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I use row level security in postgres. Then you can set read only permissions.

C3 was quite easy to get running. I have a minimal project to use C3 for ESP32-C3 chips here: https://github.com/abyesilyurt/c3-for-c3


Thresholding requires branching no?


No, you can do that without branching. See https://en.algorithmica.org/hpc/pipelining/branchless/#predi... for example.


As demonstrated in the article, you can compute clamp(x, min, max) with straight-line code.


No, it’s just a math operation and can be applied to any amount of data in parallel.


Building a shell and text editor for esp32.


Do you have any link/demo ? Is it open-source?


What model are you using to create the embeddings?


BAAI/bge-small-en-v1.5 but considering switching this to google's latest gemmaembedding - it's fairly switchable.


your post reads like ai slop


It is. I'm a software engineer, not a copywriter. As long as the message lands, I'm good.


This approach is not possible on iOS. Instead, I built a safari extension to block shorts from the feed https://apps.apple.com/nl/app/shorts-stopper/id6745517488?l=...


Rather hard to sell it here to people who are (mostly) capable to install Tampermonkey and add one line rule.


which sites does this work with?


just youtube



Tsoding recently built coroutines for C from scratch. The concept of coroutines is related to threads, so I bet you’d like the video if you liked the article.

https://youtu.be/sYSP_elDdZw


Are there any other books about the Bell Labs you would recommend?


A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age

In this elegantly written, exhaustively researched biography, Jimmy Soni and Rob Goodman reveal Claude Shannon’s full story for the first time. It’s the story of a small-town Michigan boy whose career stretched from the era of room-sized computers powered by gears and string to the age of Apple. It’s the story of the origins of our digital world in the tunnels of MIT and the “idea factory” of Bell Labs, in the “scientists’ war” with Nazi Germany, and in the work of Shannon’s collaborators and rivals, thinkers like Alan Turing, John von Neumann, Vannevar Bush, and Norbert Wiener.

I also loved this one:

Exploding the Phone: The Untold Story of the Teenagers and Outlaws who Hacked Ma Bell

Exploding the Phone tells this story in full for the first time. It traces the birth of long-distance communication and the telephone, the rise of AT&T’s monopoly, the creation of the sophisticated machines that made it all work, and the discovery of Ma Bell’s Achilles’ heel. Phil Lapsley expertly weaves together the clandestine underground of “phone phreaks” who turned the network into their electronic playground, the mobsters who exploited its flaws to avoid the feds, the explosion of telephone hacking in the counterculture, and the war between the phreaks, the phone company, and the FBI.


Thanks for the mention and honored to be in the same mention as Soni and Goodman's book on Shannon!


UNIX: A History and a Memoir by Kernighan is also good, a lot of the happenings of Bell Labs is interwoven through the narrative.


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