

That’s the ones, the 0414 release.
That’s the ones, the 0414 release.
QWQ-32B for most questions, llama-3.1-8B for agents. I’m looking for new models to replace them though, especially the agent one.
Want to test the new GLM models, but I’d rather wait for llama.cpp to definitely fix the bugs with them first.
What I’ve ultimately converged to without any rigorous testing is:
Maybe some Borges too?
Of course:
The rest of the instructions are all valid n-controlled Toffolis and Hadamards, but of course mostly Toffolis since it’s replicating a classical algorithm. There is no quantum advantage, it’s just a classical algorithm written in a format compatible with a quantum computer.
Add small errors to the quantum simulator (quantum computers always have those) and all’ll break entirely - apparently (1) no error correction was used and (2) it’s just logic gates for Doom rewritten as quantum gates. No wonder the author got bored, I’d be bored too.
For Tolkien’s work, there is the twelve volume “The Complete History of Middle Earth” which is about as inside baseball as you can get for Tolkien.
I’d replace HoME with Parma Eldalamberon, Vinyar Tengwar and other journals publishing his early materials here.
Recommending Italo Calvino’s Six Memos for the Next Millennium, the lectures he has been preparing shortly before his death.
Not an assembly guide for a work of literature, but it’ll help your own process if it’s already ongoing and you want to improve.
The lectures also have some comments on what Calvino himself was doing here and there and why.
Yeah, while tripping on acid.
It would. But it’s a good option when you have computationally heavy tasks and communication is relatively light.
Once configured, Tor Hidden Services also just work (you may need to use some fresh bridges in certain countries if ISPs block Tor there though). You don’t have to trust any specific third party in this case.
KOReader supports custom CSS. You can certainly change the background colour with it, I think a grid should be possible too.