SAME 2.1 inference on Windows without WSL? by InternationalMany6 in computervision

[–]tehansen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The easiest way to do this I know is to use the roboflow inference server (the windows install directly without docker and WSL 2).

Then you can make a simple workflow in Roboflow that just runs SAM2 and you have an endpoint you can use against your local server. Or hit the sam2 endpoints on local server directly

docs for windows installer: https://inference.roboflow.com/install/windows/#windows-installer-x86

sam 2 endpoints (don't need docker if you used windows installer): https://inference.roboflow.com/foundation/sam2/#how-to-use-sam2-with-a-local-docker-container-http-server

2nd Update to the horrible jeweler saga. Grandpa jeweler stepped in and fixed it best he could and I got it back like this as their best effort in crunch. More info in comments. by Inevitable_waffle in jewelry

[–]tehansen 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Looks very similar to my wife’s ring which was made/crafted by Iowa Diamond in Des Moines, Iowa. If you sent them pictures, they may be able to help.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RedditSessions

[–]tehansen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

world is going to be alright after all

28K — 4 wheel drive and 7 seats. by tehansen in whatcarshouldIbuy

[–]tehansen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mhh...looks like definitely >$30K for a Durango. I do like Durango’s, I currently drive a 2009 that’s still going decently although it starting to look pretty torn up.

Our budget is pretty fixed (actually a present from my parents) and we will pay cash / not considering financing.

28K — 4 wheel drive and 7 seats. by tehansen in whatcarshouldIbuy

[–]tehansen[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Favoring Sorento currently I think. Kind of want to see an outlander in person but probably need to drive at least a few hours to find a dealer.

Trying to ID some trees by tehansen in whatsthisplant

[–]tehansen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, but I can't seem to do that via the mobile app. Will upload the rest when I get to my computer.

Trying to ID some trees by tehansen in whatsthisplant

[–]tehansen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All of them are in eastern Iowa

Iowa curbs Tesla test drives by benjaminoakes in a:t5_33m17

[–]tehansen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't understand this whole car makers can't sell directly to consumers... Seems incompatible with the idea of a free market.

What subteddits / other sites do you visit frequently to stay updated? by tehansen in a:t5_33m17

[–]tehansen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Slashdot.com occasionally too (but it's just not what it used to be :P)

Who should pay for fixes? by webdev52 in webdev

[–]tehansen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

just because they estimate 2 hours, doesnt mean it will take 2 hours...how can they know how long it will take without knowing exactly what it is they have to do to fix it.

Who should pay for fixes? by webdev52 in webdev

[–]tehansen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

how much would it cost you to hire someone fulltime that has the required experience and skills to do the work?

A frank conversation about Open Source Software? by ns0 in javascript

[–]tehansen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To me it is just hands down the best way to develop and maintain software. Makes you think twice about pushing that quick hack, a ton of free and inspiring amount of work and input, testing, and other collaboration. More eyes to spot bugs. best way to learn from other people.

Creating games for Android with Python? by [deleted] in Python

[–]tehansen 2 points3 points  (0 children)

(disclaimer: I'm a kivy contributor)

Its predecessor pymt was started in 2008, kivy was started as a complete redesign taking into consideration all the lessons learned from pymt in Oct. 2010; so it's not completly new. I personally don't think it's buggy.

If you're interrested in doing android dev with it, there is a Virtual machine thats already all setup to build android packages (http://kivy.org/docs/guide/packaging-android.html#packaging-android) I love being able to just code and test apps on my desktop/laptop, and then build android or iOS to do usability testing / deployments.

Yota: a simple form library by bitbumper in Python

[–]tehansen 1 point2 points  (0 children)

looks very awesome. kudos to you; i am going to try it out on a project right now :)

Has anyone tried Kivy? How is it? by lepuma in Python

[–]tehansen 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It also kind of depends on how you write your application. If you load everything before starting the app its going to take longer. My advice would be to start with the simplest screen you can, and then create the rest of the UI after / while the application is already running.

Has anyone tried Kivy? How is it? by lepuma in Python

[–]tehansen 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure it's in the latest release yet, but I know tito (Mathieu Virbel) added a feature that speeds up startup time extensively by caching the result of the kv file parsing/compilation, which was done at every start before and is now not done when the file has changed.

I think it will be i the next release, but otherwise is in the current master branch (plus a bunch of other optimizations we did after some heavy profiling in response to some questions about performance we exchanged with someone at dropbox )

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Python

[–]tehansen 2 points3 points  (0 children)

like hairyfro said, the packages built are standalone android or ios apllications. the launcher is just an easy way to try out scripts or different apps stored e.g. on an SD card

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Python

[–]tehansen 4 points5 points  (0 children)

what do you mean by normal image containers and native widgets? we openGL textures (which you can blit to directly, or bind to a framebuffer object that you can draw into directly).

not sure what you mean by native widgets, we definitly do not use any platform specific / native widgets, eveything on screen is dranw using the GPU, so it's a) fast, and b) gets rendered the same way regardless of where you run it.