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It’s AI but a specific use case of AI: an android at home to take care of the housework. Cleaning my dishes, doing the laundry, vaccuming and putting stuff away where it belongs are obvious use cases. But also:
Possibilities are endless.
This is the key to so much. Worried about Nestlé monopolizing freshwater? With nuclear fusion we can just take any old seawater and remove the salt. Worried about the war with Russia? With nuclear fusion we can become independent of all gas from Russia and cut off one of their biggest income sources. Lots of special materials are expensive because electricity is expensive - with nuclear fusion electricity is practically free. Over time we can get rid of any coal plants etc. that produce CO2.
For some reason I find glitching physics in games to be hilarious. This clip from AC4 had me wheezing.
How bad can it be, it’s not like we’re sharing state secrets
When a news headline ends with a question mark, the answer is no.
I think such projects don’t exist precisely because Mozilla is still developing it. If Mozilla abandons Firefox then someone else will take up the torch.
I believe the Firefox development organization could be a lot leaner, and not all of the work has to be directly salaried. There are plenty of huge open source projects that are progressing fine without being run by a single for-profit company. E.g. the Apache ecosystem, the Linux foundation projects, FreeBSD, etc.
I am. Why not make it a nonprofit and get the money from donations?
Practicing loving-kindness meditation and trying to find an interest in the lives of others. When you feel a genuine interest in learning about the lives of the people you meet and are not worrying about your own self-image, people are less scary and easier to talk to.
I used to be afraid of people thinking less of me for asking stupid questions, but now I don’t care so much about what they think about me. I come from a mindset of compassion rather than fear. It turns out that people generally prefer dumb but interested over insecurity.
Mathematicians are shitty communicators who like feeling special because they can understand their obscure language.
I’m a programmer and in this field there have been tons of books published, conference talks, and heated internet arguments about how to make your code as readable as possible: formatting, function length, naming of variables and functions, keeping number of cross references low, how to document intent, etc. Mathematicians do none of that - it’s all single-character names (preferably from the Greek alphabet to complicate it further) and they rarely communicate intent before throwing formulas at you. You can easily tell when a mathematician has written code because it’s typically hot garbage in terms of readability.
Well if it was a human it wouldn’t be a peer, would it
I think what you need is Britt Hartley and her book No Nonsense Spirituality. She understands the common elements of different religions that are important to us psychologically, and explains how to bring them into your life without the need for faith in a particular deity.
That’s the drawback when “everything’s computer” in a Tesler
Someone made millions off of that Xeet.
I prefer to call them Xcrements
If the safeguards can be so easily removed, what’s the point of putting them there in the first place
If they are in a game and there is music when you’re in the temple then yes it’s part of the soundtrack for that game.
Your original title didn’t say anything about games though. The Tower of London dungeons don’t come with a soundtrack.
No I’m not confused about that. I have seen the problems you talk about. That’s why I felt the need to qualify modern with “well engineered”.
Did you forgot to specify that you’re asking about a game? Dungeons and temples don’t usually come with a soundtrack.
There can’t be an argument for or against it because there’s no clear generally accepted definition of what it means to be sentient.