It would be nice if there was some type of front-end integration that would present the user with a list of heteronyms found in the text and ask for clarification for each one. As well as having lists of common phrases to compare them against. There's really no excuse for an LLM to mispronounced "live feed" or "live here".
My math isn't strong enough to follow the whole article, but my intuition as someone who works in electronics is that when a quantized system interacts with an infinity, the infinity is restricted based on the magnitude of the quantized factor. Electric charge is quantized. Less than one electron cannot pass through a node, therefore an infinite grid of resistors is effectively a finite grid of resistors whose size changes based on how much charge is dumped into the system.
That was my initial thought, but on further reflection it feels wrong. The electron is also a wave, and that wave can spread across the entire grid.
Another interesting aspect is that in an infinite grid, a spontaneous high voltage is going to exist somewhere at all times. It is probably very far away from you, but it's still weird.
That only matters if you're measuring in the time domain and seeing the noise due to individual carriers. Often you just care about averages over some time and space (e.g. the macroscopic flow of water behaves quite different from the speeds of the individual molecules).
Anyone know how this compares to Kokoro? I've found Kokoro very useful for generating audiobook but it almost always pronounces words with paired vowels incorrectly. Daisy becomes die-zee, leave becomes lay-ve, etc.
If you're running Kokoro yourself then it might be worth checking your phonemizer / espeak-ng installs in case they are messing up the phonemes for those words (which are then passed on as inputs to Kokoro itself)
I thought Authenticator would be a more stable place to store and manage my passwords than Chrome. Guess I was wrong. I have hundreds of stored accounts and this is going to be a huge pain to migrate.
There are a lot of mind-bogglingy obvious features Windows lacks. For example, there should be a simple menu that controls what entries show up on the right click menu and in what order.
When I was using Windows many years ago, there used to be Sysinternals Autoruns[1] which could control your context menu entries. I have no idea whether it continues to work under Windows 11 though.
Based on reading a lot of The Old New Thing blog by MS veteran Rayond Chen, I think there's a pretty straightforward reason:
A user could accidentally do it and end up with a 'broken' menu they don't know how to fix, and Windows being 'broken' in that way is Windows' fault from the perspective of such a user.
This sort of thing can and does cause a support burden, which is an expensive tradeoff. So rather than it being a built in capability, a user would need to manipulate the registry or use a third-party program to do it for them.
At least, that's the reasoning that would've come up at MS when adding such a feature was suggested internally (and it certainly has been)
Seems like you know a lot on the subject, so I'll ask you about another missing obvious feature: why's there never been an option to auto-expand the task bar with the number of open windows? It seems unquestionable that if you have three windows open you need a single-row task bar and if you have twelve windows open you need a two-row task bar yet if you want one you have to manually unlock it and then manually expand it.
People do have publicity rights for their image being used in some contexts such as an advertisement. But not sure what rights to your image would even look like in the context of random public photographs or video in general.
The time in the device isn’t independent of the received signal. The device typically has a clock that is much less accurate than the timesignal that gets set based on the gps signal. There aren’t many devices that can rival a gps satellite for time accuracy. A spoofed gps signal would not differ enough in time from a real one to tip you off.
Further, a big part of the working of GPS is that your location is trilaterated from discrepancies in time from the various signals due to time of flight.
The only way to accurately detect a spoofed signal is if you already know your location. (You can infer spoofing using IMUs, or signal analysis, etc… but that is a rare capability at this point)
Reasonably fluid, but not when it comes to heavy web pages with a lot of 3D. I have an S24U I use in DeX for most of my day but when I do have to switch to my ten inch 6800u laptop it absolutely demolishes the DeX experience. There's still a fractional second of lag that Samsung hasn't done away with yet.