Correct me if I’m wrong but my understanding was that ethanol in gasoline was a result laws enacted due to corn farmers (or their state reps) lobbying for subsidies, not any intrinsic part of gasoline production
I can’t seem to find anything about this model reference anywhere besides some random LinkedIn posts and Medium articles. No official announcement or model statistics
Well, it's just the natural extension of the FHS convention to the home directory.
I didn't come up with this idea, though, I think I saw this in a reddit thread and started doing it myself: I like that the directories are visible and follow the usual structure.
Why not push it under a hidden directory? Like ~/.local/etc? If we're reconstructing some of the hierarchy I think it makes sense to group and hide. Isn't the problem that the home folder is getting cluttered?
Why would I hide them? They're not really special and since I'm organising them with modetc they're not cluttered.
For reference, my home looks something like this
~
├── bin binaries and scripts
├── etc configuration files
├── var
│ ├── lib program data
│ └── cache program caches
├── src git repositories
├── img pictures
├── mail email in maildir format
├── note text notes, todo
├── doc documents
└── down downloads
I mean we hide in the first place because configs and we don't want to clutter
But more I was thinking that having ~/bin ~/etc ~/src and so on is just clutter. I use ~/.local/{bin,build,lib} so it's compact and reduces clutter in my home
As far as I can tell, this doesn't change when the actual orbital transfer from earth to mars occurs, it just allows launching outside the normal transfer window and then loitering until the window arrives. In this case, what benefit do they have from launching it now and loitering for a year rather than just launching it a year from now?
Because of the lowered cost of launching on this particular New Glenn. By the time of the next window BO will be able to command more money for a less-risky launch.
'There's so many cliffs around that not jumping off that one barely helps you'.
I meeeeeannn... sure? I know that browser fingerprinting works quite well without, but custom headers are actually a game over in terms of not getting tracked.
And those people who would lose money are the EV manufacturers. AFAIK in the US EV manufacturers are barely making money even with gov’t subsidies (baring Tesla). They can’t charge what would be necessary without subsidies because most people simply wouldn’t want or couldn’t afford such a product at that price point.
I've been looking for a place to talk about this. Seemingly through a potent combination of government subsidies, willingness to embrace the technology, and general STEM competence, China has exploded with quality EV manufacturers. The ICE manufacturers are doomed regardless of what type of car they try to sell.
It makes me wonder about this from a policy perspective. China, more than any other country, has the power to dump products at a net loss to the country for the sake of a long term victory. That's tough to combat.
Hey,
Of course, you can create all this app functionality using Dockutil.
This is the tool that DockFlow uses under the hood. It also supports direct Dock terminal commands for some users for whom Dockutil doesn't work well.
But I think having everything in an easy-to-use UI (including managing spaces, files, and folders in one place) is a much better solution for most users.
This is like running OLLAMA on the terminal or using one of the many UI wrappers out there.
Thank you for the feedback, of course, and I invite you to check DockFlow and see if it gives you a better solution than a bash script
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