

AFAIK the “bourgeoisie” was mostly a phenomenon of the XIX and XX centuries, I don’t think it would be much relevant to the French Revolution, like it isn’t today.
(Although there were parallels then like there are today)
Software Developer from a germanic region in south Brazil.
I may occasionally post about #software, #dotnet, #csharp, #fsharp, #politics, #theology, #christianity
Politically leaning towards #ChristianAnarchism
ora et labora
AFAIK the “bourgeoisie” was mostly a phenomenon of the XIX and XX centuries, I don’t think it would be much relevant to the French Revolution, like it isn’t today.
(Although there were parallels then like there are today)
Parsing user input? Nonsense data coming from an API?
Nile Tilapia.
Also a type of duck we in my region of Brazil call “marreco”, the name in English seems to be Teal or Garganey.
Mastodon clients add ats automatically, but it’s not required, like this comment.
I find it funnier to stealthily cast fury on him.
The numbers actually seem reasonable…
They are “media transformers” and might be useful if limited to it.
Knowledge retrieval certainly not, as “they” know nothing besides how likely one data fragment is to appear near other data fragments.
Brazil is also doing this. My wife is a teacher and said that the kids are much less agitated and anxious this year.
If I time traveled to the same geographical region, considering I’m in South Brazil, if I don’t get immediately killed by some jungle animal or tropical disease, I’d probably end up starting a pandemic among the natives.
It is a nice backpack tho…
Why this controversy now? Tools like StyleGAN could do this for years already.
Little Big Adventure 2 helped me with English.
I don’t think it’s relevant, I can use CLI and terminal just fine and if it’s required to do my job then so be it.
It’s a preference, and I may complain about it on social media, but I know things are how they are and I’m not so hung up on it as to let it affect my work.
Worst case I would take a few minutes between tasks to quickly whip up a GUI helper, but I think that in 10 years I only did it 2 or 3 times.
For CLI programs I agree, but I’ve come across GUI programs for which the official installation instructions were CLI only (like Android Studio).
I’m not GUI-only, I just strongly prefer it. My CV does contain me having years of experience developing GUI programs.
Yes, eventually I learned how, but the vast majority of tutorials on how to install or do anything on Linux jump straight into it.
And as a software developer, a lot of tools I come across don’t have an official non-terminal installation option.
Yes, I eventually managed to learn how to do most stuff without the terminal, but almost all “How to do Whatever on Linux” tutorials immediately jump into it.
I know the terminal is more distro-agnostic, but even the distro-specific tutorials do it.
Unfortunately I’m a software developer…
I can use a CLI, but I’d rather not.
Makes me wonder what they are doing to reach these figures.
Because I can run many models at home and it wouldn’t require me to be pouring bottles of water on my PC, nor it would show on my electricity bill.