This has sparked concern, especially with GameStop launching new Retro GameStops across North America, where retro game authenticity should be a priority.
Lol, it's Game Stop not the Library of Congress. These are minimum wage employees they're not trained in repro carts
As someone who daily drives ChatGPT for a lot of stuff, I agree. I heard someone put it this way "AI is perfect for stuff that is hard to find but easy to verify".
The other day I took a photo of my liquor cabinet and told it to make a cocktail recipe with ingredients on hand. Or if I encounter an error on my PC I'll just describe the problem. Or for movie recommendations when I have a very specific set of conditions. Or trying to remember a show from my childhood with only a vague set of memories. The list goes on.
Particularly for anything coding. If I'm trying to learn something I always learn best when I can just see an example of the thing in action as documentation is not always great. Or if I'm doing data manipulation and I have the input and output and just need the function to convert one to the other. I recently saved a whole afternoon of effort with that one. Or spec tests I'll just drop my whole code file in and ask it for full coverage.
These are all things that traditional search engines are poor or incapable of. I'd have a hard time going back if they just turned all this off tomorrow.
I think there's a lack of education around how to use AI which is actually a problem. Like you shouldn't be using it to identify if a mushroom is safe to eat. You shouldn't be using really for anything food or health related for that matter. You should ask it for its sources when you are unsure of its answers.
Personally I use the vinyl ones (left most in the thumbnail) for almost all common tasks. They spread a little when the screw goes in unlike the metal ones. I use the butterfly toggles for bigger jobs
Usually they don't completely flop though, they just underwhelm expectations but if they can stay active long enough with the right amount of whales and fish they can usually break even or make a small profit. Concord is just a high profile legitimate flop that was turned off before it could do anything.
I mean sometimes it works. Pubg was the big Battle Royale in town until Fortnite (as a battle Royale) came along. League of Legends too. The problem with Concord is it took about 6 years to come out so it couldn't draft on the hot trend.
It's about to be a lot more with the chrome manifest update. I got my dad into chrome some 15 years ago and explaining why he should switch to Firefox is completely confusing for him. He thinks his own business listing on Google won't work if he's not using Chrome.
Preach. I don't even have a window on mine. I want my machine to blend into the room. All the showy stuff feels like you need to show off to justify the price.
Honestly it's the social aspect. Everyone I know uses Spotify, so sharing playlists and tracks are super easy. I know there's converters out there but I can't be arsed to do that every time I want to send or receive a link. I've also got some shared playlists between friends we all contribute to. At social gathering I can turn on the party mode or whatever it's called and let people add stuff to the queue. The big one though is I've got a few friends with really good taste. I can check in on them from time to time to see what they're listening to right now. Found a lot of great stuff this way.
Same. I watch more YouTube than probably any other streaming service. Plus I got the family plan and I sell the extra seats to my extended family and friends. Works out to be pretty cheap in the end.
I do the same for Spotify, Disney plus. Formally Netflix but they cut down on password sharing
Have you seen kids? Most of them play games exclusively on mobile devices now.