Yes, the whole thing is especially frustrating because the app was quite nice. Harriette did a really good job really quickly.
Yes, the whole thing is especially frustrating because the app was quite nice. Harriette did a really good job really quickly.
I think governmental organizations should do the same. It’s absurd that FEMA or whoever essentially has to rely of Elon’s goodwill.
Yes, that’s pretty much where I’m at.
If the quality of AI-generated content degrades to the point where it’s useless that is also fine with me.
So in order for data to be useful to AIs, AI-generated content will have to be flagged as such. Sounds good to me.
I was thinking pretty much the same thing. He’s got the sensibility of a teenage boy. He thinks things like the letter X and the color black are totally cool, and he thinks naming his company “Space-Sex” and one of its spacecraft “Big Fuckin’ Rocket” is the height of humor.
Palm Pilots seemed so futuristic back then.
That’s just anonymized data. I own a few domains, and none of the whois information points to me personally.
One reason might be that they couldn’t even be bothered to say what the moment they enjoyed was.
Yeah, I think it was Scorsese who said that he did “one for them, and one for me”.
I remember Damien Chazelle saying that they had considered an intermission for Babylon but that there was no natural break point in the story. Having seen it, I can state with perfect confidence that it does contain an appropriate point for an intermission at just the right time. I suspect that Chazelle just couldn’t bear the thought of the audience not watching his opus straight through.
I’ve stayed off it since the blackout started, but I did visit a sub yesterday that I used to read regularly about a topic I haven’t seen covered here. I left after a few minutes because it really seemed like no one there had anything intelligent or interesting to say, but maybe I’ve forgotten just how much crap I used to scroll through before landing on something decent. Either way, I’m OK with not going back.
I wish the micropayments model people were proposing twenty years ago had taken off. I don’t have any interest in subscribing to The New York Times, for example, because I just don’t read it very much, but I wouldn’t object to paying a few cents every time I happened to read one of their articles.
Yeah, I don’t use Reddit any longer, but it was really great that there were active subs devoted to incredibly obscure topics. If you wanted to talk about something, chances were that thousands of other people did too.