> (h) Published List of Occupations Traditionally Receiving Tips.--
Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary of the Treasury (or the Secretary's delegate) shall publish a
list of occupations which customarily and regularly received tips on or
before December 31, 2024, for purposes of section 224(d)(1) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (as added by subsection (a)).
It's down from it's heyday for the mainstream, but for the dedicated few, it's better than ever before. Gone are the days of manually searching for a movie on tracker sites, downloading them, organizing your library and watching stuff on your laptop.
There are now open-source, self-hosted applications that automate that entire process, so it's as simple as requesting a movie on your phone and having it show up on your own personal streaming service on your TV a few minutes later.
Do not under any circumstance download Stremio (available in Firestick as well). Also don't try to install the Torrentio extension for Stremio. That would allow you to play pirated content with one click I your TV, similarly to PopcornTime.
It's so nice to have all my legal media backups cataloged and organized and easily viewable. My server isn't powerful enough for 4k HDR though so I need to upgrade it.
I know a guy who knows a guy that says that you don’t even need that, you just browse the movies and press “play” as there is direct torrent streaming now. But I don’t know anything about all this i just use my VCR with the clock flashing 12:00.
Yes, for $30 a year you can instantly stream any torrent with no real setup or install. The most used client is a PWA that calls out to VLC or whatever.
Bluray 4K 100+GB copy of Dune Part 2 at >70Mbps with maybe 5 seconds of buffering at the start. Literally can’t replicate it with legal streaming.
Obsidian's local first editing experience makes a huge difference to creativity and flow.
I've been working on making Obsidian real-time collaborative with the Relay [0] plugin. In combination with a few other plugins (and the core Bases plugin) you can build a pretty great Notion alternative.
I'm bullish on companies using Obsidian for knowledge management and AI driven workflows. It's pretty reasonable to build custom plugins for a specific vertical.
Ha, this reminds me of a story from my old job, before I became a software engineer.
I worked for an artist and we had an inventory system that a freelance web developer had built for us. I think it was some sort of php, laravel, mysql stack. There was a search bar that you could use to bring up records of artworks.
Everyone at the studio used this system but I was the main person that used it. Over time, I picked up some little tricks here and there. These were useful because engaging this freelance guy for new features involved a lot of back and forth, so if I could find my own improvement to a workflow that was always the easier option.
We didn't have a clear way to pull up works for a single decade. Until I somehow discovered that you could use `%` as a wildcard character in some cases, so I could pull up paintings from the 1970s but searching for `197%`, for example.
I remember proudly telling this to the freelance dev at one point and his eyes widened and he almost looked panicked. In retrospect I recognize that he was thinking about whether he left the system open to an injection attack.
By the end of my job there I had learned enough about this to realize it was a risk but didn't get curious enough to see if a `; DROP TABLE` query would work.
Do we even know what % of Waymo rides in SF are completely autonomous? I would not be surprised if more of them are remotely piloted than they've let on...
My understanding is they don't have the capability to have a ride be flat-out remotely piloted in real time. If the car gets stuck and puts its hazards on, a human can intervene, look at the 360 view from the cameras, and then give the car a simple high-level instruction like "turn left here" or "it's safe to proceed straight." But they can't directly drive the car continuously.
And those moments where the car gives up and waits for async assistance are very obvious to the rider. Most rides in Waymos don't contain any moments like that.
That's interesting to hear. It may be completely true, I don't really know. The source of my skepticism, however, is that all of the incentives are there for them to not be transparent about this, and to make the cars appear "smarter" than they really are.
Even if it's just a high level instruction set, it's possible that that occurs often enough to present scaling issues. It's also totally possible that it's not a problem, only time will tell.
What I have in mind is the Amazon stores, which were sold as being powered by AI, but were actually driven by a bunch of low-paid workers overseas watching cameras and manually entering what people were putting in their carts.
I think the problem is the premise that successful movies should become effectively genres in-and-of themselves.
The problem with these franchises isn't all the reasons why they are poorly made, but rather that they exist as franchises at all.
A sequel or two can be good if you have real ideas to explore, as you described. But the idea that you should just make Alien movies forever is just creatively bankrupt.
> (h) Published List of Occupations Traditionally Receiving Tips.-- Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Treasury (or the Secretary's delegate) shall publish a list of occupations which customarily and regularly received tips on or before December 31, 2024, for purposes of section 224(d)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (as added by subsection (a)).
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