The first thing that comes to my mind is that reliance on a external infrastructure (Azure) is a big no no for industrial applications. You would not want your oil refinery plant to stop working because there is a connectivity issue to a server located in a different continent.
Azure, together with Power Platform tools such as Power Apps, is primarily used for large-scale training. Since the odor and gas data require efficient labeling to be reliable, Power Apps combined with Data Explorer provides an easy, cost-effective, and scalable way to manage this process. Once trained, the model can be deployed directly on the edge.
I skimmed the index but… no Clojure? My impression is that it is by far the most used current Lisp. This said, I’d love to read the book - definitely interesting.
I have been looking for ways to only use local packages for our software builds. I am looking for something that can act as a local cache for Java and NPM packages. The idea would be that developers can only use packages belonging to the allowed set for development, and there is a vetting process where packages are added to the allowed set (or removed).
I have been playing with the idea of using a single git repository to host them, Java packages as an Ivy repository and JavaScript packages as simply the contents of node_modules.
That would be a political perspective. But what we are discussing now is some very rich football clubs who have a right to filter anything on the internet because they say so.
Speaking for myself only, but I find it easier to click ‘back’ than waste time on my ‘consent’.
Lately, I’m asking some llm to fetch it and summarize, so the one sentence content that was expanded into a full page article goes back to its original form.
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