This principle is also highly relevant in safety critical systems for using redundant sensors. Just adding a second sensor is often not enough. Because if they disagree, which one do you trust.
I'm having trouble with this one due to a lack of experience, but if there is no consensus between the two parties, my assumption would be that you trust neither and ask again. Why is that not the case in a split-brain scenario here? Do you /have/ to make an immediate decision?
You could see that as a lack of detail of the problem as posed. Alternatively it's a breakdown when applying it as an analogy.
Time critical scenarios are one possibility.
In a safety critical scenario intermittent sensor failure might be possible but keep in mind that consistent failure is too.
A jury scenario is presumably one of consistent failure. There's no reason to expect that an intentional liar would change his answer upon being asked again.
Looking forward to the early bird launch.
JMAP support from an email provider (other than fastmail) is great.
Additionally, this seems like a good way to fund thunderbird apart from donations, while supporting open source email.
Another fun thing are these stable diffusion/controlnet combinations which create QR codes that at the same are AI generated art. e.g. qrdiffusion or qrbtf
You're barking up the wrong tree. Nobody's manufacturing power-of-ten sized DRAM chips for NVIDIA; the amount of memory physically present has to be 128GiB. If `free` isn't reporting that much usable capacity, you need to dig into the kernel logs to see how much is being reserved by the firmware and kernel and drivers. (If there was more memory missing, it could plausibly be due to in-band ECC, but that doesn't seem to be an option for DGX Spark.)
I found it to be the best resource to understand the material. That's certainly a good reference to delve deeper into the intuitions given by OP (it's about 5 hours of lectures, plus exercises).
I feel like for SSH certs to expand beyond large companies, there's the need for an open-source service which does the issuing of short-lived certs after a user authenticates.
I know smallstep, but their offer feels open-core/freemium.
Hey totally agree with the open source aspect here in order for SSH certificates to reach broader adoption (coupled with seamless admin and user experience).
Infisical SSH is actually an extension of the Infisical platform which is open source and used by a ton of companies for secrets management.
The best solution I have found is to buy a DRM book, then download the DRM-free version from libgen. That may not be what you're looking for but it keeps me in Calibre.
(Not affiliated, just saw their demo once.)
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