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cogley.jp | ||
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adders.blog
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| | | | | Richard Dansky The best metaphor I've seen for AI is that it's our generation's asbestos. If you think about it, asbestos was this technological marvel that promised to solve a huge problem and that got crammed in everywhere. And yeah, it was good at keeping things from catching on fire, but it also came with an extremely elevated chance of painful, lingering death, and removing it from the system has taken untold years and billions of dollars. | |
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therealadam.com
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| | | | | Everyone is losing the thread. Maybe that's what makes this moment in history so difficult to follow and frustrating to live in. Not just politics, and media, and our government(s). BMW lost the thread on their sports cars and classic design language. Apple lost the thread on great UI. JJ Abrams lost the thread on how to (finish) a Star Wars trilogy. Maybe, somehow, Saturday Night Live only briefly lost the thread because the thread was, almost from the beginning, "did we ever have the thread? | |
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therealadam.com
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| | | | | It's no "for sale, baby shoes..." (spoiler redacted), but I like the feel of this short fictional invention: From decades of reading The New Yorker, he had an extensive recall of the fabric that makes up the world. This recall, however, seemed exclusive to facts and anecdotes that led to an easy, repellent, or vulgar punchline about the minutiae that constitute the world. For this reason, it was most practical that around Thanksgiving, he was seated at the kids table. | |
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honeypot.net
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| | | Initial impression of unboxing an Oura Ring: it would have been so easy to make sure the inner box was oriented the same way as the outer box. Obviously that doesn't have the slightest effect on how the device works, but don't you want to awe new users with attention to detail? | ||