“buy”
“buy”
problem here was that Google was doing deals to undermine those things
problem with wormholes is that you can send information into the past - so if you receive a message, does that mean you’re predetermined to subsequently send that message?
and how hackers being able to change train software is in any way a less-damaging thing to claim!
depends how big their feet are! you’ll estimate the bearing capacity of the soil (e.g. 100kPa), then divide weight by shoe area to get their pressure on the ground.
Subhead: “apparently they’re being serious” - The Register knows what people think!
Scandinavia and heavy equipment - it’s been a while since ADVideoFilm has posted any examples…
Better use of space - they used to be just six coin cells with a load of empty space for a wire to connect the top connector to bottom of the stack
So does this also mean that glow-in-the-dark watches (the non electronic type) get cheaper?
halfyear includes people trying out different instances; monthly shows just the one(s) they settled on
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“We don’t infringe copyright; The model output is an emergent new thing and not just a recital of its inputs”
“so these questions won’t reveal any copyrighted text then?”
(padme stare)
“right?”
Newspaper: Hackers are announcing a trove of personal data leaked from [company] after a forwarded spreadsheet inadvertently contained more data than the sender realised.
Because a well designed game does not include drudgery
Better remove Ship graveyard simulator from that category…
I think Shapez levels become procedural after a certain number of predetermined ones?
Always wondered why the text model didn’t just put its output through something like MATLAB or Mathematica once it got as far as having something which requires domain-specific tools.
Like when Prof. Moriarty tried it on a quantum physics question and it got as far as writing out the correct formula before failing to actually calculate the result
And The Art of Computer Programming will finally be finished?
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Well that’s one way to deter car usage in future generations.
You could almost call it a “war on motorists”, Mr Sunak?