Good advice. It took me two or three attempts to finally get hooked by the game. But it was totally worth it.
rainerloeten
The low WiFi signal in the play store screenshots is stressing me out lol
Interesting to hear! For me, it's usually exploring an idea, that I find interesting, in detail. Usually something that could perhaps happen in the future (i.e. science fiction).
So I would say that Westworld is one of my favorite shows. Severance is also very interesting!
PS: I think you'd like Brooklyn 99.
Idk. I agree that it's a bad practice, but I also don't understand the downvotes. I think in this context it's valid to share your preference whether to update or not. Maybe some people just click dislike because it has lots of dislikes? Who knows :)
I use it for explaining stuff when studying for uni and I do it like this: If I don't understand e.g. a definition, I ask an LLM to explain it, read the original definition again and see if it makes sense.
This is an informal approach, but if the definition is sufficiently complex, false answers are unlikely to lead to an understanding. Not impossible ofc, so always be wary.
For context: I'm studying computer science, so lots of math and theoretical computer science.
But they run locally on the phone, if I'm not completely mistaken. So no use for a server.
Or do they offer this option? I think they explicitly advertise no internet access.
I only know that I was pleasantly surprised how well GNOME ran on a surface device of a friend.
"The other two functions work similarly" noo I wouldn't say that! :D On a very abstract way, maybe. But especially to a beginner, they don't. One just processes it's input a bit (casting) while the other displays text, reads from stdin, etc.
I believe OPs confusion stems exactly from presuming strong similarities between all functions, while only float()
and int()
are similar and input()
being a completely different thing (relatively speaking..)
The only actual good answer.
Open-webui is the best self hosted LLM chat interface IMO. It works seamlessly with Ollama, but also supports other openAI-API compatible APIs AFAIK.
I'm using both in combination with each other and both downloading and using models is super easy. Also integrates well with VSCode extension "Continue", an open source Copilot alternative (setup might require editing the extension's config file).
Explain please. What's the true meaning and what's the intended one?
Edit: had to reset my password via the reset link in the welcome email.
But the Android app is already available. Although I can't log in... Is this because the server is overwhelmed or are Android users indeed blocked? Why would they release the app then?