Very clever that they know how to use the subway system that well!
One would think that by now, these companies would have built up enough training data to no longer require human intervention?
Is their existing "AI" tech just your usual old chatbot, except with a STT and TTS so it's usable at a drive thru? The article only mentions that they started recently using ChatGPT to assist with speech recognition... so unless I missed it, there's no mention of their current tech using LLMs at all - just another company trying to climb on board the AI hype train 🤦♂️
Presto said that off-site workers based in places like the Philippines that assist the chatbots will becoming [sic] increasingly expensive, Bloomberg reported.
Good. People in countries who aren't so well off shouldn't be exploited as cheap & disposable call center labor IMO.
The last time I checked, piped had a button right on the playlist page to export playlists as JSON. You can then switch instances and re-import that data back in
I'm not sure about subscriptions though, only really use piped for watching videos quickly or listening to music playlists
The room might stink, but nobody intentionally shat on the floor.
I like this figure of speech a lot, stealing it 😁
Pressure shortens that timeline significantly IMO, similar to what happened with USB-C
I assume it's a feature to prevent Android's memory management from forcefully killing Firefox... for me the tabs don't unload, but they behave as if the JS running inside them has been frozen/paused.
Maybe installing those tabs as apps via Firefox's menu will bypass this
That's really nice! Feels great to have a positive impact on others
From GoG specifically, as they patch the older games on their store to "just run" on modern Windows
That typo 🤝 Your username
I like this, but would really prefer if Google works with the GSMA to get these implemented into the actual RCS specs, rather than using specially crafted proprietary RCS messages to add features to RCS (like they have done for E2EE)
Anticheats that run in the NT kernel may as well be described as rootkits, especially as they aren't transparent about exactly what they're doing. Then there's the question of what happens if they get compromised