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I have similar project like this: https://hostbeat.info/ More like t uptime robot and sure, I was really surprised yesterday how many alerts I have got and how many notifications were sent yesterday for this system users. Good work anyway


I built https://milliondollarllm.com, a pixel-style public board inspired by the old “Million Dollar Homepage,” but focused on LLM and AI projects.

The idea:

Companies can pay for space for their LLM/AI product (1 USD = 1 pixel) and get a logo + link on the public board.

Each paying “sponsor” can choose one free/open project to endorse publicly.

Free projects get a small logo and description for free, and can be highlighted via a sponsor endorsement.

The goal is to make a simple, transparent way for companies to get a bit of visibility for their LLM/AI products, and at the same time, shine some light on smaller or open projects that deserve attention.


:) Oh, this is neat! Python 3.12.0 has brought some cool features to the table. I'm particularly keen on the flexible f-string parsing and the performance improvements. The new type annotation syntax for generic classes is a nice touch too. It's always good to see Python getting refined with each release. Looking forward to exploring these new additions...


Robots.txt Analysis for GPT Bots API running here: https://dataguard.hostbeat.info/


Ivy is both an ML transpiler and a framework, currently supporting JAX, TensorFlow, PyTorch and Numpy.

Ivy unifies all ML frameworks enabling you not only to write code that can be used with any of these frameworks as the backend, but also to convert any function, model or library written in any of them to your preferred framework!


I find myself in a bit of a quandary over the upcoming Nintendo Switch release slated for this fall. Having navigated my way from the Switch Lite to the standard Switch, and now being confronted with the OLED model, I can't help but feel a sense of continuity, rather than any groundbreaking advancement. I revel in the games, no doubt about it, but the purported 'improvements' haven't sparked any significant eureka moments for me. Each upgrade has cost me an additional 100-150 euros, yet the experience, albeit slightly enhanced, doesn't seem to justify the price tag. I'm left questioning, is the elusive "it's better" worth it? What are your thoughts, fellow gamers?


Depends on what you expect. I've got an almost launch day original Switch and have played dozens of games on it and feel I'm still getting my money's worth. The Lite and OLED models are just slight variations on the same machine so why would you expect groundbreaking advancements?

A Switch won't play 100Gb+ AAA titles, but everytime I see video's from 'next gen' games I still see 'uncanny valley' effects and about the same gameplay. While it could look better, Mario Kart with realistic water reflections and raytraced shadows still would be Mario Kart (and probably no longer run on a portable console).


The difference between standard and OLED wasn't enough for me to upgrade. In general, I think console revisions are better as a first purchase than as an upgrade - the nicer screen or bigger battery helps sell people on the slower processors and limited future software support of a console that first released a few years ago.


The OLED version had the stick drift too, I had to return it.

My expectations for this new model are zero. Nintendo hardware sucks nowadays.


All mainstream console controllers experience more or less stick drift. Nintendo still replaces Joy-cons (even out of warranty) for free in the EU.


> All mainstream console controllers experience more or less stick drift

Yet my two xbox controllers that I've had for 5 years have not experienced this, and nor have my PS4 controller (4 years old at this point).

I've had to replace the joycon twice. And the third one still has drift. I gave up and just use a Nintendo Switch Pro controller with it now.


You shouldn't have to do this, but you can buy replacement Joycon joysticks with hall effect sensors that won't drift


The Pro controller has drift issues as well (although less often)

Did you use/abuse the xbox/ps4 controllers as much as the Switch controllers? My guess is the amount of hours played is a big factor in wear and tear. Since the Switch is portable you have a lot more opportunity to play.


Switch: Barely used, and gently used. PS4/Xbox: Gets tossed around, used as a media center as well as for gaming.

After the first joycon replacement, we were even more gentle with it.


My Xbox controllers never did it either. Never once had my character walked himself off a cliff after I stopped giving input.


Nice article! Thank you Martin :) I didn't know about Date and Time Formatting or Nested F-Strings.


Maybe a SW upgrade by Elon / Tesla will suffice :)

def power_up(battery_pover_in): voltage_in = abs(battery_pover_in) voltage_up = battery_pover_in * 1.5 return voltage_up


Veery old Kindle keyboard, but Santa will bring me Kindle Paperwhite 5. I like it a lot, easy to manipulate, battery life, ecosystem around ebooks. Works always and as expected.


Sometimes. But a lot of people around me - yes.


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