What's wrong with it? It shows the article, with a little banner on top, showing when it was captured. Doesn't mess with scrolling, what's not to like?
didnt the archive owner only start doing this after Patokallio revealed his identity for no good reason. Given the legal liability involved in maintaining that service, there is a threat to what Patokallio is doing so it doesn't seem entirely unsympathetic to do something in retaliation..
Seems like a mistake to rely on an archiving site that runs malware and changes the text of archived pages.
However, there’s also not really anything better out there. The owner being some wily/sketchy Russian is even an advantage in some respects, since they can’t be pressured by copyright law or foreign politics.
Tesla V100 SXM2 16GB is NOT DGX class as the author writes. It's HGX class. The V100 comes in two classes, SXM2 and SXM4, the latter coming with a Max of 80gb on board memory. Typically these are installed 8×A100 80GB SXM4 on an HGX riser, and what that gives you is NVSwitch fabric and 640GB of pooled HBM2e (on package stacked memory /w ~2 TB/s of memory bandwidth). 2u standard rack footprint too.
Aren't most exploits that get used, shared through black markets anyway? So Saying Xcountry-linked hackers, is just saying who ponied up the bitcoin to pay for the attack?
Here I see 9 distinctly purple dots. On a phone screen. The depth of field about a half arms length. Despite what the article says, I see all dots — the one I'm focused upon — as well as all those in peripheral vision as purple. The illusion does not apply to my visual cortex.
I think I may have found the reason in the Maxwell's Spot PDF the article links to. It says:
"The reason why this illusion [Maxwell's Spot] does not tend to be clearly visible with LCDs may be because the peak wavelength of blue in LCDs is on the shorter wavelength side than 460nm."
I don't know what technology my monitor is using, but it's possible it's LCD. Or maybe OLEDs have a similar color shift.
It has been going this way for some time in the US. My own story and experience was very similar to yours. Lost my position as a Sr. Engineer, and while going through that gauntlet of algorithms trying to find a new role, I found a pivot instead. Left the software world of abstractions and optimizations, and brought my skills in physical hardware and machine knowledge to the forefront. Now I work in hard technology. I may be sort of unique in that I had these parallel skillsets and experiences. But it's never too late to learn new skills. What other skills outside of software do you have?
That’s a great pivot and thank you for your comment at least it s open other point of view
I’m mostly focused on software full-stack, backend, automation, and building products.
The problem in my case is that I’m too passionate about it. I was so committed to web and software development that I don’t really have easily transferable skills outside of it.
I’m currently training for some certifications, but I still feel like it’s not the best use of my time.
Find places where you're the most technical person, and you will find your skills have easily transferred.
I just landed a consulting gig installing network hardware. I'm a full stack web dev like yourself. I did a web project for them before they asked about this one.
I'm simply the only technical person they know.
Thankfully, the network requirements are simple enough I could confidently agree.
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