Lots of nice things are allowed because you have a small number of guards for a huge number of inmates. If they're living in a literal hell, they're a LOT more likely to riot. Not to mention, jail isn't specifically meant to cause anguish, so much as it is meant to teach a lesson in order to reduce recidivism.
Now whether or not that's actually *accomplished* is another story, but the point is that you want your inmates calm enough that they put up with the punishment without trying to murder your guards, then balance that with teaching them a lesson so they don't come back. You want to strike a balance of juuuust miserable enough, basically.
At least, that's what the spoken goal of incarceration is.
Good. People *should* be scared of AI. We're racing to create the most intelligent creation in the known universe, and we have no clue if we can successfully contain it and make it do what we want.
It's an incredibly dangerous tech, and people taking it so lightly can only stem from a lack of understanding.
I'll be honest - if I'm not getting 15 calls a week from someone trying to get me to "consolidate my loans" or whatever it is they're selling anymore, I'm willing to make that sacrifice
This has literally been the case in every form of entertainment forever.
Survivorship bias might make you think only totally great and amazing games came out during the '90s, but plenty of shitty games came out and were quickly forgotten. This is no different.
This sounds a lot like "durr music today is no good"
There are tons of fine games out there - just because the widely-adopted ones happen to prey on children with gambling techniques doesn't mean there aren't tons of game devs dedicated to making a high-quality experience.
Don't blame the browser, blame the web sites creator who don't care about cleaning their junk.
This is only valid if all browsers are experiencing this kind of memory issue. If there's a fix that some browsers refuse to implement, that's on them as well.
Yeah, sorry - I was referring to the point of the research. Obviously there's the benefit of a greater understanding, but I wasn't sure if this work was being done with a particular goal in mind or not.
So what's the point? Some kind of security application? If you can't control the spin, but only tell if the entanglement has collapsed, I'm not sure how you'd potentially use it in the real world... but I'd love to hear if you know!
oh no people that are investing in something they don't understand at all are getting screwed over as a direct result of their lack of knowledge
not sure if trolling or stupid, but it doesn't take that long in either of those listed locations
Lots of nice things are allowed because you have a small number of guards for a huge number of inmates. If they're living in a literal hell, they're a LOT more likely to riot. Not to mention, jail isn't specifically meant to cause anguish, so much as it is meant to teach a lesson in order to reduce recidivism. Now whether or not that's actually *accomplished* is another story, but the point is that you want your inmates calm enough that they put up with the punishment without trying to murder your guards, then balance that with teaching them a lesson so they don't come back. You want to strike a balance of juuuust miserable enough, basically. At least, that's what the spoken goal of incarceration is.
With kids, focus of the sentence should be on rehabilitation rather than retribution.
Yeah, wait until they're adults to get meaningless revenge!
Good. People *should* be scared of AI. We're racing to create the most intelligent creation in the known universe, and we have no clue if we can successfully contain it and make it do what we want. It's an incredibly dangerous tech, and people taking it so lightly can only stem from a lack of understanding.
Someone should start a website for crowdfunded bribes
It's not Google's problem. It's my problem.
I'll be honest - if I'm not getting 15 calls a week from someone trying to get me to "consolidate my loans" or whatever it is they're selling anymore, I'm willing to make that sacrifice
This has literally been the case in every form of entertainment forever. Survivorship bias might make you think only totally great and amazing games came out during the '90s, but plenty of shitty games came out and were quickly forgotten. This is no different.
"hurr durr it never rains in my office and I haven't died so why would it matter if it never rains outside? I'm a moron durr hurr"
This sounds a lot like "durr music today is no good" There are tons of fine games out there - just because the widely-adopted ones happen to prey on children with gambling techniques doesn't mean there aren't tons of game devs dedicated to making a high-quality experience.
Or, more likely, someone just wrote shitty code, and someone else was lazy with their code review, and then it got published.
"I identify as a female" There, now every single white male intern is now eligible. Make stupid rules, get stupid results.
You realize you're feeding a troll, right?
Don't blame the browser, blame the web sites creator who don't care about cleaning their junk.
This is only valid if all browsers are experiencing this kind of memory issue. If there's a fix that some browsers refuse to implement, that's on them as well.
Yeah, sorry - I was referring to the point of the research. Obviously there's the benefit of a greater understanding, but I wasn't sure if this work was being done with a particular goal in mind or not.
So what's the point? Some kind of security application? If you can't control the spin, but only tell if the entanglement has collapsed, I'm not sure how you'd potentially use it in the real world... but I'd love to hear if you know!