We might eventually get to a point where LLMs are a useful conversational user interface for systems that are actually intrinsically useful, like expert systems, but it will still be hard to justify their energy cost for such a trivial benefit.
TrashGoblin
Cory Doctorow has a good write-up on the reverse centaur problem and why there's no foreseeable way that LLMs could be profitable. Because of the way they're error-prone, LLMs are really only suited to low-stakes uses, and there are lots of low-stakes, low-value uses people have found for them. But they need high-value use-cases to be profitable, and all of the high-value use-cases anyone has identified for them are also high-stakes.
You should recognize that all the artistic, aesthetic, and emotional work being done here was done by you.
As a software developer with close to 30 years of experience, I find it continually astonishing when people say LLMs are useful to them for technical stuff. I already spend too much of my life debugging code I didn't write. I don't need to automatically churn out more technical debt to be responsible for!
Around kids: shazbot
Alone or around adults: well, shitfire.
https://xcancel.com/SuppressedNws/status/1816110782322504103
⚡️BON APPÉTIT! MAGGOTS RELEASED ON THE ISRAELI PM NETANYAHU’S TABLE
Protesters disrupted the Watergate Hotel last night, targeting Netanyahu, Israeli Mossad agents, and the Secret Service. Mealworms and maggots were placed on banquet tables, while crickets were released on multiple floors. Fire alarms were triggered for over 30 minutes, creating chaos to prevent rest before Netanyahu's appearance before Congress.
Source: Palestine Youth Movement on IG.
Better option would be to turn them into maids via sissy hypno.
KHive never died, they just went into hibernation.
Donors don't know they exist in the context of everything around them and all that came before.
Honestly the strongest argument for why Harris should replace Biden is that Clinton lives to see the first woman president, and it's not her.
I do not know. Perhaps Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for Thinking Humans by Melanie Mitchell.