

“I never thought the dictator would dictate MY life!”
“I never thought the dictator would dictate MY life!”
cough weirding modules cough
Woo, I just set a new personal record!
…and Perplexity’s scraping is unnecessarily traffic intensive since they don’t cache the scraped data.
That seems almost maliciously stupid. We need to train a new model. Hey, where’d the data go? Oh well, let’s just go scrape it all again. Wait, did we already scrape this site? No idea, let’s scrape it again just to be sure.
So with inflation, it would be $500 million worth of moon rocks today?
That jumped out at me too. Giving the benefit of the doubt, it could be that this “snapshot” includes a very large amount of data that could be problematic if stored locally for longer. In reality, they probably do it this way for exactly this type of situation, so they can retain full control of the potentially-damning data.
Plot twist: their position on hate speech is in favour, and her role will be to develop ways to encourage it.
Word-of-mouth is a thing.
“Hey Sackeshi, didn’t I hear that you were working over at ABC Corp last year? I’m curious why you chose to leave that off of your resume?”
“I do not like the cobra chicken”
So is that horse and buggy, now
I’m sure this concept of non-punishment will now be applied to many other cases across social classes, right?
Right…?
The trees. They’re big. I frequently pass by Douglas firs that are 100+ feet tall and 6+ feet in diameter. They’re just normal around here, but you realize that isn’t common when you travel to other places and all they have are spindly 30-foot-tall pines or wimpy looking deciduous trees. We have some that are notably big even for this area and are definite tourist attractions, but there are also so many that are objectively massive, but we just overlook them.
The Red Creek Fir