That’s such a great read! It sounds like they had so much fun shooting these commercials. Well, except for the almost dying part.
That’s such a great read! It sounds like they had so much fun shooting these commercials. Well, except for the almost dying part.
This struck me too, if you’re relying on instruments that exist in a universe where its constants are changing to measure those constants, then it seems very natural to me that your measurements would not necessarily change.
The constants instruments use to measure other constants might change at the same rate, leaving measurement results constant.
Then again, I’m not a physicist, so I’m nowhere near an expert.
Actually, if you’re interested, gaming on Linux is great nowadays.
Nvidia GPUs are not really well supported, but they work.
However, if you game using Intel integrated graphics or an AMD GPU, the performance is perfect.
On steam I have yet to encounter a game that does not run well using Proton.
I use a modified version of an old hope
True, I think AI has the biggest potential of changing our lives in the near future. I don’t think we are anywhere near generalised AI right now, but even the current LLVMs have amazing capabilities. I think there may be many ways we can apply these AIs that we haven’t thought of yet.
Now here’s to hoping that these AIs won’t be monopolised by corporations but instead stay available to the general public.
About support: I have a Framework laptop. With my initial shipment I received a defective Ethernet expansion port. The failure was difficult to identify, but support was incredibly responsive and helpful. Once it was confirmed the issue was due to a defective Ethernet card (which took some investigative effort), a replacement was shipped immediately.
All this to say that, if you live in a supported country in the EU, I see no reason that people may find their support lacking.