Yes, always from https://gìthub.com
Yes, always from https://gìthub.com
You could try out Linux Mint¹, they’re Ubuntu based and disable Snap by default².
It seems that we focus our interest in two different parts of the problem.
Finding the most optimal way to classify which images are best compressed in bulk is an interesting problem in itself. In this particular problem the person asking it had already picked out similar images by hand and they can be identified by their timestamp for optimizing a comparison of similarity. What I wanted to find out was how well the similar images can be compressed with various methods and codecs with minimal loss of quality. My goal was not to use it as a method to classify the images. It was simply to examine how well the compression stage would work with various methods.
Wait… this is exactly the problem a video codec solves. Scoot and give me some sample data!
I was not talking about classification. What I was talking about was a simple probe at how well a collage of similar images compares in compressed size to the images individually. The hypothesis is that a compression codec would compress images with similar colordistribution in a spritesheet better than if it encode each image individually. I don’t know, the savings might be neglible, but I’d assume that there was something to gain at least for some compression codecs. I doubt doing deduplication post compression has much to gain.
I think you’re overthinking the classification task. These images are very similar and I think comparing the color distribution would be adequate. It would of course be interesting to compare the different methods :)
The first thing I would do writing such a paper would be to test current compression algorithms by create a collage of the similar images and see how that compares to the size of the indiviual images.
I think that B is a problem for everyones eyes :)
I have this in code I’m writing right now…
#ifdef DEBUG
#define DEBUG_PRINT(...) printf(__VA_ARGS__)
#else
#define DEBUG_PRINT(...)
#endif
It is the most straighforward way to get the state of things while hammering on the keyboard trying to mash up something that looks like a program.
That’s a lot of trouble, you can just ask it if it’s telling the truth.
The good old NTLM rule of max 8 characters and all converted to uppercase. It was a simple rule and if you forgot your password you could easily bruteforce it with normal consumer hardware.
I take it you haven’t heard about Free Beer.
Desktop Applications
The quote is a derivative of something Bjarne Stroustrup said himself¹.
C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot; C++ makes it harder, but when you do it blows your whole leg off
That’s the last stage of being a FOSS developer.
To me Syphon Filter was like “I want more of this” after playing Metal Gear Solid. Plenty room for two stealth games. To be honest I don’t remember any other cutscene sequences from Metal Gear Solid other than “snaaaaaaake… snaaaake…”.
I think most PDF readers support Javascript. I use xpdf and one of the reasons is that it does not support Javascript.
Unless someone has registered the trademark for those specific purposes you’re clear. A trademarks is only valid within a specific field of purpose. Trademarks are there to avoid consumers mistaking one brand for another.
There are a lot of entertaining articles on Techdirt about companies not understanding trademark law.
@[email protected] @[email protected]
https://codeberg.org/aketawi-study/rust-constellation-bgr