Tomodachi Life sounds like The Sims but with rounded corners.
The author's LinkedIn style usage of emojis repulsed me and had me closing the article.
A real artificial intelligence would be capable of independent and original thought. What we have today are mere plagiarism factories. They need to be called out for what they are.
AI is developing backwards. The simplest organisms eat and find food. More complex ones can smell and sense tremors. After several steps in evolution comes vision and complex thought. AIs that can't smell, can't feel…
> Scott Adams felt the contradictions of nerd-dom more acutely than most. As compensation, he was gifted with two great defense mechanisms. The first was humor (which Freud grouped among the mature, adaptive defenses),…
Typing in all lowercase makes you look more vulnerable, it's a pretty common rhetorical tactic in PR.
[flagged]
I always cut them into slices, then leave them in an airtight plastic container for an hour or two, so the juice can seep out a little.
This analysis totally ignores the power of snappiness. Of being laconic. It's the sort of stuff that works in the walled garden of academia but completely ignores the state of reality, where the average person is so…
Tomodachi Life sounds like The Sims but with rounded corners.
The author's LinkedIn style usage of emojis repulsed me and had me closing the article.
A real artificial intelligence would be capable of independent and original thought. What we have today are mere plagiarism factories. They need to be called out for what they are.
AI is developing backwards. The simplest organisms eat and find food. More complex ones can smell and sense tremors. After several steps in evolution comes vision and complex thought. AIs that can't smell, can't feel…
> Scott Adams felt the contradictions of nerd-dom more acutely than most. As compensation, he was gifted with two great defense mechanisms. The first was humor (which Freud grouped among the mature, adaptive defenses),…
Typing in all lowercase makes you look more vulnerable, it's a pretty common rhetorical tactic in PR.
[flagged]
I always cut them into slices, then leave them in an airtight plastic container for an hour or two, so the juice can seep out a little.
This analysis totally ignores the power of snappiness. Of being laconic. It's the sort of stuff that works in the walled garden of academia but completely ignores the state of reality, where the average person is so…