smokinliver

joined 7 months ago
[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Thats where I have seen it before!

Maybe its also both, so the conductor can have plausible deniability but also display white-blue-white?

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 3 points 3 days ago (3 children)

Whats the flag in the tram?

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 22 points 3 days ago

Idk...

Depends on preference but I usually go for bread with more fiber cause after eating this you will be hungry again in 20mins.

But at least there arent many holes the size of our solar system so you can spread the butter/margarine quite nicely.

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 8 points 5 days ago

It feels just like yesterday when the number hardly ever crossed 1k. Now its special when its not above 1.5k.

Crazy how fast the people-grinder fired up.

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 33 points 6 days ago (6 children)

Isn't that a good thing? Cause it makes russia at least somehow feel some consequences?

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 8 points 1 week ago

Thats such a nice drawing, I love the details

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 42 points 1 week ago (1 children)

...together with his gay lover

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 3 points 2 weeks ago

A radioactive drug is then injected weekly every four to six weeks to attack the tumour.

I kean its not really specified so I tried to give as much context as possible.

Thx for the diagnosis btw

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 2 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

What makes you say that?

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 4 points 2 weeks ago (8 children)

I only know this for radiotherapy where you shoot stuff from a ray cannon.

But basically there is a lethal dosis for cells and spreading it over several days and stuff reduxes side effects but sometimes you need to be quick and therefore go for higher doses and shorter timespans. This writeup has some details if youre interested in this.

If you apply the substance into the body you have to also take elimination into consideration. Then do the maths how much you need to apply so that you reach these lethal doses and when to reapply it again.

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 7 points 2 weeks ago (10 children)

Yeah cause (cancer) cells dont die instantly after getting radioactively damaged so you can/should wait a while to see the damage the radiation did and then you can hit it again.

[–] smokinliver@sopuli.xyz 4 points 2 weeks ago

Well then congrats!

And thanks for the explanation

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/19439809

So begins the reddit stash dump.

 

Hey guys I kind of have a little probleme here:

So during the upgrading of Mint 21.3 to Mint 22 there appeared some errors, and while trying to fix them a lot of library-packages were deleted and most of the programs gone.

Now after that I tried to reset my system back to tze last timeshift-backup but timeshift only ever deleted more packages and never installed the old files from the backup (i guess).

So now this is where I am at, a kernel panic and nothing boots. I guess i need a new (fresh) install and could try to use the backup of timeshift on that one?

Or is there any other elegant way to get out of this?

Thanks already for reading and tips <3

 

Dear lemmings,

I am fairly new to the server-game and want to set up my first NAS. I will not only be doing a lot of reading but also quite a lot of writing as well so I guess RAID10 (even though hardware/money intensive) would be a good choice? Or should I rather go for RAID 0 with 3 2 1 backup strategy? Currently I am hosting some websites others use as well so uptime is an issue.

Now I am not sure what brand/model to buy, when reading up on it they all sound decent. I have an old PC that I can use to run the drives so I only really need to buy the drives for now. Currently I am looking at drives with a capacity of around 14TB if that is of any importance.

Many thanks in advance :D

 

Hey guys,

I have been experimenting with self-supervised visual learning a bit. Until now I have only ever used U-Nets and related architectures.

No matter what specific task, images or other parameters I changed I always encountered these stains on my output-images (here marked with green), although sometimes more, sometimes less.

Now I wondered if anybody could tell me where they came from and how I could prevent them?

In the attached picture the input (left) and target (right) are the same, so that I can be sure these stains do not come from a badly designed learning task, yet they still appear (output is the middle image).

Thanks in advance and all the best :D

Edit: added line breaks

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