Since MOSFETs have a gate capacitance you’d want to limit the inrush of current from the output of a microcontroller to prevent it from getting damaged prematurely. That’s what gate resistors are usually good for....
As long as it fully saturates i thiink it’s fine, i’ve personally only had issues with too slow switching when i switch the mosfet many times a second, or when i didn’t give a high enough voltage to fully saturate it, both of which usually led to a smoky mosfet
I saw a video of republicans outraged because someone was apparently trying to change the voting system to use ranked voting, and this would destroy the two-party system (yt link) which apparently would be a horrible thing to happen
Strange that they worship the founding fathers so much and insist that the system they put in place is perfect and must never be changed when John Adams wrote (google books link):
There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.
Won’t the gifts also be a mere probabilitywave, and observing the space under the sciencemas tree would cause it to collapse into a single gift at a single location?
The moderation on any platform is inconsistent and arbitrary, it’s done by humans after all
with lemmy it’s at least driven by volunteers as you say, and we have the option to switch or create our own community/instance if we don’t like the moderation 👍
A buddy was living with me for like two years or so, we had a lot of network issues, suddenly slowing down, not having nearly the speed we were supposed to,
Not long before he moved out i saw his torrent stats, while staying with me he had downloaded about 100GB, and seeded around 700TB!
This son of a gun had disabled any rate limit and been seeding at full capacity for two goddamn years, i haven’t had any network issues since
Have you looked at the project that spins up multiple LLM “identities” where they are “told” the issue to solve, one is asked to generate code for it, the others “critique” it, it generates new code based on the feedback, then it can automatically run it, if it fails it gets the error message so it can fix the issues, and only once it has generated code that works and is “accepted” by the other identities, it is given back to you
It sounds a bit silly, but it turns out to work quite well apparently, critiquing code is apparently easier than generating it, and iterating on code based on critiques and runtime feedback is much easier than producing correct code in one go
MOSFET gate resistor
Since MOSFETs have a gate capacitance you’d want to limit the inrush of current from the output of a microcontroller to prevent it from getting damaged prematurely. That’s what gate resistors are usually good for....
6÷2(1+2) (programming.dev)
zeta.one/viral-math/...
America: Getting ready for another election. Rest of the world: (lemmy.ca)
there still are too many cars in german cities (feddit.de)
Check mate atheists (lemmy.world)
Title (lemmy.world)
Linus does not fuck around (lemmy.one)
An oldie, but a goodie
Not noice (sh.itjust.works)
Radical Honesty (mander.xyz)
:wq! (lemmy.world)
Helping with the cleaning (s13.gifyu.com)
What's your solder of choice? (images2.imgbox.com)
I recently came to the realization that I’ve been kinda punishing myself with cheap no-name solder that is really difficult to work with....
Not mocking cobol devs but yall are severely underpaid for keeping fintech alive (lemmy.world)
He's bigger, faster, and stronger too. (startrek.website)
this AI thing (lemmy.world)
Teehee (lemmy.world)
Yummy Mummy (lemmy.world)
4chan prepared me for this debate 😏 (media.kbin.social)
Plummeting interest rate (startrek.website)