There's the other side of maintenence that you don't have to worry about messing other parts up if you change that one drop down menu since it's the only place it's used. It sometimes takes less time to do it this way.
I still think that the dropdowns should be unified, one view for desktop and one for mobile.
For some reason they are more pro Russian suppression state, Chinese one-party censorship state and even apologise for DPRK. It's pretty tall order to call any of those democratic. Then from my discussion with tankies they often advocate for an armed revolution which are very undemocratic in their nature and often lead to one-party states or a military junta government.
Marxist-Leninism is a democratic ideology but the way tankies talk doesn't sound very democratic to me.
It's a reference to horseshoe theory with the addition of the left wing where it's actually democratic as opposed to communism authoritarianism which can resemble fascist authoritarianism in a war economy.
UK, Nordics, Germany, Netherlands and a lot of other European countries have state run media. In many cases it's the least biased media. People in the UK would use "ministry of truth" about the BBC unironically
It's pretty good at looking up readily available knowledge that doesn't have a lot of nuance to it. There's a lot of stuff you can look up but it always comes with a grain of salt.
Home remedies, bunch of baby facts like poop color meaning, recipes and adjustments, programming examples (requires very prompting skills).
Rewriting stuff into business English is another very nice use case. Tell the AI your qualitifations, ask to make a cover letter for "job description" then review. Drafting text and summarising also pretty good.
Adding modifiers to questions like "list of 20 for X" for a brainstorming or "include how scientifically reliable the claim is on scale of 1-10" really help with getting a good answer and some nuance to whatever claims.
It's touted as the be all end all but in reality the use cases are very specific in my experience.
I think porn would have to be on premises at a library with ID confirmation only if it's published in the country in question. It should be restricted access.
My idea is that creators and publishers will actually gain more money per view than Nebula for example. They can still of course market their patreon on it.
Honestly it was a toilet thought, I didn't flesh it out completely for every case.
The national government pays for storage and bandwidth and so on, financed by pay-per-view. Harmful and illegal material will most likely not make the cut but most old movies, old cartoon shows, old talk shows and interviews and so on will be available to the public.
This is both for entertainment and research, optionally they can make a library card add-on to have it as a subscription.
Current services are all in their own corner and often don't have old content such as dubbed cartoons from people's childhood.
Piracy is also limited, finding rugrats in a Scandinavian language is pretty much impossible.
If you're willing to sacrifice the clock speed it's possible. One of the issues will be that the insane amount of logic gates would have to propagate through every cycle which happens stupid fast on modern chips. Still possible to model it and do a timelapse.
A computer is a funky thingy that's a jumbled city of stuff turning on and off with the one master on/off thingy which is the clock on the processor.
When it switches from negative to positive a lot of small switches everywhere switch, some stay the same, some flip. It's all just a bunch of rythm dancing of switches going off and on.
80% of startups fail as a benchmark. It's pretty tricky to create a company.