Comment Re: Practical applications? (Score 1) 18
Comment Juxtoposition of Articles... (Score 1) 91
(how very excellent AI is going to replace custom built applications that solve actual problems)
followed by
Linkedin is the Fakest Platform of Them All
(basically says MicroSoft's LinkedIn which is replacing custom built features with AI generated content really sucks)
kinda writes the posting all by itself!
Comment Re: Trump's not "adding exceptions", though. (Score 1) 303
Comment Re:Make America (Score 2) 296
Comment Teen: I need Wi-Fi access to do my chores!!! (Score 1) 272
Comment Re:XR? (Score 1) 30
Chang Kim: Hey Will, do you know what XR is?
William Cho: No idea
Chang Kim: OK if I cancel it?
William Cho: Sure, but you have to write the press release!
Chang Kim: Hah! I will use AI to do that!
Comment Imagine MLB saying No World Series winner in 24 (Score 1) 388
Comment Re:Election Season Stimulus (Score 1) 144
Well said - I always cringe when I hear "Today's change in the market's index is its response to (some minor event)..."
Really? When did they meet and talk about this? Did they take a vote? Were there minutes?
Comment Re:Wonder if this really could have been sooner... (Score 2) 100
"The most effective debugging tool is still careful thought, coupled with judiciously placed print statements." — Brian Kernighan, "Unix for Beginners" (1979)
And he was reacting to the "fancy" command line debuggers like adb and crash; and describing the old techniques which were called Trace Debugging in the 1960's (and output to paper sheets)...
History aside, print debugging is often the only method available for real time code once it is loaded on the embedded device (we do try to find every bug we can on the emulator!)
And quite frequently the only "print" function available on an embedded device is an led that you can blink for a certain number of times or flash in a different colors...
So I concur that it was quite right to delay RTL until print_k was working adequately!
Comment Intel a Software Company ?!? (Score 1) 54
Perhaps one of the problems is some in the market think Intel is a software company...
- Shares plunged as much as 30% on Friday, its biggest single-day drop since at least 1982, according to Bloomberg data.
- The decline comes after the software company announced quarterly revenue of $12.83 billion, down 1% from the previous year and missing analyst expectations of $12.94 billion, according to LSEG estimates.
Comment The details of the paper say it happened 91 MY ago (Score 5, Informative) 75
The actual story is that scientists just recently realized the likelyhood that the nitrogen fixing ability of certain bacteria was due to a merger of one cell into another, 91 million years ago. And they hint, contrary to the headline (Only the third time!), that the nitrogen fixing capability of certain marine plankton and terrestrial plants (which host nitrogen fixing bacteria in specialized organs) may well be additional "Life form mergers."
Inspector Clouseau would be dismayed at how long this investigation required... smile
Ref:
Accordingly, not only did the B. bigelowii/UCYN-A symbiosis originate ca. 91 mya, i.e., in the late Cretaceous, but also the origin of other marine (e.g., marine planktonic diatomdiazotroph associations) and non-marine (e.g., plants with specialized root organs [nodules] where N2-fixing bacteria are hosted) N2-fixing symbioses have been dated to the Cretaceous period.
Comment Re:AI based military may well be the "Fermi Filter (Score 1) 28
Comment Pardon - Checking how close we are to April 1st... (Score 3, Funny) 40
Comment Where is the money? (Score 2) 39
A party seeking remedy must show they have been harmed. (locus standi)
- NY Times doesn't charge extra money for subscribers to the paper for playing Wordle, so they can't claim they are losing sales.
- Folks writing instructions on how to construct a similar game to what is a free game are not making any money.
Wordle was totally free to use (no subscription required) before the NYTimes bought the website (why did they buy it??), so defense would simply argue they showed people how to copy the look and feel of the free game; and publishing such instruction is protected under the first amendment.
Microsoft figured that out about Linux 25 years ago - there is no point in suing free.