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DIN is not a government; CEN is an NGO, too.

But yes, for commercial offers, presumption of conformity mean you have to pay for norms to adhere to law. Big fail.

Especially since non-commercial but persistent and public, not "for profit", is still surmised in e.g. warranty laws. (E.g. geschäftsmäßige Nutzung / usage with said two terms, even for F/LOSS)


Yet. 2035: running Doom on rat brains.

Growing Living Rat Neurons To Play... DOOM? | Part 1

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEXefdbQDjw


Thanks! Just yesterday I was thinking it's high time for me to check if there's any progress on the Torrent Nexus, and here we are

Would fit right in with LLMs' recent HN front page predictions.

Having been an eight year old boy, I remember the number one rule of physics:

"Using force is always right. But can I apply enough force"


Relatedly, if force doesn’t help, try more force!

Violence is not the answer.

It is the question.

The answer is 'yes'.


"rating to low by 1.3" for a restaurant rated 5/5.

WTF? One and zero are not probabilities, and 6 out of 5 is not a rating.


Running LLaMA-12 7B on a contact lens with WASM (arxiv.org)

is clearly wrong, it should be

"Llama 12 on smart contacts runs Doom"


Also, color pigments might age differently.

Is the image we see today really what was initially drawn?

E.g. the famous night watch picture, which was larger and brighter.


Ah, this is a Ubiquity product. That explains it.

Why did AVM or Netgear Orbi not get this treatment for "works", though?


AVM is great for single-owner use with sub 20 devices.

Unifi is great for small IT companies providing network services to tens of costumers. Being able to manage everything remotely (and even batch things for all of your customers) is great.


No experience with AVM, but Ubiquiti gear is at least a class above Netgear equipment.

Because Unifi is more focused on the needs of businesses and enthusiasts. AVM and Netgear Orbi are products for the consumer market. So they miss a the advanced features Unifi supports.

Unifi is used by the tech-savvy homeowner that needs PoE for their security cameras and wants to control and configure their network without needing a network engineer.


And also Unifi lets you just buy stuff instead of "contact a sales rep". If I go to Netgear and filter primary port speed to 2.5g, which is hardly an enterprise spec, all 3 options are "contact a rep" which... no thanks. Who on earth wants to contact a sales rep for a 10 port 2.5gb switch?

There is now also TP-Link's Omada line at least which seems like the most comparable alternative.


I tried out Netgear Orbi and I don't know who it's actually for. It tried deploying it at my dad's place, but had to return it because it just doesn't work. Dropped in Ubiquiti gear to replace it and I had the entire network up and running within 15 minutes of applying power. And it's had zero of the issues that I had with Netgear's system.

Just wanted to drop another data point that Linksys is also trash now. So for consumer-targeted gear it seems the options are:

1. Eero - great performance, no web config (only mobile app), cloud dependent, half the features paywalled for monthly subscription (eyeroll)

2. Linksys - confirmed piles of crap, a 6E mesh kit I tried last year performed worse than my 2018 Eeros so why bother. Config is even more limiting than Eero, the web UI is a slow disaster that times out constantly, and the app is terrible and the features are badly designed.

3. Netgear - sucks as parent comment explains

4. TP-Link - reputation is that it's bad but I haven't tried

5. Asus - never tried

6. Google - no doubt they'll kill and brick these at some point

Any others I'm forgetting?


TP-Link Deco line is reasonable. Fairly devoid of advanced features but plenty for probably 95% of the households out there - ie an easy VLAN separation into primary/IoT/guest networks, parental controls, QoS, meshing, etc. Linksys should be immediately reflashed to run DD-WRT.

Small aside, AVM have now formally rebranded as "FRITZ!"

"Google revives JPEG XL" works too, in the English language. Why invent a new word?

Varies by country on earth [citation needed].

Now you can feel twice as broken. That is what new, modern standards deliver. Is this part of XCD #927 or another one, too?

XMPP is 26 years old, Matrix is 11 years old.

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