Tensorflow: v0.11.0rc2 OS: CENTOS 6.8 (No root access)
- The
tensorboardSLURM.sh
can be run with the following command to start a tensorboard server on a SLURM cluster:
sbatch --array=0-0 tensorboardSLURM.sh
// ==UserScript== | |
// @name OpenAI GPT-2 Detector | |
// @namespace https://www.jolibrain.com/demo/openai-gpt2-detector-userscript | |
// @description Paragraph of text reports the GPT-2 log prob of that text | |
// @author Alexandre Girard <alex.girard@jolibrain.com> | |
// @version 1.2 | |
// @grant none | |
// @include https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/* | |
// ==/UserScript== |
Short version: I strongly do not recommend using any of these providers. You are, of course, free to use whatever you like. My TL;DR advice: Roll your own and use Algo or Streisand. For messaging & voice, use Signal. For increased anonymity, use Tor for desktop (though recognize that doing so may actually put you at greater risk), and Onion Browser for mobile.
This mini-rant came on the heels of an interesting twitter discussion: https://twitter.com/kennwhite/status/591074055018582016
So you've cloned somebody's repo from github, but now you want to fork it and contribute back. Never fear! | |
Technically, when you fork "origin" should be your fork and "upstream" should be the project you forked; however, if you're willing to break this convention then it's easy. | |
* Off the top of my head * | |
1. Fork their repo on Github | |
2. In your local, add a new remote to your fork; then fetch it, and push your changes up to it | |
git remote add my-fork git@github...my-fork.git |