You could ask Claude where it got it. GPT believes it picked it up from early 1990s RAND Assumption-Based Planning vocabulary.
If you're looking for farmers who aren't averse to tech, there are a number with YouTube channels. They're also the sort who love to talk to people. That may skew their opinions from the norm, of course.
The trick for trees is capillaries, which change the equation. The 10 meter limit only applies to larger columns. With capillaries there's a high negative tension that allows evaporation from leaves to pull the xylem…
Not flat between the wheel wells (42.9"), but on top of them. There's a photo (don't know if it's real though). https://www.slateforums.com/forum/threads/slate-truck-dimens...
"Ads may appear for users on the Free and Go plans" and "we will not show ads in accounts where the user tells us or we predict that they are under 18" Could be that based on your prompts it had just decided you were an…
rlwimi was a nice one, especially for emulators. And it also had eieio, Enforce In-Order Execution of I/O.
It's unrelated to the book, other than the title.
The goal here is neutral buoyancy when in gravity so that it behaves as though there were no gravity. Put a bag of water in water and it floats like the rest of the water, gravity or no.
In System Settings > Keyboard Shortcuts > App Shortcuts, add the shortcut: app Safari, name "Quit Safari", command-option-Q. This will leave command-Q doing nothing, yet still allow you to quit. Repeat for other apps.
That outfit was typical of clowns in 1890, and often used in the opera Pagliacci about a clown. [0] <http://1890swriters.blogspot.com/2015/10/victorian-clowns-an...> [1] <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pagliacci>
If it’s showing surface winds, it goes up. On windy.com there’s an altitude slider that lets you choose which wind level you’re looking at. Haven’t found that yet here.
I'd like to see the internet return to those who aren't putting it out there for money, so AI companies (and anyone else) hoovering it up wouldn't bother them. Sharing should be the point. Would also result in fewer…
GPT5.2 does catch it and warns to not trust anything else in the post, saying no competent person would confuse these units. I wonder if even the simplest LLM would make this particular mistake.
That's odd. ChatGPT (5.1) tells me Safari does not open an audio capture session for 'capability negotiation' that would show the mic icon. I assume you have Safari > Settings > Websites > Microphone > facebook.com set…
ChatGPT 5.1-Thinking, after having this pointed out: Short answer: no, your version isn’t the classic one, and my previous answer treated it as if it were. That was me pattern-matching too fast.
"One test, called a destructive physical analysis, involved dismantling small cylindrical batteries. This immediately revealed differences in quality."
Title I see: "CPython may go Rusty, but older platforms risk getting iced out"
There are other possibilities, the most likely being that the slide was already in the process of breaking when the child used it last, and he noticed that before others did.
Yes, I've seen occasional strange responses to seemingly innocuous prompts. Often a retry will succeed, but I've had to give up on some. I doubt it's the model itself in most cases, as it doesn't have much…
In US cities they have substations and neighborhood stations. I'd guess one of those.
It's easy to miss: ChatGPT now has a "branch to new chat" option to branch off from any reply.
I remember having a lot of colds as a kid but haven't had one for years now. I may have gained immunity to a good number of the 200+ different types.
Ask ChatGPT to explain what it's drawing as it adds parts. It's usually more successful. Or at least entertaining. Reminds me of how a young child draws.
On the Mac, Final Cut Pro 7 to X was infamous. And Aperture 3.6 to anything recommended to replace it.
And at least one movie cast and crew: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Conqueror_(1956_film)#Nucl...
You could ask Claude where it got it. GPT believes it picked it up from early 1990s RAND Assumption-Based Planning vocabulary.
If you're looking for farmers who aren't averse to tech, there are a number with YouTube channels. They're also the sort who love to talk to people. That may skew their opinions from the norm, of course.
The trick for trees is capillaries, which change the equation. The 10 meter limit only applies to larger columns. With capillaries there's a high negative tension that allows evaporation from leaves to pull the xylem…
Not flat between the wheel wells (42.9"), but on top of them. There's a photo (don't know if it's real though). https://www.slateforums.com/forum/threads/slate-truck-dimens...
"Ads may appear for users on the Free and Go plans" and "we will not show ads in accounts where the user tells us or we predict that they are under 18" Could be that based on your prompts it had just decided you were an…
rlwimi was a nice one, especially for emulators. And it also had eieio, Enforce In-Order Execution of I/O.
It's unrelated to the book, other than the title.
The goal here is neutral buoyancy when in gravity so that it behaves as though there were no gravity. Put a bag of water in water and it floats like the rest of the water, gravity or no.
In System Settings > Keyboard Shortcuts > App Shortcuts, add the shortcut: app Safari, name "Quit Safari", command-option-Q. This will leave command-Q doing nothing, yet still allow you to quit. Repeat for other apps.
That outfit was typical of clowns in 1890, and often used in the opera Pagliacci about a clown. [0] <http://1890swriters.blogspot.com/2015/10/victorian-clowns-an...> [1] <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pagliacci>
If it’s showing surface winds, it goes up. On windy.com there’s an altitude slider that lets you choose which wind level you’re looking at. Haven’t found that yet here.
I'd like to see the internet return to those who aren't putting it out there for money, so AI companies (and anyone else) hoovering it up wouldn't bother them. Sharing should be the point. Would also result in fewer…
GPT5.2 does catch it and warns to not trust anything else in the post, saying no competent person would confuse these units. I wonder if even the simplest LLM would make this particular mistake.
That's odd. ChatGPT (5.1) tells me Safari does not open an audio capture session for 'capability negotiation' that would show the mic icon. I assume you have Safari > Settings > Websites > Microphone > facebook.com set…
ChatGPT 5.1-Thinking, after having this pointed out: Short answer: no, your version isn’t the classic one, and my previous answer treated it as if it were. That was me pattern-matching too fast.
"One test, called a destructive physical analysis, involved dismantling small cylindrical batteries. This immediately revealed differences in quality."
Title I see: "CPython may go Rusty, but older platforms risk getting iced out"
There are other possibilities, the most likely being that the slide was already in the process of breaking when the child used it last, and he noticed that before others did.
Yes, I've seen occasional strange responses to seemingly innocuous prompts. Often a retry will succeed, but I've had to give up on some. I doubt it's the model itself in most cases, as it doesn't have much…
In US cities they have substations and neighborhood stations. I'd guess one of those.
It's easy to miss: ChatGPT now has a "branch to new chat" option to branch off from any reply.
I remember having a lot of colds as a kid but haven't had one for years now. I may have gained immunity to a good number of the 200+ different types.
Ask ChatGPT to explain what it's drawing as it adds parts. It's usually more successful. Or at least entertaining. Reminds me of how a young child draws.
On the Mac, Final Cut Pro 7 to X was infamous. And Aperture 3.6 to anything recommended to replace it.
And at least one movie cast and crew: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Conqueror_(1956_film)#Nucl...