When you teach a child what a dinosaur is, you have to do a lot more explaining than when you try and teach an adult what a dinosaur is in french - the child isn't just learning a language for those 10 years.
COVID has long lasting effects across your entire body, it impacts your immune and cardiovascular systems for years after you get it.
Risks of heart attack, stroke, etc are increased 2.5x in the year after infection, increasing exponentially with the number of times you have been infected. In fact, the risk of pretty much ANY health problem skyrockets following a COVID infection.
So I would say that if you’re explicitly trying to use Python, a Pi is the way to go.
I will point out you can run micropython on a lot of embedded boards now. I haven't used it, so I don't know if it's actually good or if it's more like those software-gore "here is my python package for building web front ends that is somehow worse than JS" packages you always see on python boards
Not quite the same, but London calling was similarly used for tourism ads among other things
Yes, but if someone trips over the cord there is a 50% chance the wrong side comes unplugged and potentially kills them, hence why they don't make these cords
You gotta donate to planned parenthood for every dollar spent there. It's like buying carbon offsets, but for sandwiches. /s
This seems more like a collection of examples than an actual attempt at a definition.
At its core, AI is a program that takes a given input and returns the output that, during it's training phase, would be expected to minimize it's error (or maximize it's reward).
More, but not way more - they would be licensing window IoT, not a full blown OS, and they wouldn't be paying OTC retail rates for it.
They are saying they will build their upcoming OS on whatever the RC is several months before the OS release date, with the understanding that the Linux kernel will be out of RC by then.
The way they did it before, if the kernel wasn't stable by the feature freeze deadline, they would use the older one, meaning by the time the "cutting edge" (non LTS) ubuntu OS ships, it's using a 2-or-3 releases-ago kernel
I haven't used dual shock so I can't speak to that, but as far as Xbox 1/S controllers, there is no 1st party support - literally all the drivers are from some non-MS affiliated GitHub page. 360 controllers required the xpad driver as well - that isn't 1st party support. Yes they work out of the box with steam if you are using a wired connection, but that's because it's going through steaminput (not 1st party either), and making the controls of the submarine dependent on being launched through steam is even more absurd. Gen 2 series 1/S controllers didn't work via Bluetooth for a long time after they (silently) launched on most LTS Linux OSs due to the kernel missing requisite BLE functionality
@bjorney
@lemmy.ca