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Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/20/2023 in all areas

  1. I want too, global moderator 🙂
    4 points
  2. For all the new moderators, keep grinding and show your interest because soon (maybe at the next meeting, idk) we will choose 1-2 for the upgrade at Global Mod.
    3 points
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  4. @Sinan.47 Has Been Added To Our Team Welcome. @BeBoOo Has Been Added To Our Team Welcome. @Dean Ambrose™ Has Been Added To Our Team Welcome.
    2 points
  5. and we are now 11 mods, how good xd congratulations @Josue.- and @Dean Ambrose™ ❤️
    2 points
  6. Congrast guys ❤️ @Dean Ambrose™ @Josue.-
    2 points
  7. Request accepted. Keep your activity like this and don't let us down, take it as a big responsibility. Congrats!
    2 points
  8. غيجي نهار وتلقى كل شي بين يدك😉
    2 points
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  12. Accepted. Welcome with Staff Read Rules.
    1 point
  13. It will be allowed to publish 1 post per week. be careful this is your second time the same mistake next time you will be Warned..
    1 point
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  15. congrts bro, Welcome to CSBD Staff
    1 point
  16. Hello @nihat Your Tag - Request has been: #rejected. Reason: You didn't played 10 Hours yet. Information: Play 10 Hours and Request again please. Best regards Founder VollmeR.
    1 point
  17. congrts bro, Welcome to CSBD Staff
    1 point
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  22. Welcome to CSBD Staff, please keep your activity like this and try to join atleast 1 more project. I have faith in you! 😄 Congrats!
    1 point
  23. Sam Altman is joining Microsoft, the tech-giant has announced, ending speculation he might return to OpenAI just 48 hours after his chaotic ousting. Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella wrote on X, formerly Twitter, that Mr Altman would be joining Microsoft to lead "a new advanced AI research team". Meanwhile, ex-Twitch CEO Emmett Shear will become OpenAI's new boss. Writing on X, he called the job a "once-in-a-lifetime opportunity". But he added the way Mr Altman had been sacked was "handled very badly" and "seriously damaged our trust". Mr Altman, 38, helped launch the firm - best known for creating the po[CENSORED]r ChatGPT bot - and has become one of the most influential figures in the fast-growing generative artificial intelligence (AI) space. So when the board dismissed him on Friday, after saying it had lost confidence in him, it sent shockwaves through the industry, and set in train a chaotic series of events. AI boss Sam Altman ousted after board loses confidence The extraordinary firing of an AI superstar A number of Silicon Valley bosses offered support, including former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt who called Mr Altman "a hero of mine", and there was a backlash from investors, prompting speculation that Mr Altman might even be reinstated. Instead, though Mr Altman is joining Microsoft which has invested billions in the ChatGPT maker. Responding to the post by Microsoft boss Mr Nadella confirming his new job, Mr Altman posted "the mission continues". 'Embarrassing circus' Dan Ives of investment firm Wedbush Securities says Microsoft has ended up being strengthened - but the episode reflected badly on OpenAI. They were "at the kids poker table and thought they won until Nadella and Microsoft took this all over in a World Series of Poker move for the ages", he wrote. "The embarrassing circus show over the weekend at OpenAI was finally taken over by the adults in the room." Reports this weekend suggested Mr Altman's sacking had angered current and former employees who were worried it might affect an upcoming $86bn (£69bn) share sale. A number - including senior executives - have posted the same message on X, which reads "OpenAI is nothing without its people". OpenAI's new boss Emmett Shear is the former head and co-founder of video streaming service Twitch. A memo to OpenAI's staff said he had a "unique mix of skills, expertise and relationships that will drive OpenAI forward". In spite of now being at the helm of one of the world's most powerful AI companies - and being a self-described "techno-optimist" - Mr Shear has expressed concerns about what he sees as the potential existential threat posed by the technology. "It's like someone invented a way to make 10x [ten times] more powerful fusion bombs out of sand and bleach, that anyone could do at home", he told the Logan Bartlett Show podcast in June. The exact reasons for Mr Altman's sacking by the board remain unclear. On Friday, when OpenAI announced it was firing Mr Altman, it accused him of not being "consistently candid in his communications with the board, hindering its ability to exercise its responsibilities" - but did not specify what he is alleged to have not been candid about. Mr Shear has addressed some of the speculation on the subject. "The board did *not* remove Sam over any specific disagreement on safety, their reasoning was completely different from that. I'm not crazy enough to take this job without board support for commercializing our awesome models", he wrote on X. But Mr Shear committed to hire an independent investigator "to dig into the entire process". Link
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  26. Hello The easiest way to review permission/ownership values on a directory is via SSH. Check to make sure the FTP user has access to that directory, and that it's not owned by "root" or some other user. Other info
    1 point
  27. Voted. Best regards Elder Gobo-loco
    1 point
  28. The world is on an "unstoppable" shift towards renewable energy but the phase down of fossil fuels is not happening quickly enough, a new report says. The International Energy Agency, the global energy watchdog, predicted renewables would provide half of the world's electricity by 2030. But it warned that emissions were still too high to prevent temperatures rising above a key threshold of 1.5C. And the report said investment in fossil fuels needed to be cut in half. What is net zero and how are the UK and other countries doing? Record surge in days over key 1.5C warming limit The Paris-based energy agency's report, released on Tuesday, was not all doom and gloom. It praised the significant progress countries had made in expanding renewable energy and supporting consumers with the shift to electric vehicles and heat pumps instead of gas boilers. The report said the growth in clean energy and technologies was "impressive". In 2020, one in 25 cars sold was electric. Just three years later this number has risen to one in five. "The transition to clean energy is happening worldwide and it's unstoppable. It's not a question of 'if', it's just a matter of 'how soon' - and the sooner the better for all of us," said International Energy Agency (IEA) Executive Director Fatih Birol. The report recognised that oil and gas would continue to play a role in the world's economy and that maintaining investment was "essential". But it said at the moment, current levels of funding were double what they should be. "Governments, companies and investors need to get behind clean energy transitions rather than hindering them," Mr Birol said. In what appeared to be a criticism of the UK and other governments' decisions to open new oil fields, Mr Birol added: "claims that oil and gas represent safe or secure choices for the world's energy and climate future look weaker than ever." Earlier this year Rosebank oil field off the coast of Scotland was given the go-ahead amidst much controversy. Environmental campaigners argued the decision was not compliant with the UK's climate change plans. But Claire Coutinho, the government's minister for energy, said at the time: "[The government] will continue to back the UK's oil and gas industry to underpin our energy security".A spokesperson for the Department of Energy Security and Net Zero said in response to the IEA report that the independent Climate Change Committee recognised oil and gas would continue to be part of the UK's energy mix on the path to net zero. The world's reliance on fossil fuels means that we are still on track to be facing a global average temperature rise of 2.4C by 2100. That compares with the pledge made in 2015 when political leaders agreed on limiting temperature rises to "well below" 2C and to make every effort to keep it under 1.5C, to avoid the most dangerous impacts of climate change. Record surge in days over key 1.5C warming limit World leaders will meet in Dubai at the end of November for COP28 - the UN climate summit - where it is hoped further commitments to tackling climate change will be made, including potentially agreeing to phase out "unabated" fossil fuels. Abatement refers to technologies, which are not yet available at scale, that could capture the emissions released when fossil fuels are burned. The IEA report also reflected concerns about the Middle East. The agency said it was not yet clear what impact rising tensions would have on world energy markets. But the IEA warned that it meant further uncertainty compounding an already unsettled global economy - Middle Eastern countries, such as Iran and Saudi Arabia - account for 67% of world oil reserves. https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-67198206
    1 point
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  33. For now I'm PRO but I expect atleast a little bit more activity from you, just try to be constant.
    1 point
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