We do support Canada!
We'd love for you to join as the 28th EU state!
Wait, what do you mean "We are good just the way we are, sorry"? What if we gave you Greenland? (you can have the Suez canal too)
We do support Canada!
We'd love for you to join as the 28th EU state!
Wait, what do you mean "We are good just the way we are, sorry"? What if we gave you Greenland? (you can have the Suez canal too)
Come on, they most probably had zero choice in the matter... yes, they could have resigned in protest (and in a sense they should have), but we can't require that people be heroes
Can public authorities in the US kill people without consequence as long as they issued a warning? Like the "freeze or I'll shoot" from the movies? (asking from the other side of the Atlantic)
For those kind of issues I'd recommend snapshots instead of backups
Syncthing or unison might be what you want
Your system will appeal to the intersection between people who like gambling and people who like donating to charities.
Even among them, I don't see why anyone would prefer putting 100$ in your web3 thingie instead of just donating 50$, gambling with 45$, and buying a beer with the 5$ they would lose to you... well, there are a lot of ~~stupid~~ peculiar people (especially among crypto bros), so you might actually be ok.
About the implementation, the 50% to charities should be transferred automatically... what's the point of a smart contract if people must trust you to "check the total donations and create a donation on The Giving Block"?
PS:
IDK about the US, but where I live gambling is regulated very strictly: make sure to double check with a lawyer before getting into trouble.
2 more cents :)
I've been using syncthing for a while now, on different devices, and the only unreliability I've run into is with android killing syncthing to save battery life, which is kinda hilarious, considering all the vendor- and google-provided crap they happily waste battery on (I don't use it, but for what I've heard iOS is even worse in this regard).
Specifically, I have a samsung tablet where, no matter how much I tinkered with system settings, synchthing would only run if I manually launched the app or while the tablet was charging (BTW I still use that same tablet, but it now runs LineageOS and syncthing works flawlessly).
All this is to say, you should probably look into system settings and research ways to convince your OS to do what it's supposed to rather than tinkering with syncthing itself.
I don't see the ethics implications of sharing that? What would happen if you did disclose your discoveries/techniques?
I don't know much about LLMs, but doesn't removing these safeguards just make the model as a whole less useful?
I fear it was nothing that entertaining: it was just my "normal" dark panel at the top of the screen and a second "default" white one at the bottom (this last one partially covered the windows I had open). I didn't try triggering notifications or otherwise causing some kind of mayhem.
TLDR:
What the author baptizes "do-nothing scripts" are interactive scripts that print out the steps of some procedure one by one and wait for you to confirm each step (eg. "1. do this. press enter when done" "2. do something else. press enter when done" and so forth).
PS:
@OP (if you are the author)
I HATE those sites where popups come up when you are halfway reading something.
What's the idea behind it, besides annoying your users as much as possible?