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Oh that's why. I didn't connect the dots until I see your message. I had like 5 vscode open and all of them were spamming GitHub PR extension requiring login alert at me.

I actually laughed out loud in a restaurant.

I don't get it. How does this help with anything? You pull in a dependency to use it, right?

Well pulling some code is different than running a script on your machine

Frequency of actions matter, especially for security changes. If we are talking about git, I agree. If we are talking about npm, I bet 95%+ times people install packages in order to use them, not just to admire the code.

Someone else in this thread mentioned that npm can be used to manage pure front end libraries, which is a fair point.


People are so different. When I was in college, if I had an unsolved problem, I could not fall asleep.


They should rewrite it in rust again to get another 3x performance increase /s


There are explicit residual connections in a transformer block. Look up "residual connections" in Google images and you will see.


Thanks for the explanation. Honestly, your explanation is better than the entire video. - I watched it in full and got really confused. I completely missed the part where he said the light is pulsing at 30kHZ and was really puzzled at how he is able to move the mirror so fast to cover the entire scene.


FWIW he explains it better in his earlier video about the original setup. He might be assuming people have seen that.


Huh. I watched a lot, but not all, of the video, and I thought he made it clear early on that he was stitching together 1px videos & repeating the event for each pixel (about a million times for that 720p result)


Does using a constraint solver actually solve the question under the time ... constraints?

If not, how can you claim you have solved the problem?


Where do you even get the $3,000 standing desk? I am don't even compare prices and I got mine from Amazon for $200-$300. Sure the quality might not be the best but I just can't see there are people buying $3000 standing desks.


This desk (used to?) fit the budget, for example: https://www.architonic.com/en/p/holmris-b8-milk-classic-1070...

Essentially, you pay a lot for fancy design.


Early in the pandemic I bought a decent motorized standing desk for $520. It's nice, but I could very easily imagine a desk that costs 6x that. I would never buy that desk, but some people go for that sort of thing.


> And as someone who's into spy stories, I know that a big part of tradecraft is of formulating your questions in a way that divulges the least about your actual intentions and current information.

Not necessarily disagreeing with you, but if everyone started doing this, we will be in XY problem city.


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