Comment Re:WTF? (Score 1) 13
"When you're dead, you do not know that you are dead. The pain is felt by others. The same thing happens when you're stupid"
"When you're dead, you do not know that you are dead. The pain is felt by others. The same thing happens when you're stupid"
Damn.
And going running to HR for petty shit makes you tough? Which planet is that? LOL. There are certain things a man should tolerate or let go out of toughness, and certain things
Because someone still has to take time to read the slop. Over and over.
That work sounds like a great candidate to offload onto AI!
Is there a viable path to citizenship from that? Would they let you retire there? Otherwise you'll spent years there and have zero benefit for the things you did and risk you took.
Guaranteed when you try to put your phone back into the sock without paying full attention it will fall to the floor.
Sounds like a valuable social service to me.
20 minutes end to end? 1. How many trains will they have? 2. how many stops? What's the wait time for train to a given destination? Seems like they will need a hundred trains.
Unless you're planning to print it out (requiring about 300 cubic meters of paper - per month, to keep up with edits), you still need things like electricity, and replacement hardware as it wears about and the infrastructure to keep it all going, which is about as likely to be available after a civilization destroying collapse (which is, by definition, what we're talking about) as the internet.
So good luck with that.
All that aside from the fact that it's largely useless with the internet.
200 meters (650 feet) is waaay too thin. I get claustrophobia thinking about it. Their images show lots of greenery, looks like a forest or something. But it's all bullshit. You can't have a "forest" environment that is a mere 200 meters wide. I do like the idea of high speed rail and rapid 7 minute transit to places for shopping, hospital, dining, movies, water parks, etc. but a mere 200 meters width? That shit is dystopian.
Wikipedia officially requires articles to summarize their sources from a neutral point of view.
And NPR brags about how unbiased and factual they are, and little girls all want a pony.
But it isn't hard to find first hand accounts of their overtly political bias, so perhaps, their own claims about themselves are not exactly reliable or credible.
In my experience, not really, no. Cloudflare, yes, a pretty large percentage of all internet traffic goes through them. But AI scrapers? Not that I've seen.
Or buy them from gog.com, which will come with a custom version of DOSBox all set up specifically for it.
Become? Were they ever not?
If only one could get a reliable list of all IP addresses they use, it would be trivial.
A physicist is an atom's way of knowing about atoms. -- George Wald