Pop!_OS also has a built-in tiling window feature called "Automatic Window Tiling." It's integrated into the default desktop environment rather than being a separate tiling window manager like dwm. Nice to have something like dwm but without any fiddling.
Yup, I strongly agree with you too. Infact In fact I mentioned that in my interview for the Tesla Autopilot team lol I guess that’s why they didn’t move me forward in the process.
I’ve been a proud paid user for years. The developer even accepted and swiftly implemented my feature request several years ago to support downvotes! Best app purchase I’ve ever made.
Using Google site search is a great way! For example - site:lever.co “Software Engineer, Machine Learning” OR “Machine Learning Engineer”. This is helped me search for a lot of jobs that weren’t advertised.
You can do this similarly for greenhouse.io, ashbyhq.com, myworkdayjobs.com, breezy.hr, workable.com, dover.io, ats.rippling.com, icims.com and other popular ATS websites.
How about governments pass a law that requires all AI research & engineering efforts to provide all the data that they use, and all technical details must be open access and any AI stuff cannot be patented. Does that solve the democratisation issue?
No. Because the vast majority of the data used was not theirs to provide. If people, and especially organizations, found their data in that data release the courts would make anyone using the model pay the appropriate licensing fees. So everyone now owns the model and you have to pay checks to god knows how many people if you use that model.
Basically what you’re suggesting is that we admit to stealing data at scale. It would kill model production, because no one would be sure of the provenance of their training data. In all honesty, we can’t even be sure right now.
There's next to no chance of that happening though.
It'd be like asking if a law was passed making all of the companies on the S&P 500 co-ops owned equally by all Americans would solve the democratization issue.
I think most Wine users are on Linux. If I remember correctly, Wine was actually mostly broken on macOS until Wine 9.0 last year, because it required 32bit support, which macOS got rid of in 2019. Plus, BSD usage is very far behind Linux.