The Russo-Ukrainian War has increasingly made the view of drones as weapons a consensus, and it may not be long before we see them regulated like firearms (to be fair, the kinetic energy carried by an FPV drone racing at 200 kph is no less than that of a .50 bullet).
In China, starting from the 1st of next month, the "strictest new regulations" on drones will be implemented immediately. Taking the capital Beijing as an example, after May 1st, the issue is not whether you can apply for a flight permit, but a comprehensive ban on possession. Those entering Beijing from other regions will also undergo strict security checks to detect if they are bringing any in. This is bad news for travelers who bring drones abroad and need to transit through Beijing.
The world is more of a makeshift operation than you can imagine. Don't forget what caused the Cloudflare outage that took down half the internet last year or the React vulnerabilities and all that, lol :p
I hope Zig can stabilize as soon as possible. Copilot's auto-completion cannot even compile a HelloWorld (due to I/O-related changes), which is clearly not a good thing in the AI era. Time is already running out for new languages.
Mathematically, this is based on the assumption of the infinite and the continuous.
However, quantum mechanics tells us that the world should be finite and discrete. Therefore, measuring the coastline of England naturally has nothing to do with limits. Of course, in practice, infinite measurement precision (not to mention the uncertainty principle) is impossible, so obtaining the "accurate" length of England's coastline—at least within the current framework of physics—is impossible, but that is another issue.
The meaning of "coastline" breaks down far before you reach quantum levels. I challenge you to go to the beach and pick a square inch where the "coastline" splits it half and half, this part England, that part the sea.
This is also ignoring the time component, where individual fluctuations in water will change the measurement, tides will as well on a daily and monthly cycle, and as years go by erosion and global climate change will shrink the land and grow the sea.
It seems the Android heavily modified versions on Chinese phones have been doing this for a long time; I recall for Xiaomi it was MIUI 12—5 versions ago.
The scrolling behavior in tmux has always annoyed me. Every time I have to press a shortcut to enter copy/scroll mode, and then exit it again. At the same time, using Ctrl+A to select all is always cumbersome.
In modern TUI editors, scrolling and select-all don’t seem to be issues at all. I can use them almost unconsciously in a way similar to GUI applications—for example, Micro or TUIs from OpenCode. Does anyone know how to solve these problems?
Definitely possible. In January, I tried using Gemini to perform black-box/white-box testing on an existing system in my company (it's quite old). It successfully exploited a hidden SQL injection vulnerability to penetrate the system and extract password hashes (not particularly strong passwords, successfully decrypted on a public website).
In terms of pure skill level, I'd say this is at least the level of a mid-level cybersecurity professional, not even considering the significant efficiency improvement.
DDLC is not a niche game, nor is it a new game. It should have been released 9 years ago, right?
This alone proves that the so-called policy violation is just a pretext.
The game was only 5 months ago released on Android. And no, this is absolutely niche, most people who are gaming on mobile have probably never even heard of this game.
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