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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/)IL
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436
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2 yr. ago

  • Ok, I understand the officers likely used excessive force and this guy maybe had dementia or something but ...

    Burgess [...] was seen poking a care worker in the stomach with a cutlery knife

    Sorry, but I have a hard time feeling sorry for this old man.

  • It's an extension so it can be deactivated

    Article says:

    [...] then carefully refactor the relevant components of the extension into VS Code core.

    So... maybe you won't be able to deactivate it anymore. Not cool, microsoft (but totally expected).

  • One thing I don't like though, the article says:

    then carefully refactor the relevant components of the extension into VS Code core.

    So ... you won't be able to deactivate it anymore? not cool, it I interpreted it correctly.

  • it is a lot of effort and time invested on a feature no one requested

    At my last job there were several people using copilot very successfully, some even had the paid subscription, and clearly it was very useful to them. I tried it and found it not that good, barely saves me any time and sometimes actively wastes time, but that's me. I won't judge if others want to use it, as long as the code gets reviewed by humans, like during a pull request (and it was, in our case).

    It's just a tool. Just because I don't find it very useful, I shouldn't tell others not to use it.

  • I guess I misunderstood what you meant. I stand by my words though: If a mother, who wanted the child, is now all of a sudden braindead, it makes a lot of sense to try to save the baby. This is of course not the case in the article, because the fetus is not in good conditions and probably dead already, so I agree in this case it makes no sense.

  • Yes, generally if a mother was pregnant and now she's braindead, it makes sense to keep her alive until her child is born, but if you read the article, the fetus suffered complications and is likely braindead as well, so it might be a stillbirth or just suffer and not live for very long, so it's a bit more complicated

  • but is it really unlimited? At my last job, it was "unlimited with manager's approval", which basically means as long as the manager approves you're good to go, no hard limits, but in practice managers wouldn't approve more than 2-4 weeks (10-20 work days) a year, usually.

  • Gmail, outlook web, whatsapp web, slack web ... just some examples of webapps that I use or used in the past that someone might legitimately want notifications from. Maybe you don't use them, or are not required to use them for work, and that's fine.

    The article is specifically talking about android though, and there you'd most likely use an app for those, so I personally never needed them on mobile, but I can see someone else might need them.

  • Hasn't been true for my past two jobs at least (US based), what I do outside of company premises / my own hardware and my own time is mine. They only own what was done on company's dime. Not saying it doesn't happen, but that's not my experience so far, and I'm not sure if would be legal.

  • I literally run deepseek r1 on my laptop via ollama, and many other models, nothing gets sent to anybody. Granted, it's the smaller 7b parameter model, but still plenty good.

    Microsoft could easily host the full model on their infrastructure if they needed it.