“How to save a life” by The Fray is literally intervention instructions.
“How to save a life” by The Fray is literally intervention instructions.
Sure. It just means you got a drinking buddy!
That increase isn’t in spite of the company’s layoffs. It is because of them.
The feedback cycle rewards this behavior, so it will continue to happen.
Foie gras.
This can probably be modeled off the Digg to Reddit transition. Digg made a couple bad decisions in a row and Reddit exploded. Reddit is making a couple potentially bad decisions in a row, so give it a year or two and the fediverse will come around.
With the rising sea levels due to glacial melt the saltiness of the water is going down, so really this is just doing the fish a solid! /s
Did you just make a universal API?
That looks delicious. Do you have a recipe?
Yup, that’s terrible. PSC’s still have a long way to go and we need to find encapsulation technologies to extend their life more, but where they shine is that they should be dirt cheap. If they cost 1/4 of silicon based cells, but only last 1/2 as long, that’s still a massive improvement.
Why spend R&D when you have something that works? Companies don’t care about anything that they aren’t legally forced to care about.
AI is only as good as the model it is trained on, so while there are absolute truths, like most scientific constants, there are also relative truths, like “the earth is round” (technically it’s irregularly shaped ellipsoid, not “round”), but the most dangerous “truth” is the Mandela effect, which would likely enter the AI’s training model due to human error.
So while an AI bot would be powerful, depending on the how tricky it is to create training data, it could end up being very wrong.
It’s not the sulphites, but the chitosan that acts as a clarifier that comes from shrimp shells and makes it not vegan.