything about this?
This might be OK depending on your location and the government system in place. Voting for a single person that has to answer all questions sounds like UK or US to me.
Take a look at the Finnish or the Dutch parliament. 7, 8, 16 parties there? Independent (no-party) politicians too. Each one of them is free to represent people with specific needs and only focus on that.
Also keep in mind that some questions like "healthcare" and "welfare" may be less relevant too. It can be pretty much resolved (you can always promise to "increase doctors' wages by 30%!"). More specific issues remain.
MIT Technology Review got an exclusive preview of the research
The article was published 3 days after the arxiv release. How is this an "exclusive preview"?
Successfully tricking existing models by a few crafted samples doesn't seem like a significant achievement. Can someone highlight what exactly is interesting here? Anything that can't be resolved by routine adjustments to loss/evaluation functions?
They don't have to cover everything. Pirate Parties often ally with other parties that cover other specific problems, e.g. Piratenpartij & De Groenen ("Pirate Party" and "The Greens" alliance) in Netherlands, and they work well together.
Reported dead 2024-02-16 11:22utc, exactly the moment you posted your comment.
huh