Same… I love MagSafe and would prefer to use it. I’m always worried about yanking the computer with the USB-C charger in and breaking the cable or the port.
But I have a bunch of USB-C stuff and so when I go to charge my laptop it’s just easier to find that cable and use it.
It’s how the LLM works. Anything accessed by the agent in the folder becomes input to the model. That’s what it means for the agent to access something. Those inputs are already “Input” in the ToS sense.
You can do this on your desk, or better yet at your local diy bio hackerspace. Validating it takes some equipment, e.g. for PCR, but that's commonly available.
The end goal is to provide user-space memory isolation on CHERI-enabled hardware, where I won't need the RISC-V VM/sandbox any more. Anything as long as I can run on a flat address space and not have to waste countless CPU cycles swapping out page tables every message send. I admit my knowledge of CHERI is superficial and have not spent too much time reading the specs until I can play with off-the-shelf CPUs that support it.
Singularity/Midori from MS Research have a lot of good ideas but I feel we don't completely have to compromise forcing a managed environment or language in userspace. I want to run native binaries in this platform, which of course would look a bit different than one is used to (no _entry, no dedicated stack, just a message handler that's called directly by the scheduler, no concept of syscall, just sending messages to a capability)
The very different idea that came to my mind is to electro-mechanically wire up the keys, and hook it up to an LLM. You type something, then it types back. Like Tom Riddle's diary.
Are they being subsidized the same way my employer subsidizes my lifestyle?
If I sell steel, grain, boots, or launch services to the government and that gives me profits that I invest into some aspect of my business, I’m not sure that “subsidized by” is the clearest term.
Pretty much all of the commercial rocket companies are in America. There is competition between them. In the amount of money that SpaceX gets from the government is quite small compared to its overall operating expenses. They launched 90% of all mass to orbit, most of which is commercial.
The “SpaceX lives on government subsidies” thing is a myth.
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