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Listen To the Baz Luhmann song "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)". A lot of it is pretty good advice. I regret not having invested in index funds at that age. I'm very happy I backpacked the earth for 1.5 years as soon as I could afford it. When looking for a job: do the things you enjoy most, aim high and go for it. Do not try to find your calling: try different things and your calling will find you.


This works great from a leadership perspective as well. If anyone is interested, I can recommend the book Turn the Ship Around! by David Marquet about this very subject.


Wouldn't surprise me if the outcome would have been exactly the same if instead of LLM's this was tried with a random selection of human beings :-)


> Seismometers placed on Earth’s moon enable researchers to measure shudders and groans that are mainly caused by meteor impacts, and the squeezing and stretching of its interior by the tidal pull of the Earth.

How would the moon still be squeezed and stretched when it is now tidally locked to Earth?


The Moon isn't fully face locked, there's still residue rocking back and forth, the Earth isn't at all face locked, nor is it gravitationally uniform so there's a small flexing delta G force there as the two move.


> Navigate to http://{YOUR_SERVER_IP}:51821. Log in using the admin password

Over http? Pretty YOLO...


I think it's mostly for intranet setup. Most router still use http for management ui, as it's complicated to setup an working certificate, especially only with ip.


You might be right. There's a link for deployment to Oracle cloud, but that seems to use a different way to login.


I should've stipulated more clearly and will do. Thank you.


http for local networks should be fine, right?


It's okay but not ideal.

Otherwise anyone connected to WiFi can snoop on traffic.

Unfortunately my router, switches, AP and NAS don't support HTTPS either :'(


But if you think people are snooping on your network then you’ve got a larger issue.

But of course, good security practices is never bad and using https whenever you can is always good.


You should always assume someone is snooping on your network.


I should've stipulated more clearly and will do. Thank you.


> Wait, you want to do a gravitational perturbation mission with 5kg, for a body of > 10^18kg? You'd have to do super duper precise measurements to notice anything I don't think so. We would measure the effect of 33 Polyhymnia on the probe, not the other way around. Which would work if it got just in the vicinity of the asteroid. The mass of the probe wouldn't even matter.

You're right of course about the density being a wild guess, probably not worth pursuing because the odds of finding something interesting are just about 0.


If the same receptor can distinguish between 2 distinct tastes I would consider it a different basic taste. In my experience ammonium chloride does not taste sourat all, so this might be the case. The article does not mention that though.



The question not answered: won't I stick out like a sore thumb if only 1 in 10000 people uses this browser?


Stick out to who? Just set the useragent to a default firefox one (assuming its not already set) and you're golden.


I decided to test it out on a website[0] and it does seem that the useragent goes by the Firefox name:

Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; rv:102.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/102.0

On my Firefox:

Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:109.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/110.0

It's interesting to note that the Mullvad browser seems to be based off on Firefox 102.0, which came way back on June 28, 2022:

https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/102.0/releasenotes/

[0]: https://gs.statcounter.com/detect


Firefox 102 is current Extended Support Release (ESR):

https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/102.9.0/releasenotes/


You can see in the "About" window that it's based on Firefox 102.9, which is the latest ESR version. It masks the minor version in the UA string.


That's because it's a fork of the Tor browser, meaning it's based on Firefox ESR, which is currently on version 102.


Extended releases are counted a bit differently, it will jump from 102 to 115.


Did anyone check if the terms and conditions of 365 would allow Microsoft to use content processed by AI for AI training? I mean we trust Microsoft with our data already, but what if it regurgitates our internal company data to other users?


> Copilot LLMs are not trained on your tenant data or your prompts. Within your tenant, our time-tested permissioning model ensures that data won’t leak across user groups. And on an individual level, Copilot presents only data you can access using the same technology that we’ve been using for years to secure customer data.


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