I didn't realize they finally added a way to sort of control this behavior. It's under Languages in the YouTube settings. Similarly there is a control for captions languages under Captions/Subtitles.
I think this is likely a process problem. Having been a safety officer for a lab in the past, there are two types of injury reports. One for regular injuries, you have a week to report. Serious injuries need to be reported within 24 hours. These are death and amputation injuries (there might be more, it's been a few years).
Anyway I suspect they missed the deadline because it slipped through the cracks.
NIST maintains several time standards. Gaithersburg MD is still up and I assume Hawaii is as well. Other than potential damage to equipment from loss of power (turbo molecular vacuum pumps and oil diffusion pumps might end up failing in interesting ways if not shut down properly) it will just take some time for the clocks to be recalibrated against the other NIST standards.
I tried to use an LLM for assistance with reversing some embedded code and agree with this. I had built up a pretty decent model of what was going on before starting. It was able to explain what was going on in this one perplexing function quite well but when I'd feed it decent sized blocks of code it would hallucinate like crazy. But I was quite happy with the performance at finding the basic library and ROM functions and annotating them correctly. I think it is all in how you use it.
There is another source, SNI certs showing up on a server or load balancer during the TLS handshake. When the client tries to connect to a server using SNI without indicating the server, some will reply with a default or give a list of valid server names.
While the esp32 is only going to be able to do 2.4 GHz. KrakenSDR can be used in a similar way to do spatial mapping of other frequencies. There was a passive RADAR project for it as well that I think was taken down because of ITAR. https://www.krakenrf.com/
Totally agree. A cheap GPS + Raspberry Pi makes an incredibly capable little NTP server capable of serving 100k clients(after you block the bad actors). The local network is down in the 10s of microseconds. Anything more accurate would need PTO and significantly more investment, but that is more accuracy than I'd ever need.
Absolutely. Additional benefits on RasPi's is the lower power usage which makes the power capacity folks in the datacenter happy. They are also cheap enough every DC can have two of them so that application and system logs do not drift even if there is a prolonged network outage. There are PDU's that can switch between A and B side power for single power supply devices like these.