If those sites think that being linked to is a service they’re providing Google (which demanding payment implies), then Google is just fulfilling their wishes.
If those sites think that being linked to is a service they’re providing Google (which demanding payment implies), then Google is just fulfilling their wishes.
“AI” long predates LLM bullshit.
Hallucinations aren’t a problem with the actually medically useful tools he’s talking about. Machine learning is being used to draw extra attention to abnormalities that humans may miss.
It’s completely unrelated to LLM nonsense.
Except the summary is almost always literally the content the sites ask the sites linking them to show.
They have “please show this preview instead of a boring plain link” code.
Magic damage felt spikier than other classes to me in Elden Ring, to the point early and mid-game where there were segments where I would run out of magic before getting through crowds even with all blue flasks.
Hogwarts Legacy. Combat is fast and brutal.
The side stuff feels kind of bland mechanically and something about the open world doesn’t capture me like I want it to, but it’s pretty good pure magic combat.
As part of its earnings call, Unity revealed that it’ had $1.4 billion’s year-over-year revenue for the quarter fell to $446.5 million from $544.2.
🤷🏼♀️
Of course they aren’t, because they’re not required to, and money is money.
The fun part is that if it actually were restricted to collecting data for law enforcement? It would be a pretty obvious (though probably still not enforced because the courts suck) violation of your rights against searches without due process of law. But because it’s “publicly available”, they can pretend that it’s not really a search.
They’re struggling because they’re not learning, or learning how to learn.
LLM outputs aren’t reliable. Using one for your research is doing the exact opposite of the steps that are required to make good decisions.
The prerequisite to making a good decision is learning the information relevant to the decision, then you use that information to determine your options and likely outcomes of those paths. The internalization of the problem space is fundamental to the process. You need to actually understand the space you’re making a decision about in order to make a good decision. The effort is the point.
Evaluating sources and consolidating the information they contain into concise, organized structures is how your brain learns. The notes aren’t the goal of note taking. They’re simply the process you use to internalize the information.
There’s a place for more formal writing.
But the point of using precise, formal language is the intent behind it. If you’re just RNG-ing it it loses all meaning.
They’re asking for a jury trial. That’s what I’m referring to.
The scary part is that they think (and are probably correct) that they have a good chance of convincing a random jury that it’s totally fine.
Holy hell.
Even by the standard of “all software patents are nonsense”, these are a fucking joke.
It was less than 6 months ago when I finally cancelled.
Not just every gaming session. Literally every single time I switched games. Not one single exception.
I was on the founder plan for a while because 50/year to keep an eye on the state of the tech wasn’t a huge deal, and there was plenty of stuff my MacBook wasn’t really powerful enough for but could tolerate the lag.
But the whole log-in process was way too much of a barrier for me to actually use it routinely.
You also have to re-log in to Steam every fucking time.
It was wider, longer, and those bars were about the same size, but the pro was 3 instead of 2 compared to the original non slim.
The implied uncertainty was the noise part. Neither was enough to really pay attention to in a living room type environment, so I have no idea.
It’s definitely not smaller.
I’m not an Xbox guy.
But if the PS Portal was $400 and played PS4 games natively plus did streaming like it does now, I would have been all over it. I like my steam deck, but there’s a benefit to games hyper optimized to one system.