Comment Re:Google Gemini reposts old story on/. (Score 1) 59
True, that. Now if there were only a Japanese form of suicide for AIs
True, that. Now if there were only a Japanese form of suicide for AIs
Now, now: that's kind of harsh.
I always knew Microsoft was kind of evil, but I still regret not selling everything when I retired from the Army in '84 and moving to Washington, to try for a job in Microsoft. I was a pretty good programmer back then, could've impressed them somehow or another.
The farther away they can get from the DC swamp, the better off they'll be.
Besides, there should be plenty of room left at Fort Meade. I got to visit the big bronze mirrored cube one time (long long ago) to explain to the crippies my source code for an encryption file/communication program they were somehow interested in. Very intimidating, to say the least (since I wasn't really a crippie myself, and they had to explain the questions they asked as much as I had to explain the code (8086 assembly language and Pascal). It was kind of fun, once I realized these were actually real humans
One might wonder why she signed that non-disparagement agreement in the first place? She could've just walked away, right? Of course that might've affected the publishing and/or distribution.
I've never signed a non-disclosure agreement in my life (not quite the same as a non-disparagement agreement, true) that I didn't carefully and suspiciously rewrite, ensuring I wasn't giving away the entire farm. Curiously, I never had an employer who disagreed with my rewrite
Agreed.
Youtube on my TV is the vast majority of things I watch on that TV. The vast scope of topics, the effective use of however they do it (algorithms? whatever that means): it all adds up to very interesting, educational, and even current topics. Of course I watch a LOT of history and old programs (dearly loving snips from "West Wing" and the like). But I could do without almost every other choice of "channels" that are available on my TV (although I'm subscribed to almost none of them). Cheers for Youtube (although I find accessing program comments awkward, and I hardly ever view them).
Far better, one would think.
I still remember the goats grazing on the ammo storage bunkers down at Fort McClellan (home of the US Army Chemical School, not to mention the WAC basic training).
Most of them were extremely wary of us humans, since the Chemical School had the habit of occasionally grabbing one of them for nerve agent (and remedy) training. They'd usually survive (I still remember the "Hoof Spread Chest Pressure" CPR exercise), but they never were very happy about it.
Naw, those are electric. No surprise there.
Sigh
I'm making plans on how to sit down on the Pope Field (near the former Fort Bragg) runway to block the C-17's on their way to Greenland, Panama, wherever. You know, kind of like the little Chinese guy with his bags in front of the Tienaman (sp?) Square who became so famous.
I'm _pretty_ sure the C-17 pilot wouldn't run me over like a dog. But you never can tell about those flyboys
I am SO surprised to hear about ELIZA after all these decades!
Nothing new under the sun, that's for sure.
I suggested this sort of thing a while ago. Looks like someone else likes it too!
So we need special leeches, bred to filter just the bad stuff?
Nothing wrong with leeches, really: they were a common visitor for us Vietnam vets. Painless, really, although the thought was pretty 'orrible.
That was my first question.
So I can shelve my plans for a drone transmitter anti-missile?
They make some very nice bottom-based torpedo launchers these days, so I've been told. Link it in with a nearby submarine cable: if the cable gets cut, the torpedo launches toward the nearest ship dragging an anchor
The greatest productive force is human selfishness. -- Robert Heinlein