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Here is an article that seems to be the primary source for the time-lapses: https://english.shanghai.gov.cn/en-Latest-WhatsNew/20250605/...


> Removing requirements.txt makes it harder to track the high-level deps your code requires

The very first section of the article talks about replacing requirements.txt with pyproject.toml which contains a similar high-level list of deps


> (There’s one that’s chock-full of Star Wars memorabilia, for example.)

Tavern Pachimon Wars in Osaka seems like it fits the description


Top nav of their site has an "API" link which goes to a page that says "ELV’s API keeps your email list clean. Notify website user about an invalid email address when they are filling out a form."

So presumably yes


I tried it out. Yes they do support a live check, but it seems... inadequate? The first Google search result for "disposable email address" yields https://temp-mail.org, and an email addressed created with that service is not recognized as disposable.


I’ve run into this problem before and there’s ways to stop it. Sure your email blocklists work to an extent assuming they’re up to the minute accurate (which they’re not).

I’d look into fingerprinting (https://github.com/fingerprintjs/fingerprintjs), block by ASN if it makes sense for your business (does OVH really need access to my SaaS?), use an active disposable email checker and possibly flag risky orders for manual payment capture if at all possible.


Thanks! I actually just ran into another problem with ELV, a request to their "single email verification" API timed out repeatedly. So not a good experience so far, will probably not keep using it.


When we were having our stolen card testing it was from people using made up gmail handles and ELV handled those easily. I guess it views temp-mail emails (and probably others) as real, which is unfortunate.


> We are also changing how remote playback works for streaming personal media (that is, playback when not on the same local network as the server).


I was basing my comments on the email I received from Plex, which did not make that clear at all - thanks.


Keep in mind $20k in 2025 dollars is the equivalent of ~$10k in 1997 dollars, if that helps set your frame of reference


With `ollama run gemma3:27b-it-qat "What is blue"`, GPU memory usage is just a hair over 20GB, so no, probably not without a nerfed context window


Indeed, the default context length in ollama is a mere 2048 tokens.


DeSantis received 4.61 million votes [1] from a population of 23.37 million [2]. 3.15 million voters voted for a candidate other than DeSantis [1]

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electoral_history_of_Ron_DeSan...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida


14.5m eligible voters[0] - but your point still stands there. Though I'm of the opinion that non-voters implicitly voted for whoever won. So 11.35m hypothetical people voted for DeSantis in my mind.

[0]: https://dos.fl.gov/elections/data-statistics/voter-registrat...


And that's how democracy works. If you didn't vote? Well, your fault.

The beauty of the election is that it means right now in Florida you have exactly the government you want and deserve.


The maxim of the law is "Silence gives consent." Those who did not vote voted for the winner.


PS: Not voting is voting.

No real American has the right to sit on the sidelines anymore.


For what it's worth, the "air conditioner" is just a giant radiator. From the linked bilibili video it's clear (at 1:20 mark) that they've repurposed the radiator, fan, and case from an air conditioner but there is no compressor.


My calculations show that they should have a working compressor to achieve the reported 20C constant under load


It seems the London Underground uses a four-rail system http://www.trainweb.org/tubeprune/tractioncurr.htm


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