The MMU isn't remotely comparable to the AMS though, it's finnicky, regularly breaks and needs a heck of a lot of tinkering for most people to get right. One slightly different filament and you have to start over.
Not to mention its just a messy product. Heck the new Core One doesn't even have support for it at launch which is pretty unforgivable.
You’re right, except I’d say that Cox gave some thought so security, but not enough. Which is in some ways even more dangerous than ignoring security entirely.
At this point it’s time to create lists of “ethical” AI services, ones that aren’t OpenAI nor other bad actors. I’m dropping my ChatGPT Plus today. Any suggestions on what to replace it with?
Atlassian products are very complex. Jira alone has sophisticated low-code automation, extremely thorough templating for projects, a rich API, extensive support for i8n, meta-projects (Jira Plans), an add-on marketplace, and so on. Confluence is pretty amazing too when you really understand what it can do.
Edit: Jira’s tight integration with GitHub and ability to drive/be driven by GitHub actions is also a big deal.
I’d say there’s a difference between expressing an opinion, and moralizing about it. One can make great comedy with the former, while the latter sucks because the comedy is completely subjugated by the message. It’s the same difference between heavy metal and Christian metal. Same instruments, same basslines, etc., except the latter is trying to push you towards belief, and thus it’s annoying.
The downside is after you use the platform for a week, you have to delete all the expired models yourself and clean up all the labels or face a hefty housekeeping surcharge.
Partisanship and hyperbole? Where's the partisanship? There's no political party in the US that wants to legalize alcohol consumption in public parks (maybe the libertarians, but no one pays attention to them anyway, for good reason; their last Pres candidate didn't even know what Aleppo was when it was all over the news). Hyperbole? It's *literally* the truth. Go try it for yourself. Make sure a cop knows you're drinking a beer. There's nothing "complex" about this.
Probably not much to worry about in the US. The Fukushima earthquake was much more powerful, but the resulting tsunami did almost nothing to the US west coast. Some boats in Crescent City were wrecked, but that’s due to local geography funneling the wave a certain way. I’m on an island in the SF bay, we saw nothing.
Not a lawyer, but I think the government has more ability to prevent you from doing something than forcing you to act.
They can tell you to not remove the canary, and not tell anyone your logs are being monitored, but it is trickier for them to say you must re-sign this certificate.
That sounds like much more of a nuanced law question than a "are these the same".
While they might be able to stop you telling the world, they might not be able to force you to perform actions that cause you to lie to the public
I heard an interview with the founder of Klarna, who said that the vast majority of their loan defaults are write-offs, they don’t even report them to credit bureaus let alone attempt to collect.
In light of this layoff announcement, do with that info what you will.
That's not true, it happened I believe when they entered the UK's market when people simply did not pay and Klarna didn't want a PR backlash. But Klarna has its own collection agency appended to the business and does attempt to collect.
Easy to do while the bank is still full of VC money. When investors start to demand profits they will quickly start to act like any other bank/loan shark.