On Linux (maybe only certain distros, not sure) the keys are different,
but you can enable a Compose key and enable special character keybinds as well.
For example on Mint:
en–dash is "<compose> <minus> <minus> <period>"
em—dash is "<compose> <minus> <minus> <minus>"
On Linux (maybe only certain distros, not sure) the keys are different, but you can enable a Compose key and enable special character keybinds as well.
For example on Mint en–dash is "<compose> <minus> <minus> <period>" and em—dash is "<compose> <minus> <minus> <minus>"
The post mentions that Reddit calculates a $20M/yr opportunity cost to allowing Apollo to continue running as-is. Apollo is trying to say that $10M one-time is a bargain if Reddit truly believes the users are worth $20M/yr.
I don't think Apollo is using this argument as some sort of leverage. Reading through the post, they seem well aware that they are defenseless. They only have the court of public opinion.
AMD GPUs are not as good as Nvidia's. The other issue that AMD and any other competitor has to face is that much of the new AI software uses CUDA, which as far as I know is limited to Nvidia hardware only.
I've no idea. It's a complex arguement to make, and my few points don't do it justice.
I'm sure there is an optimal balance with legality that minmizes harm and cost. I think we are on the conservative side of that balance. But going for a free-for-all approach is the other extreme side.
I am assuming you're joking, but in the event you are not I can add some commentary here.
If an employer wants employees willing to go the extra mile, then they should offer compensation for those who choose to go the extra mile. This could come in the form of a performance bonus. The people who simply want to do the work they are paid to do and nothing more/less (i.e. the people the media is calling "quiet quitters") will get no additional bonus.
The name "quiet quitting" is disingenuous, as it leads you to think that it means someone is "quitting" when in fact they are just doing what they are paid to do.
Not to make this an ad, but you can actually do better with Redis Enterprise using Redis on flash (part of the flexible and annual plans). It stores hot data in RAM and "warm" data in flash. Here is a good 68s video on the subject: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFQnhPstqLM
It has been awhile since I used the GCP admin, but I am intimately familiar with how awful the Azure UI is... is it really better than GCP? I have never liked how Azure seems to be designed as if you're in a virtual machine or something. The horizontal scrolling is a mess.