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Does macOS respond to external keyboard power button presses because if so this could very well be as easy money-making real product
That’s not what it’s there for. It can also be used that way.
I’m in tears, I’ve finally found the version of this toy I had as a kid.
Thank you so much for this shitpost, sincerely.
Sokath, his eyes open.
I guess I just don’t understand the relevance of his other opinions to the discussion about the specific ones we’re talking about.
“I was served a plate of raw chicken tenders” “The chef usually makes Michelin quality meals”
It just doesn’t advance the actual discussion.
That doesn’t make any sense. He’s a valuable addition to… What general community, humanity? I mean, I’m not disputing that he has a following, I just don’t see how that has anything to do with the discussion around his self-professed and now recanted dogshit awful opinions about the lives of other humans.
What’s the purpose of your post? It comes off as agreement with his message at worst, and an irrelevant non sequitor at best.
It was previously issued in 2018
I do try to keep the “unknown unknowns” problem in mind when I use it, and I’ve been using it far less as I latched on to how OOP actually works and built up the lexicon and my own preferences. I try to only ask it for high-level stuff that I can then use to search the wider (hopefully more human) internet more traditionally with. I fully appreciate that it’s nothing more than a very incredibly fancy auto-completion engine and the basic task of auto-complete just so happens to appear intelligent as it gets better and more complex but continues to lack any form of real logical thoughts.
I believe accessibility is the part that makes LLMs helpful, when they are given an easy enough task to verify. Being able to ask a thing that resembles a human what you need instead of reading through possibly a textbook worth of documentation to figure out what is available and making it fit what you need is fairly powerful.
If it were actually capable of reasoning, I’d compare it to asking a linguist the origin of a word vs looking it up in a dictionary. I don’t think anyone disagrees that the dictionary would be more likely to be fully accurate, and also I personally would just prefer to ask the person who seemingly knows and, if I have reason to doubt, then go back and double-check.
Here’s the manpage for bash’s statistics from wordcounter.net:
Understood, thanks for the info. Probably worth raising with them on the discord, which I would do if I felt strongly about it.
https://thunderstore.io/c/lethal-company/p/ebkr/r2modman/v/3.1.45/
Edit, for convenience:
(Emphasis mine, one of them humorous. There’s more, but formatting this on my phone is tedious and frustrating.)
Haha, yeah. It really loves to refactor my code to “fix” bracket list initialization (e.g. List<string> stringList = [];
) because it keeps not remembering that the syntax has been valid for a while.
It’s newest favorite hangup is to incessantly suggest null checks without asking if it’s a nullable property that it’s checking first. I think I’m almost at the point where it’s becoming less useful to me.
It introduced me to the basics of C# in a way that traditional googling at my previous level of knowledge would’ve made difficult.
I knew what I wanted to do and I didn’t know what was possible or how to ask without my question being closed as a duplicate with a link to an unhelpful post.
In that regard, it’s very helpful. If I had already known the language well enough, I can see it being less helpful.
Wild. Neat!
Still very early days, yes. R2modman supports more games also.
It’s definitely helpful for games to support their own modders also, and I can understand why most don’t put in the effort.
If I’m thinking of the same thing you are, I believe they were/are working on making biological neuron chips play a traditionally-running game of doom, less making doom run on a neural network.
It doesn’t get them money, but it still registers as engagement with the audience which I think is really the only true metric.