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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)GE
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  • No it's not. It's pedantic and arguing semantics. It is essentially useless and a waste of everyone's time.

    It applies a statistical model and returns an analysis.

    I've never heard anyone argue when you say they used a computer to analyse it.

    It's just the same AI bad bullshit and it's tiring in every single thread about them.

  • I literally quoted the word for that exact reason. It just gets really tiring when you talk about AIs and someone always has to make this point. We all know they don't think or understand in the same way we do. No one gains anything by it being pointed out constantly.

  • I mean they literally do analyze text. They're great at it. Give it some text and it will analyze it really well. I do it with code at work all the time.

    Because they are two completely different tasks. Asking them to recall information from their training is a very bad use. Asking them to analyze information passed into them is what they are great at.

    Give it a sample of code and it will very accurately analyse and explain it. Ask it to generate code and the results are wildly varied in accuracy.

    I'm not assuming anything you can literally go and use one right now and see.

  • I mean it's not hard so much as very dated and a bit shit.

    I could use raw pointers in c# if I wanted to. But it's just not a great way to do things.

    C will likely have a place where low languages are required for a long time. But everywhere else there's little reason to choose over more modern languages.

  • August 31, 1955 The term “artificial intelligence” is coined in a proposal for a “2 month, 10 man study of artificial intelligence” submitted by John McCarthy (Dartmouth College), Marvin Minsky (Harvard University), Nathaniel Rochester (IBM), and Claude Shannon (Bell Telephone Laboratories)

    http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/history/dartmouth/dartmouth.html

    This is just literally not true.

    Point 3 is what LLMs are.

    You are thinking of general artificial intelligence from sci-fi

    An attempt will be made to find how to make machines use language, form abstractions and concepts, solve kinds of problems now reserved for humans,

    This is what artificial intelligence actually means. Solving problems that traditionally require intelligence

    Path finding algorithms in games are AI. And have always been referred to as such. We studied them my AI module at uni.

  •  
            Head & Shoulders contains ingredients that have anti-fungal properties: 
    
        Zinc pyrithione
        Also known as ZPT, this ingredient is an active ingredient in Head & Shoulders dandruff detox shampoo. It can reduce the amount of fungus on the scalp, which can help prevent dandruff. ZPT can also help manage seborrheic dermatitis, an inflammatory scalp condition. However, it can cause contact dermatitis in rare cases. 
    
        Selenium sulfide
        This ingredient acts as an antifungal and antibacterial cleansing agent. It can help prevent the growth of Malassezia, a type of yeast that causes dandruff. However, it can cause excessive oiliness and yellow discoloration in the hair shaft. 
    
    
      

    I think you had fungal infection mate

  • The letter "W" is called "double U" because the Normans invented it by combining two pointed capital letters to represent the sound "w" in Anglo-Saxon words after the Norman Conquest of England in 1066. The name "double U" still indicates how the letter was created.

    Before the Norman Conquest, the Latin letter "V" was used to represent both the "v" and "w" sounds. The Anglo-Saxons created a separate character called "wen" to represent the "w" sound. After the Norman Conquest, the Normans combined two pointed capital letters to create the "W" to represent the "w" sound in Anglo-Saxon words.