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148 results for “kjg”
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@film_girl How did I not know about #Overtired!? Checking it out now
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Wow these new fonts are incredible, especially the texture healing
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Success! I wonder if I'm the first person to get a #Ruby 3.2 app running on #ElasticBeanstalk Amazon Linux 2023? Surely not, right?
The biggest difference for me was that AL2023 seems to no longer user rbenv for Ruby, the platform just has it installed. I had modify my platform hook that copies the Amazon .rbenv version into my app’s root dir to only do it if the file exists (so I could get that app version deployed on a Ruby 3.0 instance before doing the instance upgrade)
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Success! I wonder if I'm the first person to get a #Ruby 3.2 app running on #ElasticBeanstalk Amazon Linux 2023? Surely not, right?
The biggest difference for me was that AL2023 seems to no longer user rbenv for Ruby, the platform just has it installed. I had modify my platform hook that copies the Amazon .rbenv version into my app’s root dir to only do it if the file exists (so I could get that app version deployed on a Ruby 3.0 instance before doing the instance upgrade)
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Success! I wonder if I'm the first person to get a #Ruby 3.2 app running on #ElasticBeanstalk Amazon Linux 2023? Surely not, right?
The biggest difference for me was that AL2023 seems to no longer user rbenv for Ruby, the platform just has it installed. I had modify my platform hook that copies the Amazon .rbenv version into my app’s root dir to only do it if the file exists (so I could get that app version deployed on a Ruby 3.0 instance before doing the instance upgrade)
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Success! I wonder if I'm the first person to get a #Ruby 3.2 app running on #ElasticBeanstalk Amazon Linux 2023? Surely not, right?
The biggest difference for me was that AL2023 seems to no longer user rbenv for Ruby, the platform just has it installed. I had modify my platform hook that copies the Amazon .rbenv version into my app’s root dir to only do it if the file exists (so I could get that app version deployed on a Ruby 3.0 instance before doing the instance upgrade)
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Success! I wonder if I'm the first person to get a #Ruby 3.2 app running on #ElasticBeanstalk Amazon Linux 2023? Surely not, right?
The biggest difference for me was that AL2023 seems to no longer user rbenv for Ruby, the platform just has it installed. I had modify my platform hook that copies the Amazon .rbenv version into my app’s root dir to only do it if the file exists (so I could get that app version deployed on a Ruby 3.0 instance before doing the instance upgrade)
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I’ve got some really cool work news!
I recently joined a brand new team that is focused on improving the way licensing works. This includes :github: Enterprise Cloud, :github: Enterprise Server, :github: Copilot for Business and :github: Advanced Security
Let me know if you have any licensing feedback or woes!
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I’ve got some really cool work news!
I recently joined a brand new team that is focused on improving the way licensing works. This includes :github: Enterprise Cloud, :github: Enterprise Server, :github: Copilot for Business and :github: Advanced Security
Let me know if you have any licensing feedback or woes!
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I’ve got some really cool work news!
I recently joined a brand new team that is focused on improving the way licensing works. This includes :github: Enterprise Cloud, :github: Enterprise Server, :github: Copilot for Business and :github: Advanced Security
Let me know if you have any licensing feedback or woes!
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I’ve got some really cool work news!
I recently joined a brand new team that is focused on improving the way licensing works. This includes :github: Enterprise Cloud, :github: Enterprise Server, :github: Copilot for Business and :github: Advanced Security
Let me know if you have any licensing feedback or woes!
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I’ve got some really cool work news!
I recently joined a brand new team that is focused on improving the way licensing works. This includes :github: Enterprise Cloud, :github: Enterprise Server, :github: Copilot for Business and :github: Advanced Security
Let me know if you have any licensing feedback or woes!
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A bunch of “old” (2022) episodes of “Heavyweight” podcast showed up in my Overcast playlist recently. I assumed it was one of those flukes where a feed config change causes old episodes to appear new.
But no! They are new to me! They finally released the episodes from their Spotify exclusiveness. There’s some really great stuff in this “season”, happy to finally get to hear it!
Anyone remember “Mystery Show” with Starlee Kine? That was a good one too
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A bunch of “old” (2022) episodes of “Heavyweight” podcast showed up in my Overcast playlist recently. I assumed it was one of those flukes where a feed config change causes old episodes to appear new.
But no! They are new to me! They finally released the episodes from their Spotify exclusiveness. There’s some really great stuff in this “season”, happy to finally get to hear it!
Anyone remember “Mystery Show” with Starlee Kine? That was a good one too
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A bunch of “old” (2022) episodes of “Heavyweight” podcast showed up in my Overcast playlist recently. I assumed it was one of those flukes where a feed config change causes old episodes to appear new.
But no! They are new to me! They finally released the episodes from their Spotify exclusiveness. There’s some really great stuff in this “season”, happy to finally get to hear it!
Anyone remember “Mystery Show” with Starlee Kine? That was a good one too
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A bunch of “old” (2022) episodes of “Heavyweight” podcast showed up in my Overcast playlist recently. I assumed it was one of those flukes where a feed config change causes old episodes to appear new.
But no! They are new to me! They finally released the episodes from their Spotify exclusiveness. There’s some really great stuff in this “season”, happy to finally get to hear it!
Anyone remember “Mystery Show” with Starlee Kine? That was a good one too
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A bunch of “old” (2022) episodes of “Heavyweight” podcast showed up in my Overcast playlist recently. I assumed it was one of those flukes where a feed config change causes old episodes to appear new.
But no! They are new to me! They finally released the episodes from their Spotify exclusiveness. There’s some really great stuff in this “season”, happy to finally get to hear it!
Anyone remember “Mystery Show” with Starlee Kine? That was a good one too
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The most significant leader in the pursuit of disability rights, Judy Heumann, has unfortunately died and no one is talking about it.
If you're familiar with IEPs and 504s in schools, that's thanks to her. In her honor, please take some time today to learn about her amazing life and the advancements she has made for people with disabilities.
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According to available data, the average energy required to produce 1g chocolate ranges from 2.5 to 4.5 kilojoules (kJ). Let's take the midpoint of this range as a reference and assume 3.5 kJ/g for the energy required to produce 1 gram of Kinder Buenos.
Considering the reference energy unit of 1 gram of Kinder Buenos, we can estimate that a single ChatGPT query may consume energy equivalent to 1 to 10 grams of Kinder Buenos.
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According to available data, the average energy required to produce 1g chocolate ranges from 2.5 to 4.5 kilojoules (kJ). Let's take the midpoint of this range as a reference and assume 3.5 kJ/g for the energy required to produce 1 gram of Kinder Buenos.
Considering the reference energy unit of 1 gram of Kinder Buenos, we can estimate that a single ChatGPT query may consume energy equivalent to 1 to 10 grams of Kinder Buenos.
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According to available data, the average energy required to produce 1g chocolate ranges from 2.5 to 4.5 kilojoules (kJ). Let's take the midpoint of this range as a reference and assume 3.5 kJ/g for the energy required to produce 1 gram of Kinder Buenos.
Considering the reference energy unit of 1 gram of Kinder Buenos, we can estimate that a single ChatGPT query may consume energy equivalent to 1 to 10 grams of Kinder Buenos.
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According to available data, the average energy required to produce 1g chocolate ranges from 2.5 to 4.5 kilojoules (kJ). Let's take the midpoint of this range as a reference and assume 3.5 kJ/g for the energy required to produce 1 gram of Kinder Buenos.
Considering the reference energy unit of 1 gram of Kinder Buenos, we can estimate that a single ChatGPT query may consume energy equivalent to 1 to 10 grams of Kinder Buenos.
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According to available data, the average energy required to produce 1g chocolate ranges from 2.5 to 4.5 kilojoules (kJ). Let's take the midpoint of this range as a reference and assume 3.5 kJ/g for the energy required to produce 1 gram of Kinder Buenos.
Considering the reference energy unit of 1 gram of Kinder Buenos, we can estimate that a single ChatGPT query may consume energy equivalent to 1 to 10 grams of Kinder Buenos.