I just posted a link to a review by someone who has been playing with it for a while and talks about a lot of use-cases: https://lemmy.ml/post/18938549
fubarx
Why is this news?
President's Biden
?
So you can play your favorite, relaxing playlist.
San Francisco tried this path eons ago. Didn't go so well then: https://www.sfgate.com/crime/article/s-f-abandons-matrix-program-but-brown-says-2999337.php
Let's see how it goes this time.
Twitter moving to mid-market was pretty controversial because of the tax breaks the mayor lavished on them. But a lot of condos went up in the area.
Wondering if anyone still working at Twitter bought a condo just so they could be within walking distance of work.
Making spaghetti for the first time, in my first apartment. Then realized I had made enough for four people for a week, aaaaand the feeling passed.
This topic came up when self-driving was first coming up. If a car runs over someone, who is to blame?
- Person in driver seat
- Dealer
- Car manufacturer
- Supplier who provided the driving control system
- The people who designed the algorithm and did the ML training
- People who wrote and tested the code
- Insurer
Most of these would likely be indemnified by all kinds of legal and contractual agreements, but the matter would still stand that someone died.
First and last snowboard lesson. Long time ago. Never again.
A long time ago, a manager called me into her office, and pointed at a report I had sent to her about the company's products. Her words are just as relevant to this situation:
"This is a career-limiting move."