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Oh wow! Guy who's current project depends on AI being good is talking about AI being good.

Interesting.


The people working for Palantir are collaborators.

In no way is this "towards" anyone.


[flagged]


? in the second video and others you can see the car never hit him ...


https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/experts-analyze-new-v...

>Johnson said his biggest takeaway from the video was a crunching sound he heard immediately before the gunshots, which he believes is the sound of the SUV hitting the ICE agent.

>"That data point for me shows that there was contact made with the agent, who is now in reasonable fear, who could clearly articulate being hit with an SUV as reasonable fear of great bodily harm or death. And then the shots were fired," said Johnson.


Doesn't contradict what I said at all.

You think she was aiming at this chump?


ICE agents should be tried in the Hague.


The Hague Invasion Act will put a stop to that pretty easily.


When these companies run out of VC hype money, what's the actual cost of running 10-20 instances of this at all times, going to be?


And when everyone is hooked on it and ot becomes $2k a month who will pay and who will be locked out.

Like SAS licenses


I thought this title was a reference to this David Bowie/NIN song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LT3cERVRoQo


Congrats to them! Unions are the reason we have (had) an 8 hour day.


And weekends.


And vacations.


And all the major American legacy car companies filing bankruptcy through the years and becoming completely uncompetitive. Welcome to your soon do you come greedy unionion reps That will ensure high performers will leave for better pastures and low to average performers will stay and benefit from collective bargaining,. Unions always increase friction and company politics and stunts growth. Growth is what is key to success of any company and its workers.


As an Australian can I just say of this article: yeah nah


One thing I remember from languagelog is that almost all English speakers have a form of "yeah no" and they all think they invented it.

https://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=30758

Might be Scottish.


Not only did Australians invent it, we also invented Pavlova, Sam Neill, etc.


This is like when Australians tell me they invented drinking coffee.

(Conversely, I've seen Australians who dislike Halloween because they think it's an American invention, but it's also Scottish.)


Yes we also invented drinking coffee.


As a New Zealander, I can say: it's not bad.


I don't know if anyone has been reading cover letters recently but it seems that people are prompting the LLMs with the same shit, dusting their hands and thinking "done" and what the reader then sees is the same repetitive, uncreative and instantly recognizable boilerplate.

The people prompting don't seem to realize what's coming out the other end is boilerplate dreck, and you've got to think - if you're replaceable with boilerplate dreck maybe your skills weren't all that, anyway?

The hate is justified. The hype, is not.


If you have a look at figure 2 here: https://migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/resources/briefings/lo...

You'll see that immigration was at record levels post Brexit.


Yes, but a third of Poles emigrated, largely ending Brits' moral panic about Polish plumbers stealing the jobs, social housing and increasing housing prices.

Not that it solved the issue of jobs, social housing or housing prices of course.


So a largely imaginary "problem" was replaced with an even larger "problem".


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