

well, not anymore. it’s been backwritten into some sort of space-warping area where keeping your distance short is impressive


well, not anymore. it’s been backwritten into some sort of space-warping area where keeping your distance short is impressive


i think it’s standard equipment today. it all works with radio beacons so any place that has them should enable autolanding.


the first autoland system was fitted on the hawker siddeley trident in 1962, but it was built to deal with inclement weather where the runway was completely invisible from the cockpit.
the lockheed L-1011 from 1970 could perform an entire flight on autopilot, including takeoff and landing.
i’ve not heard of a system that kicks in when there’s an emergency though.
that makes sense, dave does make the rules.
why do they have to be nude?
because people who don’t know computers can’t learn to use the right file format.
pdf is a container format for code that is run by printers. it’s not something that can be easily changed. pdf editors are hacks upon hacks upon hacks.
i feel like this should take into account the month when the program was compiled, or at least when its process started.


most procedural algorithms don’t require training data, for one. they can just be given a seed and run. or rather, the number of weights is so minimal that you can set them by hand.


generative ai is a subset of procedural generation algorithms. specifically it’s a procedural algorithm with a massive amount of weight parameters, on the order of hundreds of billions. you get the weights by training. for image generation (which i’m assuming is what was in use here), the term to look up is “latent diffusion”. basically you take all your training images and blur them step by step, then set your weights to mimic the blur operation. then when you want an image you run the model backwards.


no apology necessary, i find it an interesting question. i was aware of things like worldedit but using a pure voxel editor for terrain work is new to me.
i think the relationship is probably reversed here though, it’s more likely that tools like avoyd can be made to export things for use in luanti and/or bonsai.


but those tools are built for minecraft right? this is a different system with (presumably) a different format, and from what i can see, no builtin terrain generation algorithm. it would be easier to just build one in luanti.


how?


luanti is an engine and so is bonsai. i don’t think they can be “used together”.
i assume that “it’s real” thing would have been more impactful if i knew anything about disney parks.
the only documentary i know that has a twist in it.
i mean, it’s equivalent to using a typewriter to edit a printed page. pdf was not designed to be edited.
expecting word to edit pdfs is like expecting excel to edit compiled matlab programs


point being that the active firefox forks are heavily dependent on upstream, just like the active chrome forks. if firefox dies, the forks die, unless they can scramble the 400ish full-time devs seemingly required to keep gecko current.
minecraft has a vanilla launcher too, because the game started out as a java applet so you need a shitton of flags to actually get the game to run normally. also there’s no way to login to an account in the actual game.
anyway, prism is a mod-loading launcher. it integrates with curseforge and modrinth to allow you to install, build and distribute mods and modpacks.