That is the source material for the book. It was loaded by Jake to Azure Notebooks.
You can load any github repo by creating a Library (a repo basically), and +New / Load from github. It'll load the notebooks, data, etc. You can then run the notebooks.
Cool! Pay me and I"ll build you a linux server with mattermost and git on it. You can self host all the things they're putting together here on keybase. And it's free now, but it won't be for too much longer, soon there'll be freemium and then a full paid service. Because they want you to build an environment and workflow around it, and once you're making money with it you'll gladly pay a bit in a few years or so when you're large enough to afford it.
But until then, I"ll totally build you a self hosted solution. I'll even work remote.
Am I confused on mattermost's feature set or did you miss that end 2 end encryption is the core "product" of Keybase and everything else is addons to that?
Holy moly, that is a helpful link. I had been doing it the old-fashioned way that used the server key. It's so great that browsers added support for logging session keys.
I don't think you should leave with any proof of who you voted for. I'm worried that it could be used by people to influence elections by paying for receipts from certain candidates or by punishing people who are not able to produce the correct receipt.
I think we should return back to paper ballots. When there are witnesses to elections, I don't think any of them are qualified to judge if an election has been done in a honest fashion. This would require experts on the voting equipment where they can guarantee that it has not been tampered with and that is too high a burden and something that complex can not be trusted.
Yes, they don't actually give you a receipt, for this reason.
One way it's done is that after entering your choices on touchscreen, you see the printed receipt through a glass window, and then it's stored so a recount can be done if necessary.
However, an electrically scanned paper ballot seems a lot simpler.
> you see the printed receipt through a glass window
I actually believe this is actually the best possible situation.
The voting machine should print a clear, unambiguous, ballot and on-screen tell you to verify it before you officially "cast" your vote. "If the ballot below does not represent your choices, please click <HERE> to request an attendant."
I'm thinking of this more as having printers that print out an unambiguous completed ballot and less as voting machines that "also print out a copy".
not sure how that helps. if you can verify the hash, it means the baddies can verify the hash as well, which means they can still operate a pay-for-receipts-shows-you-voted-for-our-guy program.
> I don't think you should leave with any proof of who you voted for.
I don't think you should leave without (at least seeing) proof that your votes were properly and accurately recorded.
If that means that you have to be given a "receipt" with the names of those you voted for on it, well, so be it. It isn't like your name and/or any other personally identifiable information would be on it -- just the minimal details needed to achieve the singlemost important purpose: verification.
>>If that means that you have to be given a "receipt" with the names of those you voted for on it, well, so be it. It isn't like your name and/or any other personally identifiable information would be on it -- just the minimal details needed to achieve the singlemost important purpose: verification.
Now imagine cults and other groups that pressure their members into producing those receipts with the correct candidate on them... or else.
That doesn't solve my concern. If your boss at work tells you to go vote and then demands you show your receipt when you get back it wont matter that your name isn't on it. You would be pressure to vote how they told you to.
The proof would be a paper ballot that you turn in. Your actual vote.
In RI --- we mark a paper, and surrender it to the scanner that stores it to a locked box before we exit the polling place.
A printed receipt, from an electronic polling place could just as easily be placed in a secure box prior to leaving.
It's amusing watching "ballot selfies" issue too -- it seems that folks just don't understand how important it is not allowing any coercive force influencing or verifying your vote.
I would assume since these are going to be commercial vehicles Tesla will resurrect or otherwise leverage their battery swap idea. Which fizzled out for private vehicles but would really help extend the range of these trucks.
http://www.teslarati.com/tesla-to-debut-battery-swapping-sta...
Also more of the tractor can hang underneath the trailer so there's the chance for a larger battery capacity. Like this extended tractor (the semi painted green not the flatbeds behind it) in this image that is 22 feet long. http://www.bigtruckguide.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Sout...
I regularly go out for dinner with my partner, and sometimes we sit and talk for 3 hours, not noticing where the time goes. Other times, we sit in silence, enjoy our food, and head home together. And other times, we will sit, chat, and maybe take our phones out for a little while. Don't judge a relationship based on a single observation.
https://jakevdp.github.io/PythonDataScienceHandbook/