@JohnEdwa
@sopuli.xyzKill, injure and seriously disrupt the communication of Hezbollah, no matter the consequences or civilian casualties. At least this time there was a tiny bit of military assassination type logic to it, and they weren't just blatantly shooting civilians and bombing hospitals as they usually do, but they just had to trigger it during rush hour because of course they did.
That's what happens on mine if I undervolt the APU too much. If you haven't touched those settings, it's possible you lost the silicon lottery, and the only fix is an RMA.
That's the fine.
The original issue was not taking down illegal content in X even though there was a court order and a fine to do so, and withdrawing their legal representation from the country when they were expected to legally represent the company (i.e take responsibility for X breaking the law). Brazil requires companies to have that in order to operate, so X got blocked, and now the fine has been taken for their assets.
Unless your "full resolution and reasonable framerate" are 4k and/or 144fps, you mostly can, games these days just tend to make the sliders go up to 12 so that the Super Ultra WTF Ray Tracing preset runs at like 5 fps unless you have two RTX 4090 cards. A low/mid-range cards need to use low/medium settings, that's all.
And DLSS on Quality preset is a rather wonderful AA implementation, it gets rid of jaggies while making the game run a bit faster.
Yup.
The previous family share was gathering your library of games with the "console" in a single box and giving that entire to your friend. If you want to play anything, you need the box back.
Steam Families is now a common bookshelf, grab a game if it's there and play.
Now we just need a way to use that shelf with the same account so I don't get booted from my steam deck games just because I left something running on my PC and vice versa.
And at rather ridiculously fast paces, as demonstrated by comparing the different versions of Midjourney
The difference in being able to generate realistic humans is even more striking.
The question is where do the current LLMs fit in that kind of a timeline.
So does PLA, both materials are amorphous polymers so they are never "truly" solid unless they are frozen - nor are they really ever molten either. That is why screws and bolts etc always seem to "work" loose on 3d printer parts - they don't, the material just flows away from them.
It's just that at the glass transition temperature is when they go from slowly getting softer the hotter they get to suddenly completely rubbery and floppy.
PETG will not, the glass transition temperature is 80-85C. For PLA it's 55-60C, so those will go floppy if you go at full tilt, though you should dry PLA at 40-50c-ish.