I would add: until it doesn’t.
I would add: until it doesn’t.
All accurate, except the Microsoft one. Microsoft makes you pay for enterprise development tools, but not for libraries.
Ah, I misread that as drive to the plane.
They are usually driven from their hotel to the airport by someone else, arranged by the airline.
I do wonder what prevents BlueSky from going the way Twitter did, though.
No wonder with all these off-duty cops I keep hearing about.
Until you have concrete evidence, speculating like this in public lowers you to the same level as Trump’s supporters when they were claiming the previous election was stolen.
If that drone doesn’t have a very valid, emergency services type reason to be there, that would make the operator an irresponsible asshole.
Based on this article, that makes you the asshole in this scenario. TFRs exist for a very good reason, it’s not just big guberment trying to make your life harder.
You’d have to be dead for your name to show up on this list
I don’t need an agreement from my burger place to sell a burger they made for me to someone else without being obligated to tell them it came from my burger place. There’s a lot of things that are iffy with this approach, but rebranding agreements aren’t one of them.
Interesting what this guy and Elon Musk have in common…
And, I’d like to add, fuck Musk.
I have to ask, even though I’m afraid of the answer, exactly how many USB storage devices are you (planning on) hooking up to that poor machine?
LLM is at its core just a text processing tool. For it to be remotely useful when you’re not generating text from nothing, you need data to process. Preferably larger amounts so you appear more useful. Scraping websites like this is a good way to get source data useful for an individual who you’re trying to convince to give you money.
I’m a complete noob at this, but would it be possible for a submarine to cut the cable at the same time and install something to snoop on the data?
Yet somehow you’re arguing to make it worse.
I’m curious why you’d consider it a good conversation if this was the result. Clearly it wasn’t for them.
Yeah that looks like hardware damage, not disk corruption.
Now give me an example of a corporate board at Intel’s scale being responsible when given the choice between being responsible or buttloads of short-term profits.