But it did look like an F-14. There really was an F-14, just on the ground at an Iranian airbase. And the Vincennes was under armed attack at the time--Iran let a civilian jetliner overfly their own attack. Plenty of blame for them, also.
It absolutely did not. The RCS of an F-14 v/s an Airbus A300 is an order of magnitude different (probably 2 or 3 orders).
> There really was an F-14, just on the ground at an Iranian airbase
There was, but that’s a red herring for the root cause. Each ship’s radar independently and correctly identified and tracked the Airbus separate from the Mode 2 targets, but when communicating the track information between ships, the tracks were mixed up.
> There was a combat camera team aboard the Vincennes, and the footage depicts considerable confusion and even ill-discipline amongst the crew (cheering, shouting, football game atmosphere) that contributed to one of the most tragic events in U.S. Navy history
The URL you linked to results in a 503 error (Service unavailable) and the Wayback Machine returns "Error code: 403 Forbidden" with "Looks like there’s a problem with this site", for all timestamps I tried, in 2025 or 2024.
I'm outside the US so that's probably the cause. Is such information available elsewhere?
Can’t charge for something if you’re giving it away for free.
Data’s the only moat left. Companies like stack overflow need to build revenue streams from AI or they will cease to exist.
By banning bots and then licensing some kind of access, eBay can protect itself from merely being a listing point that no human actually visits. Tailwind and their adverts via docs model, eBay and its promoted listings model, we’re going to see businesses adapt or die on this.
I think it’s only a matter of time before we see asic vendors making TPU devices. Same thing happened with BTC. There was enough money there to spawn an industry. Nvidias 70% margins are too hard to ignore. And if playing on the open market seems too rough, there’s always acquisition potential like what happened to groq.
A lot of silicon on a GPU is dedicated to upscaling and matrix multiply.
Ultimately GPU's main use is multimedia and graphics focused.
See all the miners that used to do GPU based mining...or the other niche markets where eventually the cost of custom asic becomes to attractive to ignore even if you as a consume have to handle a few years of growing pains.
> Ultimately GPU's main use is multimedia and graphics focused
This has long ceased to be true, especially for data center focused gpus from the last few years; the "gpu" moniker is really a misnomer / historical artifact.
It would be unlikely that Chinese EVs send anything less than western car manf. back to base. So you can safely assume that minute by minute data is sent back and sold to companies like Inrix.
Can confirm. Colombia based, a year ago I had my first Uber trip in a BYD, now I would guess about 10% of my journeys are Chinese EVs. It's impressive how fast they've caught up and mostly surpased their competition. If the Japanese took 20 years, the Koreans 10, then the Chinese have done it in 5.
In Holland there's even ISPs that filter porn and stuff, like https://kliksafe.nl . They're used by ultra-religious conservative communities (calvinists). Even adults use it there.
I view this as a much better solution. The people that want it can do their blocking and the rest of us aren't bothered with verifications and stuff.
Personally I belong to the sex-positive movement which thinks diametrically opposite about such matters :)
You will loose this argument because there is a real problem with children and AI slop. Especially because there is a problem with AI slop and handling it by people in general.
Provide a solution which doesn’t require that, like some other top commenter did. Otherwise, you have already lost.
Yes, RDS seems to really hold PG back on AWS, with all the interesting pg extensions getting released now (pg_lake). It is a share I can't move to other PG vendors because it is a pain in the ass to get all privacy, legal docs in order.
Technically, is there a reason AWS can't support allowing sophisticated users to run arbitrary extensions in RDS? The control-plane/data-plane boundaries should be robust enough that it's not going to allow an RDS extension to "hack AWS". Worst case is that AWS would have to account for the possibility of a crash backoff loop in RDS.
I understand that practically you can b0rk an install with a bunch of poorly configured extensions, and you can easily install something that hoovers up all your data and sends it to North Korea. But if I understand those risks and can mitigate them, why not allow RDS to load up extension binaries from an S3 bucket and call it a day?
If AWS wanted to broaden the available market, this would be an opportunity to leverage partners and the AWS marketplace mechanisms: Instead of AWS vouching for the extensions, allow partners to sell support in a marketplace. AWS has clean hands for the "My RDS instance crashed and wiped out my market cap" risk, but they can still wet their beak on the money flowing through to vendors. Meanwhile, vendors don't have to take full responsibility for the entire stack and mess with PrivateLink etc. Top tier vendors would also perform all the SOC attestation so that RDS doesn't lose out.
P.S. Andy, if you're reading this you should call me.
I'm considering hosting a separate pg db just to be able to access certain extensions. I am interested in this extension as well as https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Incremental_View_Maintenanc... (also not available on RDS). Then use logical replication for specific data source tables (guess it would need to be DMS).
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