I motivated my Cursor-colleagues to switch to tmux+nvim -- they don't use it all the time, but they enjoy the vibe. Claude is running on some tmux pans. Much nicer than VSCode!
I just read the Wikipedia page, and it does not seem to fit your analysis. They present the origin on the term, what it means, and then disclose that a consensus among scholars is to reject the term nowadays. They disclose also that some recent scholars have found it appropriate and cite one of them.
On the other hand, Grokipedia seems very biased to me. “This historiographical tension underscores broader tensions between romanticized medievalism and data-driven assessments of civilizational trajectories.” What a pejorative criticism! If you don’t think that dark age is an appropriate term, you are not data driven and you are just too sensitive??
On subject that I don’t know much about, I am quite happy to know the scientific consensus. Discussions on Wikipedia do an amazing job to help me figure out what’s going on.
I am a CEO of a young French startup in France (bootstrapped to 6 employees) and I hold a PhD in AI. But overall I have limited knowledge about partnership breakdowns.
I would recommend to compute the worth of your equity not based on a startup valuation but on how much money would you have made if you would have been a consultant.
Indeed, the hard work on the startup has not been achieved yet. It takes a lot of times, energy and lucks to go through all stages.
The best scenario for you (in terms of satisfaction and experiences) remains that the company succeed.
Would you mind sharing your company name?
I'm a master's student in AI, and after finishing my master's thesis at IBM this summer, I'll be looking for jobs.
There is a longer story to that name, for that reason I think it fits, but I see your point.
Although I did years of Python in my early days I totally forgot the pyxxx naming convention. Looking at it today I think that convention only applies when py is the prefix for another word (pytorch, the torch for Python).
That doesn't work with Pylon (Pylon, the lon for Python).
So basically Pylon is a read word and the other pyxxx packages aren't.
Hard to say as the green transition is poorly defined. However, lack of transition is much easier to define and to evaluate. According to a recent French government report [1], the cost of non action is significantly higher than transitioning to a net zero GHG economy by 2050.
No one is claiming that 100% of our final energy should come from biomass.
In France, the research institute Negawatt has computed numbers when using biomass to fill the gaps when solar panel and wind turbines are not producing electricity. They show we could replace nuclear power only by using current farming wastes (no need to allocate more area to bio fuel). (But they also assume a serious reduction of our current electricity usage)
A little known fact is that we likely already crossed 1.5C.
Latest IPCC reports a likely cool down due to aerosols of 0.4C. But aerosols are a serious health issue (responsable of several millions premature deaths). And most of aerosols come from incomplete fossil fuels (hopefully we'll get ride of them), whereas their lifespan is less than a few years. So their cool down effect is only temporary.
Also, it's quite unknown that Europe has already at +2C. Far from Equatorial + being in a continent are factors for warming faster.
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