Not to mention more restrictions to come via the various secret international trade pacts being made.
People must understabd this, to disagree is to be disingenuous on the face of mountains of evidence. The American people have zero say on policy, the laws the government wants the government will get, it may take a few more years but it will happen.
The system cannot be reformed, it's very core is corrupt, those who disagree are for the status quo of the police state and they are our enemy and the enemy of justice.
I'm waiting for the day this is just a library you pass an image to and it returns an array. No, not a SaaS. Then on my own pump.io, diaspora, redMatrix etc. it just works. My data, my images, my network. I'm not against the tech at all though. Neat
There are already pre-trained networks out there. TensorFlow comes with an example command line tool that you can pass any image and it will tell you what is in the image.
The classes that it can detect are from ImageNet, so that might be limiting.
If you were to train your own net, ImageNet is one of the biggest and most complete datasets and you'd surely use it for training. The alternative is to make your own training set, which will cost you money and/or time. For a proof of concept or initial prototype (until your business can pay for it), those classes should be enough.
Yeah, in "Person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul" there's the deeper category "smiler" which contains the categories "smirker" and "simperer". Some of the images are (note: my idea was to link to the images directly, but it isn't loading, so I had to take a screenshot and upload to imgur):
Which I say is pretty much what you'd need to train a net to detect people smiling (amongst other things). Of course, there are some refinements you can make to improve accuracy and presentation of the results. My point was: you should begin with datasets that are readily available, and then improve on need (and if resources are available to justify the investment).
I run a gitolite[0] instance on my server. It's great so long as you have another way to deal with issues and love the terminal. Access control is a breeze.
I feel like Gitlab is heavy. Gogs is neat, but incomplete. If you don't need/want bloat, gitolite works well.
There are duckduckGo privacy settings you can set. I'm not a big fan of a cloud store for your settings and thankfully duckduckGo allows for settings parameters in the url[0]. You can do things like require POST instead of GET, redirecting, forcing https etc. Once you get your search and privacy settings how you like them, take the resulting url and make an openSearch plugin out of it, manually or with something like my mycroft project[1]. Now any searches use your settings, no account/cloud settings needed. It's then easy to throw in every browser you use. Technically a plugin.
Firefox lets you do that natively too. Self destructing cookies deletes the cookies after you close the browser tab, not the entire window. If the browser doesn't provide complete isolation between tabs, this'll make it so the cookie isn't there to harvest from. You can set each site to tab/browser/never too.
If this is true, it's unfortunate. Things like flux should have a small footprint and a small working domain. I'm willing to spare some complexity for usability tools, but always end up getting off the bus when it gets too heavy.
I agree. It's helpful, but by no means novel or interesting beyond being a tool in the utility belt. It gets more attention than other tools far more interesting.
I use redshift[0] on my linux machines which I really like. Cyanogenmod has LiveDisplay natively which is practically the same thing unfortunately it works off off gps location and not manually editable lang/long. Both are really helpful.
Twilight just doesn't feel the same. Unlike f.lux and redshift, which actually seem like they change the color of the screen, Twilight just seems to overlay a red filter. I can't tell you why, but the result is much less satisfactory.
Twilight is just a red overlay. If you want the real deal like f.lux or redshift, there's Cf.lumen (requires root) which works great and even offers a "freeloader" option for pro features.
On Linux I use the 'Negative' Compiz plugin. You can apply it on a window by window basis or desktop-wide. For both modes there are keyboard shortcuts (that's what makes it such a killer feature IMO). People find the screen weird when I enable the plugin but I'm a practical guy and this has saved my eyesight.
I know you can invert colors in OSX but the effect is desktop-wide and you can't use a hotkey to enable or disable it. Does something similar exist for other OSes?
> I know you can invert colors in OSX but the effect is desktop-wide and you can't use a hotkey to enable or disable it.
I haven't tried this myself, but I believe you could rig up something in Automator/Script Editor to toggle the inverted colors, then set up a hotkey for that service from System Preferences -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts.
I've been using this method for years. Very simple, and gets the job done. Most websites and desktop apps default to whites and off-whites which convert perfectly to blacks and off-blacks when enabled. Pocket, Firefox, and FBReader on my Android devices all have dark modes for reading on my mobile devices; takes care of all my use-cases!
I use the KDE equivalent all the time. Really nice on web pages at night when they're bright white. Don't know if it's saved my eyesight but it has made things more pleasant at times. It's also really nice to be able to invert the desktop and then invert a single window (VLC) so colors are correct there.
Guess I better jump on too: I've run flux on three machines with OSX's from Snow Leopard to ElCap: A white plastic Macbook from 2006, a late-2014 Air, and an early-2014 MBP with a triple-head display setup, and never had any problems at all. So YMMV.
Oh you're right! We need EME'd web assembly so Facebook can hide everything behind a proprietary binary blob. THEN the user will really be free from themselves and their own stupidity. \s
[0] http://www.theverge.com/2015/12/18/10582446/congress-passes-...