I would argue with that looking at Argentina. I do see however there is not enough data to be biased against any side, but disruptive changes in management are in my perception more effective on changing the status quo.
Achieving change against current incentives with politically mindful measures I'd say is very time consuming and slow.
In regards to your point I agree that treating public services as companies that can't be running at a loss is been demonstrated to be bad, but there is a fine line between trying to make public services profitable VS trying to make them more efficient.
I had mine for almost a year now. The laptop is nice, although I had problems with the motherboard twice.
Pros:
* super modular, I have 2 usbc and 2 usba usually and the hdmi and ethernet on the backpack for when needed
* it's pretty fast in comparison to my carbon x1 from 2021
Cons:
* the motherboard died twice and they still don't know why. I suspect the charger as it stops charging after a while, something tells me they haven't fully figured out the motherboard completely yet.
* BIOS software is also somewhat lacking still, but this is a well known problem they are hoping to fix with time
* Battery life is not really the best, but again I blame it on the BIOS
* fingerprint reader just works in Linux, and webcam too which is a difference with Carbon x1
I'm looking forward to future improvements and maybe seeing them enter the mobile phone market.
To make it worse, he made clear when the call had happened, and you have:
1) Who was in the call
2) When the call happened
3) A blur instead of a complete black out
I'm not sure I would feel safe reporting stuff to journalists nowadays.
Yes, the Steam version already includes a native Linux binary and we tested it on both the Steam Deck and Ubuntu 22.04. If you run into any trouble, please let us know.
So I was going through my namecheap account and I found out that Invoices are nowhere to be found in Europe. How is it possible for them to still skip this obligation after these many years?
I don't get the complaints in the comments from the link you posted: As a customer my understanding is that it does not matter. You buy their product, if they had to charge VAT but didn't it's their problem and liability, not yours.
I am thinking that, realistically, if they have no presence in the EU/relevant country and are not too big then (1) there is little relevant tax authorities can do and (2) they may be considered small fry, anyway.
Out of doubt, which seems to be spreading around the internet. The LLaMa model weights weren't "leaked" AFAIK but rather explicitly given access to to researchers, isn't it right?
I know the article goes on to speak about something else, but I'm not sure why this claim that the LLaMa model weights were leaked, as in unintendenly made available is being done.
My understanding is that researchers could ask for access to weights, but then also they were leaked so that anyone could get them without asking. There is another layer, where Facebook seems to accept it on some level (I mean they don't have a choice anymore anyway); they put a cheeky comment in the open pull request instead of closing it.
The model weights were only shared by FB to people who applied for research access. Github repos containing links to the model weights have been taken down by FB.
I use elvish[0] and have been using it as my main shell for the last 2 years. I like the focus on datastructures and flows (such as exceptions).
It is mature enough for me, and I have found that the nuance of having non-posix compatibility in some things doesn't annoy me as much as when I hit a problem that is too small to write python and to complex for bash.
Community is great, and I always find the answer to my problems in either the chat or other code samples.