NTS radio https://www.nts.live (and the app) is my most recent favorite way to discover, underground/rare/undiscovered music, curated by humans that are experts in their scene or musicians themselves. Covers many genres
Wonder showzen was inspired by this stunt and took their episode budget of ~$100k and paid a homeless person $10k to throw another $10k out of a helicopter onto the statue of liberty. It didn’t work out in the end but still was a hell of a tribute in theory. See https://www.brooklynvegan.com/wonder-showzen-creators-talk-t...
These zwift races require two data inputs, one from a power meter (pedal or crank) and one from the trainer. So manipulating just the trainer flywheel would not be enough.
> We will then begin the hybrid pilot in full on May 23, with people coming to the office three days a week — on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday — and working flexibly on Wednesday and Friday if you wish.
Though personally I'm fully remote, everything I've read and seen suggests something like this is going to be extremely common. Most employees seem to want to come into an office on a semi-regular basis but not 5 days a week. And, if you're going to do that, you probably want some level of coordination whether it's at a company, facility, or team level.
Can confirm. We do something like this (2 days in, 3 days remote). We have one mandatory day and then each team has a designated day where their whole team is present. I never minded going into the office anyway because I live in a fairly small apartment, so it's nice to have dedicated space away from home. The only downside I've experienced so far is that the all-teams day can be very chaotic, with more disruptions than ever before because everyone tries to plan everything that is more than a little involved for that day.
As long as the ISA can get compiled for from Tensorflow, Torch or whatever DeepLearning AST is used geht's comppiled down to it the user won't notice unless he is optimizing his model for the hardware in which cases he would also have to care about the equivalent implementation details
Private relay will egress from the same general region as the client source location. So if you’re in switzerland and hopping through a US exit point that is a bug. This is clearly explained in the wwdc video
Yeah, and there are solid performance reasons for that too even beyond any legal/privacy ones. Relaying across an ocean could actually be a fairly significant latency hit in many cases. Services that are completely focused on privacy even against some level of state actions (like Tor) may just accept and eat that, but that's not definitely not the threat scenario Apple is targeting and it would diminish its appeal as a fairly transparent service. Even purely in the browser people do engage in a certain amount of real-time activity. I can't see Apple considering adding thousands of miles worth of RTT ideal.
All depends on where the destination server is. If the destination is in the U.S., you might benefit from your traffic being routed through Apple's private network.
The two options are basically city-level or country but same TZ level. e.g. Toronto, or somewhere in Canada in Eastern time (which I mean would almost certainly be limited to Toronto -- presumably these options make more sense on say the East Coast for the US where there are a number of possible major locations that fit)
There are clearly some bugs. Occasionally I, in Canada, get routed through the US. This guy got routed through the US. Neither case should happen by Apple's description. Apple is quite intentionally trying to avoid their relays getting around geo-restrictions (likely to avoid them getting blacklisted).
AT&T runs transparent proxies on their network that have been known to intercept and mangle tls, and directly manipulate tcp packets on the wire.
Take a tcpdump capture on both server/client side and compare the handshake/tcp headers/negotiated window size. Often you see the server sending one thing, but the client sees another
I'm confused if this is for people that are already employed (aren't there tax implications for working in another country?) or for startup founders, or startup employees?
You won’t be taxed by the Finns since you need to be there 181 days to be considered a tax resident. For those staying for about a year, the US has a FEIE exemption that kicks in for the first 105k or so anyway. No exception for California taxes, however.
No major tax implications, it's just for 90 days... It's more like a concierge service + air bnb "experiences" and stuff like that, plus services for your family (like day care). If you wanted to apply for a longer stay that's an option too. I think it's a neat idea though, and it sounds like fun!
I think there may be tax implications since the company you work for might need to pay taxes to the country you are working in. This is the reason HR is not allowing me to work in another country even though I am 100% WFH right now due to COVID and thus physical location should not matter.
I had a similar experience on a grand jury in new york (where you decide whether or not a felony case should go to trial at all) and was shocked to see a prosecutor come back 4 times on the same case, each time with a slightly less serious charge (ie, starting with level 1 felony assault and ending with some lesser assualt charge). So even after we the grand jury decided there was not enough evidence for the felony assault case to go to trial, they attempt it over and over again, with the same evidence, though requesting a slightly lesser charge, desperate for a different result.