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Posts
6
Comments
44
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • This seems like very standard ML. I'm not surprised it works, but also it likely takes a huge amount of training data (i.e. print samples) to recognize a specific machine.

    I've done stuff like this. For instance I took a pre-trained model that could identify animals and used reinforcement learning to feed it thousands of annotated images of my cats. After this fine-tuning it could reliably tell the difference between them. Useful? Yes. Neat? Yes. But it's not like it can identify a cat it's never been trained on.

    So it's interesting and useful, but not as impressive or useful as the article makes it seem.

    Also I'm sure something as simple as changing a nozzle or even what slicer is used would completely throw it off.

  • I don't think this is that unpopular. But it's probably better to be radically honest with yourself. Notice and accept your flaws, yes, but also notice and accept your value and strengths. And if some of your flaws are reasonable to put some work into then you may wish to choose to do that. For example - I'm trying to be more kind this month.

  • Ironically AI would probably work ok here whereas excel is using a human-designed pattern matching heuristic that apparently either has a bug or didn't take into account your locale properly. I say that as someone with a relatively negative opinion of ai

    This is a task ai would do well at whereas most of the Excel workflow it would not.

  • It's actually because January is also misspelled. Or possibly because Excel's language/region isn't set up right (I see your month abbreviations aren't us-eng... If excel is in us-eng it likely isn't going to identify them properly.

  • Not what you're asking but since it's been covered well:

    Buy your own cable modem and put your own firewall behind it. Not only will this save you money in the long run, you'll also have no issues with things like port forwarding. I use Comcast/Xfinity with a docsis3.1 cable modem + a decent firewall and it's a good way to go.

  • I've been trying to move away from email as a document server.

    Anything that's important / I might want to reference later gets exported to a secure paperless-ngx instance where it's neatly categorized and easily searched. I then delete it from my inbox.

  • I love the listicles feature. Not because I want to actually look at those results but because they're all stripped out of the main search. Doing product research is so much better without all those low-quality "top whatever 2023" lists that take up the first 3 pages of google lol

  • There are a lot of options: Bitcoin & Bitcoin lightning via opennode + Paypal, Venmo, iDeal, giropay, & stripe.

    Personally I converted some XMR to BTC then paid with that (using a single-use wallet)

  • By default just did a video (piped link) on this and I 100% agree with him. The killer feature is simplelogin. Being able to use a different alias email for every single account I use is absolutely amazing.

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    what are you all doing for secure DMS?

    Showerthoughts @lemmy.world

    The prevalence of touchscreens has probably resulted in a decrease in average fingernail length

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Dedicated NAS or Nextcloud server for home lab?

    You Should Know @lemmy.world

    YSK: name-based jokes are the lowest form of comedy

    Android @lemmy.world

    What's your favorite alternate launcher?

    3DPrinting @lemmy.world

    Designed & printed a working gear pump (edit: added video & more info)