Comment Re:That's what "they" want you to believe! (Score 1) 26
That's not the conspiracy that they've been hiding.
That's not the conspiracy that they've been hiding.
multiple scenarios
They missed a few important ones. Like the one about the aliens. Personally, that's the one I'm waiting for.
"We have met the enemy and he is us." - Walt Kelly
But everything I said was a fact.
You wouldn't know the facts if they hit you on the head. This is the source:
https://searchepsteinfiles.com...
From this you somehow manage to infer the following:
"So apparently Jeffrey Epstein wrote that Donald Trump sucked Bill Clinton's dick and Vladimir Putin has the pictures.
Stop, read that again, Google it, and just Jesus fucking Christ what the hell is wrong with our world?"
NONE of the shit you spouted above is anything even remotely resembling a "fact". FFS you even manage to get the speaker wrong. It was Jeffrey's brother who made the statement.
If that makes you uncomfortable what the hell does that say about you?
What makes me uncomfortable is coming to obviously absurd conclusions based on shit information and then proceeding to wonder "what the hell is wrong with our world".. Look in the goddamn mirror.
So apparently Jeffrey Epstein wrote that Donald Trump sucked Bill Clinton's dick and Vladimir Putin has the pictures.
Stop, read that again, Google it, and just Jesus fucking Christ what the hell is wrong with our world?
What the hell is wrong with YOU? Get some mental help or something dude... your rantings are completely unhinged.
One thing that is different this time is there has been very little retaliation while Smoot Hawley triggered a trade war between all nations. I think the only countries that retaliated this time were Canada and China.
What too many people do not seem to understand with LLMs is that everything it spits out is simply a probability matrix based on the input you gave it. It will first attempt to deconstruct the input you provided and use statistical analysis against it's trained knowledge base to then spit out letters, words, phrases and punctuation that statistically resembles the outputs it was trained to produce in it's training materials.
LLMs are simple feed forward networks run in a loop. They make no use of "statistical analysis" nor is there a "knowledge base".
The just statistics statements are as useful as saying just autocomplete or just deterministic. These are completely meaningless statements that in no way address capabilities of the underlying system.
Until this version, ChatGPT obviously suffered from a lack of training materials within it's trained neural network to have it overcome the English language's typed grammar rules for it to be able to discern that em dashes are not typically used in everyday conversations and/or that the input to not use them needed to change it's underlying probability network to be able to ignore the English language's grammar rules and adopt it's output without the use of the em dash.
It's is shorthand for "it is"
This is a very difficult concept to train into a neural network as it needs to have been training on specifically this input/output case long enough to have that training override the base English grammar language model, which is a fundamental piece of knowledge a LLM requires to function and one of the very first things it is trained to handle.
This is gobbledygook. You are guessing and have no actual clue how the technology works.
russia has already bled out nato's military capability (barring the us openly jumping in, which is unlikely) so there's little that nato can do except covert operations
More unhinged nonsense from a clueless clown.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
I would say under-regulation, or more to the point, mal-regulation. Unregulated markets inevitably settle into a worst case scenario given time.
In the case of residential property (which is what your link refers to), I agree that some of the regulations there are bad and need to be revised or eliminated. But they have nothing to do with the commercial space falling into squalor.
Those were the two campaigns. Which statement evokes any kind of emotional response from you? The one that says your life will be better with this one neat trick, or the one that says this may be a bad idea?
I suppose it is mostly the first one. Of course, the emotion it evokes is mostly disgust and anger. The second also evokes emotions. Milder, more positive ones.
My observation has been that any streaming package that includes ESPN is automatically well more than 4 times as expensive as any package without it. Perhaps the cable companies should find a way to dump ESPN and pass along the savings to remain viable.
It'll be at least half of that in ten years.
The Zoomers have no interest in cable TV.
> Why not just build the proper infrastructure with what we know works?
I tried to do this locally. The government allows the pole owner (electric or telephone usually) to charge $50/mo/pole to the startup that wishes to hang wires.
The owner pays $5/mo in property taxes to the town.
There are exceptions for large corporations that are in the state's good graces.
It's just to keep competition limited to the cartel.
Short answer: corrupt government.
This was my first thought as well.
Such marketplace confusion!
Too much money for not enough content.
When I had my morning toast and coffee earlier today I chose between three YouTube videos. An analysis of a high-performance motorcycle engine, a review of an off-road vehicle and troubleshooting a hybrid car. All cable ever has these days is reality shows.
...laura
Can anything be sadder than work left unfinished? Yes, work never begun.