There’s going to be some good ones for sure
There’s going to be some good ones for sure
I can’t get over how I’m learning about small town economic policies via a meme. Thanks for spreading awareness!
This Washington Post article talks about the policy and how other small cities are trying the same thing https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2024/08/30/cumberland-maryland-revival/
All non-dairy milks have their place, so it depends where you’re using it as a replacement to cows milk.
I enjoy Oatly oat milk for cereal, coffee, and if a recipe calls for milk I typically use it.
Coconut milk is delicious in smoothies.
Nut milks are good in baking.
What were you trying to use Nitinol for?
'Never ascribe to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence.’
The News Industry is profit driven just like all the rest. I wouldn’t point blame journalists for being dumber when it’s just as likely that it’s management pushing for more content with quicker turn around times.
Long term investigative journalism is expensive and the output is still only one article. From a profit prospective, why not spend the same investment in puff pieces to produce a dozen articles written to drive engagement.
Don’t knock it till you’ve tried it. I myself am intrigued!
First time I’ve seen the number of sentences skipped in these summaries, very nice! Gives a better idea of the whole article and if I’m missing out on a detail that was skipped
Can you provide a source for that?
Edit: Appreciate it!
Why not try eating less meat today? Meat alternatives exist already, plus a diet of more plants and vegetables is more healthy for you and the planet.
If you’re concerned about the impact of our agricultural industry on the planet why wait for some sci-fi solution when you can make your opinion heard by changing your buying habits at the grocery store and in restaurants?
Memmy problems lol oops!
Is the alternative that we do nothing in the short term while we wait for new laws? Sure voluntary agreements may not be fully enforced but even if one of these companies followed some of those restrictions then I’d say that it worked.
The four tech giants, along with ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and startups Anthropic and Inflection, have committed to security testing “carried out in part by independent experts” to guard against major risks, such as to biosecurity and cybersecurity, the White House said in a statement.
That testing will also examine the potential for societal harms, such as bias and discrimination, and more theoretical dangers about advanced AI systems that could gain control of physical systems or “self-replicate” by making copies of themselves.
The companies have also committed to methods for reporting vulnerabilities to their systems and to using digital watermarking to help distinguish between real and AI-generated images or audio known as deepfakes.
These commitments are faster to secure while slower steps like creating regulations through laws can come after.
This specific interaction would have never happened if public transportation was provided free of cost.