🎵 If I could turn back time… 🎵
This reminds me of my old phone. I downloaded a podcast on it that had a shock-opener and for some reason was always “the next thing” the sound/music player wanted to play. So many times, by accidental touch inputs or clicking the headphone button, or the like, my phone would randomly scream: "WHO DOESN’T LIKE TO PEE IN THE SINK!?!?!”
Double-twist-back: it’s not under a special TLD, so you can transfer it to another registrar.
It might tell you to go a way that is unsafe, blocked, impassable, flooded, etc.
Both practically and theoretically, it might be impossible. It basically comes down to trusting trust. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SJ7lOus1FzQ
To assume that a GPT is right is to assume everything on the internet is right, as from that it arose.
To the victor goes the scholarship.
Then I suppose the question is reduced to how one should select the 5 people! :)
I would suggest getting an ortholinear keyboard. When I first switched to a Kinesis advantage, the FIRST thing I noticed was how many terrible habits I had of hitting a key with the wrong finger (even twisting my hand about, if you can believe that). Having keys in line with actual finger geometry cured that mess up real quick!
Perhaps more important is to have devices start or fall open… if the OEM has lost interest in it, let others support the device. Make ewaste valuable and avoidable.
I assume that is the intended purpose of the wago connector over the hot line.
I’m not talking about one-offs and the assessment noise floor, more like: “ChatGPT broke the Turing test” (as is claimed). It used to be something we tried to attain, and now we don’t even bother trying to make GPT seem human… we actually train them to say otherwise lest people forget. We figuratively pole-vaulted over the turing test and are now on the other side of it, as if it was a point on a timeline instead of an academic procedure.
The natural general hype is not new… I even see it in 1970’s scifi. It’s like once something pierced the long-thought-impossible turing test, decades of hype pressure suddenly and freely flowed.
There is also an unnatural hype (that with one breakthrough will come another) and that the next one might yield a technocratic singularity to the first-mover: money, market dominance, and control.
Which brings the tertiary effect (closer to your question)… companies are so quickly and blindly eating so many billions of dollars of first-mover costs that the corporate copium wants to believe there will be a return (or at least cost defrayal)… so you get a bunch of shitty AI products, and pressure towards them.
No, Neo. When you’re ready… you wont need a lighter.
A twist on Oliver Twist with Churro twists.
NGL… I kinda want to tell someone to reduce their beanage without any context, and walk away.
Well, if they are neatly hung and countable, I have too many. If they are in a wash basin dissolved in acid (akin to refried beans), then maybe I have too much?
tachypsychia? bradypsychia?
Guilt by statistical association… (i.e. word distance).
Some context: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/105-it-could-happen-here-30717896/episode/the-uaw-staff-purge-216613592/