Sodium-based batteries currently have a lower energy density than lithium-based batteries so they are only useful in some applications.
Sodium-based batteries currently have a lower energy density than lithium-based batteries so they are only useful in some applications.
That website is horrible, reads like somebody having a temper tantrum.
Especially since AI is already in Firefox, the offline translation feature uses local NMT models.
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That’s strange, my headphones cost about 300€ and there is no way a smartphone headphone jack can even drive them at a sufficient volume due to their higher impedance.
I would imagine that gets worse on more expensive ones?
I don’t think Windows server is officially supported by Synapse so Docker, WSL or a Linux VM are probably your only chances.
Yes, it’s possible but you either have to host your own server, have to be on a server where the IRC bridge is installed and can be used by anyone or use a service like Beeper that takes care of it for you.
Are we talking about a company?
Element provides hosted and on-premise solutions for companies: https://element.io/
Synapse is the server that’s normally used and can be installed pretty easily: https://matrix-org.github.io/synapse/latest/setup/installation.html
There’s a list of public servers here: https://joinmatrix.org/servers/
But be careful if it’s for a company, public servers might go down.
As frontend you can also use the Element clients or web interface, they are completely free.
Would you say the same thing about a car?
“We know the door might fall off but it has not fallen off yet so we are good.”
The chances of that door hurting someone are low and yet we still replace all of them because it’s the right thing to do.
These processors might fail any minute and you have no way of knowing. There’s people who depend on these for work and systems that are running essential services. Even worse, they might fail silently and corrupt something in the process or cause unecessary debugging effort.
If I were running those processors in a company I would expect Intel to replace every single one of them at their cost, before they fail or show signs of failing.
Those things are supposed to be reliable, not a liability.