Wouldn't the compiler achieve hat by inlining?
IMO, the main connection between all of these is that humans are really bad at estimating our own skill. And even if we can estimate our own skill, we would need to compare it to a programmer with the same number of…
It's likely using a nearest neighbor or tree search; it might take a billion instructions to process a single photo and another billion to do the nearest neighbor search.
It might also be why the US had the dot com and unicorn bubble. And note that Twitter is not, and has never been, profitable.
The creators of the anime are OK with it. People in Japan (or, as the epithet you call them, "people of color") are OK with it. Most of the people watching are OK with it. Maybe the whole thing is overblown by people…
"The story doesn't talk about race, it talks about sci fi ideas." "Ugh, so you're trying to justify race bending?"
They lied because they claimed the emails weren't being scanned: "which means your school's content is not processed by Google's advertising systems"
You're missing the point. Lockheed and Boeing had initial failures when each company was started. It's not like Boeing put up rockets on day one without a problem. Then, when each company approaches stability with their…
The author makes a huge leap by making assumptions about intention. Some men may have wanted to give tips because they didn't trust management. Others may have done so because tipping is a social norm. And yet others…
But here's the thing: drawing the line between "conservatism" and "liberal" is arbitrary. Would you say that 100% of conservative beliefs are false and that 100% of liberal beliefs are true? The whole point of my…
Practically nobody is right 100% of the time, which is why you shouldn't put people in charge of censoring information.
> The Facebook CEO was overheard responding that "we need to do some work" on curtailing anti-immigrant posts about the refugee crisis. "Are you working on this?" Merkel asked in English, to which Zuckerberg replied in…
Benghazi was the result of a YouTube video! We're not spying on your emails! I never sent classified information on that server! Drone strikes only hit terrorists! There are no secret "kill lists"! With this insurance…
Or perhaps perception of "empirical reality" is shaped by existing biases, causing them to be denied outright, resulting in an echo chamber that disproportionately affected conservative positions.
Or Facebook has learned the art of Plausible Deniability. If the bias happens during hiring (by preferring candidates who naturally lean left), then Facebook merely needs to give them curation power without giving…
In what way?
Wouldn't the compiler achieve hat by inlining?
IMO, the main connection between all of these is that humans are really bad at estimating our own skill. And even if we can estimate our own skill, we would need to compare it to a programmer with the same number of…
It's likely using a nearest neighbor or tree search; it might take a billion instructions to process a single photo and another billion to do the nearest neighbor search.
It might also be why the US had the dot com and unicorn bubble. And note that Twitter is not, and has never been, profitable.
The creators of the anime are OK with it. People in Japan (or, as the epithet you call them, "people of color") are OK with it. Most of the people watching are OK with it. Maybe the whole thing is overblown by people…
"The story doesn't talk about race, it talks about sci fi ideas." "Ugh, so you're trying to justify race bending?"
They lied because they claimed the emails weren't being scanned: "which means your school's content is not processed by Google's advertising systems"
You're missing the point. Lockheed and Boeing had initial failures when each company was started. It's not like Boeing put up rockets on day one without a problem. Then, when each company approaches stability with their…
The author makes a huge leap by making assumptions about intention. Some men may have wanted to give tips because they didn't trust management. Others may have done so because tipping is a social norm. And yet others…
But here's the thing: drawing the line between "conservatism" and "liberal" is arbitrary. Would you say that 100% of conservative beliefs are false and that 100% of liberal beliefs are true? The whole point of my…
Practically nobody is right 100% of the time, which is why you shouldn't put people in charge of censoring information.
> The Facebook CEO was overheard responding that "we need to do some work" on curtailing anti-immigrant posts about the refugee crisis. "Are you working on this?" Merkel asked in English, to which Zuckerberg replied in…
Benghazi was the result of a YouTube video! We're not spying on your emails! I never sent classified information on that server! Drone strikes only hit terrorists! There are no secret "kill lists"! With this insurance…
Or perhaps perception of "empirical reality" is shaped by existing biases, causing them to be denied outright, resulting in an echo chamber that disproportionately affected conservative positions.
Or Facebook has learned the art of Plausible Deniability. If the bias happens during hiring (by preferring candidates who naturally lean left), then Facebook merely needs to give them curation power without giving…
In what way?