That’s the underlying reason to keep distance ofc. The rule of thumb gives you an easy to calculate solution to how far that approximately is.
That’s the underlying reason to keep distance ofc. The rule of thumb gives you an easy to calculate solution to how far that approximately is.
The simplified distance rule we learn in europe is: half your speed (km/h) in meters or as an equation, v/2000. E.g. you drive 120km/h, keep 60m distance.
This technology gets interesting, when I can unfold a full 27" 2k screen.
You are in no danger. I bought the full Sherlock Holmes collection as an ebook and get recommendations for the 500 other full Sherlock Holmes collection ebooks every day
I can’t tell for sure, but IMO it’s pretty secure when you can block internet access for the robots as a whole.
Easy solution: the app only redirects you to the website via browser intent.
For some robtos there seems to be a self hosted version of the servers available. Though I haven’t found the actual installation guide yet.
OpenWebUI is also a great and simple solution, that’s using Ollama under the hood. Was pretty easy to setup with Docker.
Honestly I had problems with every Miracast device I ever used. Beamers and TVs always broke connections randomly. Most of the time pairing didn’t even work and failed without an error.
Depends on what are the allowed values for x are. Real numbers, complexe numbers, binary or I made up my own numbers ;)
No definition what values are suitable for x.
My uneducated understanding is that the chart shows at which temperatures sulfuric acid freezes depending on the concentration. Also in my very basic understanding of physics and chemistry I would have thought that it’s linear or exponential or something predictable and not that jumpy.
Installed another update, working again!
Loaded the update via the internal function a few hours ago and still got error 403 on every video I tried. Haven’t twsted it thoroughly yet though.
Someone really got caught up in “Yeti Sports 1” it seems
Meanwhile in Germany: Houses still getting copper internet cables this year (and probably the next 10 too).
Tbh the math required is pretty similar, I just divide the speed by 2 and am done.