Sounds like you should get involved with PTs, they’d be right up your alley. The spirit is alive and well.
Sounds like you should get involved with PTs, they’d be right up your alley. The spirit is alive and well.
I’m almost certain that it is, though the fact that there’s even a shred of doubt says it all.
Abbreviation for New York, the country would be USA.
If you pay for boost, it does not share any info with 3rd parties.
Shout-out for boost
It changes with the season, but lately I have been loving “Boots of Spanish Leather.”
Looks like a joke to me
Sounds like you’re anxious, which will lead to a stressful experience no matter where you’re seated. Airports tend to be large, crowded, confusing, and loud, with people constantly rushing around.
The best way to improve your travel experience is to find techniques that help relax you as much as possible.
If it’s a short haul flight, save yourself some hassle and put the seat selection out of your mind. You can use the time you would be worrying about and changing your seat to improve on ways you self-calm in stressful environments.
If the flight is more than a couple of hours, I’d recommend switching to a window or aisle. The benefit of the aisle seat is you can occasionally stretch your legs in the aisle, and more importantly, you can leave your seat unimpeded. The window gives you something to lean on, as well as cool views, particularly during takeoff and landing. If you’re a nervous flyer that might be a negative.
I find it helpful to remember that just because everyone else is in a rush, you don’t have to be. You don’t have to run to your terminal, you don’t have to rush to the front of the boarding line. You don’t need to be the first on or off the plane. You can get to the airport a tad early, to give yourself time to walk slowly and rest as you need it.
There’s ample staff at just about every airport, if you don’t know where to go or what to do, ask them. Same is true on the plane itself, the flight crew is available to assist you.
Enjoy your trip!
ISPs in the US are notorious for getting public funds for services that they never provide, so I wouldn’t be too concerned about that.
I will archive you!
Since myself and others had no issues with your float needle example, mind sharing what you searched for, and what Google returned?
My cousin’s friend knows a guy if you are interested…
Errrm,
Ma’am*
Sorry you just have a very raspy voice.
You, sir, are a genius
Tomato, tomato translates hilariously poorly in text, I’m dying
I’m not really following you but I think we might be on similar paths. I’m just shooting in absolute darkness so don’t hold much weight to my guess.
What makes transformers brilliant is the attention mechanism. That is brilliant in turn because it’s dynamic, depending on your query (also some other stuff). This allows the transformer to be able to distinguish between bat and bat, the animal and the stick.
You know what I bet they didn’t do in testing or training? A nonsensical query that contains thousands of one word, repeating.
So my guess is simply that this query took the model so far out of its training space that the model weights have no ability to control the output in a reasonable way.
As for why it would output training data and not random nonsense? That’s a weak point in my understanding and I can only say “luck,” which is, of course, a way of saying I have no clue.
I laughed way too hard at this, many thanks.
One of the big advantages of a victorinox is that they’re designed to be essentially maintenance free. As far as I can tell, the intention is that if you leave it in a bag, drawer, car, or just lose it under the couch for a decade, it will be ready to perform when you need it.
Another great benefit is that you can play around with different maintenance routines and find a system that works for you without worrying about corrosion or excessive wear. Try different oils, try it dry, see how it responds.
Clean it with water, compressed air, alcohol, or whatever else you feel like trying. Keep in mind that naturally derived oils will go rancid over time and if you’re too thick, it’ll go sticky.
A similar design philosophy is used with the blade, they are super easy to resharpen. It’s a great blade to learn how to repair and sharpen. It also doesn’t require oiling, but nothing is stopping you from trying it. Just stick to something food-grade so you can use it worry-free on meal prep if you have to.
Lastly, the most important thing you can do to prolong the life of your tool is to learn the limits of the tool set. No matter how well you generally maintain it, using it abusively once will break it.
You’ve got yourself a fine little knife, I hope it serves you well for years to come.
I would absolutely believe it, makes a lot of sense.
The report was issued in 1983, Stalin died in 1953. The Ukrainian famine was around 1933. I suspect whoever made the meme is fully aware of these facts.