

The advantage of good wire is isolating the signal from interference. However, if you aren’t in an electrically noisy environment, anything that can conduct electricity will do just as well.


The advantage of good wire is isolating the signal from interference. However, if you aren’t in an electrically noisy environment, anything that can conduct electricity will do just as well.


This has got to be some sort of tax fraud at the very least. That or money laundering.


Conversely, Apple is nothing but an overpriced burner phone without the apps. No one is buying it for safari and iTunes.


Didn’t they just lose a lawsuit along these lines? I can’t imagine this going well for them.


I mean, we can make fusion happen, but it’s not exactly useful outside of turning things into not things anymore.


Summer thunderstorms will knock out power, especially in the Midwest where tornadoes are common.


Shouldn’t you be using your outdoor kitchen to do that properly.


I’d settle for just causing the CEO pain.


You obviously didn’t even glance at the case law. No one can own what AI produces. It is inherently public domain.


My instructions are copyright by me
First, how much that is true is debatable. Second, that doesn’t matter as far as the output. No one can legally own that.


AI doesn’t get IP protections.


If you outsource you could at least sue them when things go wrong. Good luck doing that with AI.
Plus you can own the code if a person does it.


I think the point is that someone should understand the code. In this case, no one does.


They’re not really smart in any traditional sense. They’re just really good at putting together characters that seem intelligent to people.
It’s a bit like those horses that could do math. All they were really doing is watching their trainer for a cue to stop stamping their hoof. Except the AI’s trainer is trillions of lines of text and an astonishing amount of statistical calculations.


Any company not using AI for anything will be pretty unaffected when this bubble pops.
This is just the beginning of the coming vibe code apocalypse.


They probably hash the list of hacked passwords the same way your passwords get hashed and check for matches.


Anyone using something with inconsistent output in their automation deserves what they get.
That’s why they’re hyping the repairability.