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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)GO
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2 yr. ago

  • My wife and I ended up having a girl, but the names we were thinking of if we had a boy were Apollo or Layton. Those probably don't need your criteria, but just throwing it out there!

  • Yeah, when I worked for an energy company, their stance was: why wouldn't we build as much renewable energy as we can? It's cheaper than power plants and basically just sits there making them money with minimal upkeep

  • I think the major difference that determines copywrightability is the amount of control the artist has on the outcome. If a photographer doesn't like the composition of a photo, there's a variety of things they can do to directly impact the photo (camera positioning/settings, moving the subjects, changing lighting, etc.), before it's even captured by the camera. If someone is generating a picture with AI and they don't like the composition of the image, there's nothing they can do directly impact what the output will be.

    If you want a picture of an apple, where the apple is placed precisely at a certain spot in frame, a photographer can easily accomplish this, but someone using AI will have to generate the image over and over, hoping that the algorithm decides to eventually place the apple exactly in the desired spot

  • That reminds me of this great place I once went to that was literally just a farm house that was repurposed into a restaurant, in the middle of nowhere on a dirt road and surrounded by farmland. It wasn't cheap but also not outrageous, and the salads were amazing.

    I also just remembered this Hungarian restaurant. Can't get any more homey than some ukranian grandma's house

  • You can get that same experience with coffee for much cheaper, but it does require a little effort. You just need to find a good coffee roaster near you or online where you can get freshly roasted specialty coffee(arabica, not robusta; and from a single farm, not a blend), instead of the stuff at grocery stores that's been sitting for months. It might cost $15-$20 a bag, but that's still less than a dollar per cup! If you want the absolute best coffee, then grinding the beans yourself and using something like an aeropress or pourover brewer is ideal, but you can still get great coffee just by buying locally roasted beans from a nearby shop, letting them grind the beans for you, then brewing with a regular old coffee machine

  • Honestly, unless you're getting headphones that require a decent amount of power, you should be good with Apple's USB C DAC that they sell for around $8. If you have a limited budget, it's better to put as much towards the actual headphones as possible, you're going to get a lot better sound out of $100 headphones through a $10 DAC than you would with $50 headphones through a $50 DAC

  • It's so blatant how gen ed classes are used to get every last cent out of students. Like, I understand the reasoning that some students lack general skills they'll need for their jobs (e.g. engineering students having terrible English skills, which will be needed for presentations/reports), but that's not an excuse to require every student to take those classes no matter what. If they really only cared that students were proficient in those subjects, there would be the option to test out, but that's never a possibility. Most big universities near me also refuse to give credit for AP/IB classes, and don't even allow credits to transfer from other colleges for everything but the most base-level courses.

    I can think of about one class per semester (so almost a quarter of my classes) that was pure filler, where I only showed up for tests/presentations, and that I could have tested out of with maybe a week of effort, but that wasn't allowed. In one case, I managed to skip the first semester of a subject and take the second course because they forgot to list the first one as a prerequisite. The scheduling counselor found out after I had already passed the more advanced course and was pissed. They made me take a replacement course even though I was 30 credits over the graduation requirement and had clearly already filled the knowledge requirement for that subject. You get one guess as to why that was 🤔

  • Based on the article, it seems more like the seller conspired with FTX, a company based around cryptocurrency, to make a huge sale far above the "expected auction price". The legitimate complaints about this are that the buyer wasn't disclosed as being FTX, and that both the buyer and seller both stood to gain from the sale, as it gave an illusion of a market where someone could make profit, and not just a scam

  • If your grades are good and you enjoy your major, could I suggest becoming a tutor/teaching assistant for a class or professor you liked? It would give you a way to interact with people in your major that might even be in your other classes (whether that's other TAs or the students you're teaching), you'd get something for your resume, a professor to use as a job reference, and you should even get paid!

  • This video even shows a method using a wok that's really similar to kenji's last experiment, where he cooks the pasta with a small amount of water and just uses the remaining starchy water to immediately make a sauce. Pretty smart!

  • Software support, basically ASUS doesn't have a great track record when it comes to updating phones to the newest versions of Android (although they might be getting better at this). I would only expect 1 or 2 Android version updates if I were buying a zenfone (and probably to get those significantly later than Google and Samsung phones), and it would be a good idea to double check on how long they're committing to security updates for the phone you're eying