Ok that's interesting to hear as someone trying to lose a bit of weight. Can you elaborate or point to some sources that do? My doctor told me to minimize carbs so I'm very curious
Hexarei
The best part is that a good faith answer to the question is surprisingly trans affirming
Yeah the native portrait screens they use cause all kinds of weirdness on Windows for games, but I've solved that by running Bazzite. I only use mine for gaming most of the time, my Win Mini's 7840U is a fantastic chip both for hooking up to a lapdock for software dev and for handheld gaming.
I've only flown a few times but it's been a great way to pass the time
I adore my GPD Win Mini, they're the only ones putting out good pocketable clamshell devices and I adore them for it
A handheld PC manufacturer
Congratulations on inspiring me to do the same forever
Flip it twice and it starts an automation!
No but I don't even need my money back, man. You can just dispose of it for me tbh
I'd like to return one mental image, please
Toilet paper is wood, while the seats are plastic. Wood is a 2.5-ish on the mohs scale, and plastics tend to be too. So they scratch at a 2.5 ~~with deeper grooves at a level 3~~, even on a micro scale. The alternative is to use ceramics for the seat, but the fragility means one rough drop of the seat and it could shatter. Metals are generally no better.
Well, the address one was an example. Smart paste is useful for more than just addresses - Think non-standard data formats where a customer provided janky data and it needs wrangling. Happens often enough and with unique enough data that an LLM is going to be better than a bespoke algo.
The email one though? We absolutely have dedicated forms, but that doesn't stop end users from sending emails to our customer anyway - The email ingestion via LLM is so our customer can just have their front desk folks forward the email in and have it make a best guess to save some time. When the customer is a huge shop that handles thousands of incoming jobs per day, the small value adds here and there add up to quite the savings for them (and thus, value we offer).
Given we run the LLMs on low power machines in-house ... Yeah they're worth it.
Interesting, thanks for the info and resource! I don't actually see another response so I'm assuming they're not federated with programming.dev, but I'll check from another instance later