> In the memo, Shah said employees should be prepared to work longer hours and not be afraid to let work impinge on their personal lives. I wonder what executives should prepare for. Presumably continuing to contribute…
Oh god they're russian. That means they're evil!
> States can make bad calls in the short term but you’ll often find they are rational decisions regardless of if they don’t turn out well. This line of reasoning only makes sense when compared with counterfactuals,…
> I made a statement considered factual by political science/international relations This is typically termed a "belief".
Well, it's impossible to say without the opportunity to experiment. It's certainly difficult to believe nobody would take advantage of this if they could.
I have yet to see evidence of this lol
Many single-unit family home neighborhoods do not have an HOA—people just get along or take their concerns to the town itself. I mostly associate HOAs with suburbia.
Given that it also functioned as sort of an uncomfortable couch—not really. Besides, it's way further behind in basically every respect but compute.
If you don't have an HOA, consider not leaf blowing or raking at all. There's not much point and local insect populations probably need them to weather winter.
This just straight up doesn't make sense to me—states aren't monolithic entities or rational actors. I think it's easier to say that the modern state exists at the behest of capital, at least in the west.
> I wonder if there's a way to prevent the growth at all costs that is demanded by the financial markets. Growth and private investment are part and parcel.
Ads (along with nazis and pedophiles) are the root of almost all issues on the internet and it looks like a very bleak future if we can't build an alternative form of compensation into our protocols. I don't understand…
> The whole field has been referred to as AI for decades Yea, everyone else has been laughing at you for this the whole time. It's a dumb term for anything but encouraging rubes to fork over cash for stuff that looks…
> I'm not so keen on forcing successful businesses to ruin themselves I don't really have a problem with that if they can't play nicely with others. Businesses come and go. But ultimately companies need some incentive…
> There is a belief, entirely understandable, that more and more frequent symbols of our intent to retaliate will keep the North at bay How's deterrence working on those other fronts, Uncle Sam? Have you tried…
> inside platforms This just means private market. There's nothing special about the term "platform" that changes the feudal nature of this. The tenants compete but the operator has coerced exclusion on collecting its…
TBH as an app developer myself I'd far prefer an option to publish and make transactions outside of Apple's purview than any kind of concern about piracy or meddling.
> No legal precedent supports the idea that the Android or iOS app stores are monopolies under US law. I probably shouldn't have used the term. It's still a very negative sign about our future that's worth fighting.
> Or because those two companies created those platforms. I don't see why they owe it to other companies to lower their prices. It's up to us to make them give us better tools for us. This isn't a natural thing that…
> clear what a monopoly means in that case Well, it's bad regardless of the concept of monopolies. Private markets are not a good sign.
> Apple does not have a monopoly in that market Why do we act like there is a "mobile game market" when there are clearly two distinct major private markets, both monopolized by definition of private control over basic…
> What does seem new is people trying to argue that ML isn't AI. Well, ML is a well-defined class of processes, calling it AI seems a little disingenuous. Is a beam search still considered AI? How about Markov chains?…
> The Bluesky app has very few features, This doesn't really matter. It's replicated all of the features that matter, twitter has very few user-facing features that matter anyway. The only thing preventing Blu Sky from…
Is anyone denying this? You seem to be the only person introducing complications into the electrification of Calgary by having a weird polemic about EV cars you can't articulate.
> Generative AI can copy the style, if they's all you have as an artist, then it's barely art TBH. How could you possibly expect this sort of worldview to reflect well upon you as a person?
> In the memo, Shah said employees should be prepared to work longer hours and not be afraid to let work impinge on their personal lives. I wonder what executives should prepare for. Presumably continuing to contribute…
Oh god they're russian. That means they're evil!
> States can make bad calls in the short term but you’ll often find they are rational decisions regardless of if they don’t turn out well. This line of reasoning only makes sense when compared with counterfactuals,…
> I made a statement considered factual by political science/international relations This is typically termed a "belief".
Well, it's impossible to say without the opportunity to experiment. It's certainly difficult to believe nobody would take advantage of this if they could.
I have yet to see evidence of this lol
Many single-unit family home neighborhoods do not have an HOA—people just get along or take their concerns to the town itself. I mostly associate HOAs with suburbia.
Given that it also functioned as sort of an uncomfortable couch—not really. Besides, it's way further behind in basically every respect but compute.
If you don't have an HOA, consider not leaf blowing or raking at all. There's not much point and local insect populations probably need them to weather winter.
This just straight up doesn't make sense to me—states aren't monolithic entities or rational actors. I think it's easier to say that the modern state exists at the behest of capital, at least in the west.
> I wonder if there's a way to prevent the growth at all costs that is demanded by the financial markets. Growth and private investment are part and parcel.
Ads (along with nazis and pedophiles) are the root of almost all issues on the internet and it looks like a very bleak future if we can't build an alternative form of compensation into our protocols. I don't understand…
> The whole field has been referred to as AI for decades Yea, everyone else has been laughing at you for this the whole time. It's a dumb term for anything but encouraging rubes to fork over cash for stuff that looks…
> I'm not so keen on forcing successful businesses to ruin themselves I don't really have a problem with that if they can't play nicely with others. Businesses come and go. But ultimately companies need some incentive…
> There is a belief, entirely understandable, that more and more frequent symbols of our intent to retaliate will keep the North at bay How's deterrence working on those other fronts, Uncle Sam? Have you tried…
> inside platforms This just means private market. There's nothing special about the term "platform" that changes the feudal nature of this. The tenants compete but the operator has coerced exclusion on collecting its…
TBH as an app developer myself I'd far prefer an option to publish and make transactions outside of Apple's purview than any kind of concern about piracy or meddling.
> No legal precedent supports the idea that the Android or iOS app stores are monopolies under US law. I probably shouldn't have used the term. It's still a very negative sign about our future that's worth fighting.
> Or because those two companies created those platforms. I don't see why they owe it to other companies to lower their prices. It's up to us to make them give us better tools for us. This isn't a natural thing that…
> clear what a monopoly means in that case Well, it's bad regardless of the concept of monopolies. Private markets are not a good sign.
> Apple does not have a monopoly in that market Why do we act like there is a "mobile game market" when there are clearly two distinct major private markets, both monopolized by definition of private control over basic…
> What does seem new is people trying to argue that ML isn't AI. Well, ML is a well-defined class of processes, calling it AI seems a little disingenuous. Is a beam search still considered AI? How about Markov chains?…
> The Bluesky app has very few features, This doesn't really matter. It's replicated all of the features that matter, twitter has very few user-facing features that matter anyway. The only thing preventing Blu Sky from…
Is anyone denying this? You seem to be the only person introducing complications into the electrification of Calgary by having a weird polemic about EV cars you can't articulate.
> Generative AI can copy the style, if they's all you have as an artist, then it's barely art TBH. How could you possibly expect this sort of worldview to reflect well upon you as a person?