I think “last moment” is a bit of a stretch. It may have been weeks before the Space World reveal, but the Space World event was a full year before the console released.
I think “last moment” is a bit of a stretch. It may have been weeks before the Space World reveal, but the Space World event was a full year before the console released.
I dunno that the “Prime” name is that hard to get. If a couple of YouTubers can name their energy drink “Prime” and get away with it, then I imagine Microsoft wouldn’t have much trouble using it.
I’ve got you now, John Smith!
127.0. 0.1
Scared yet??!?
It’d be great if they all got together for Jonestown 2.0.
Sounds like he finally ran out of that Microsoft money.
Only if I confessed to a crime or doxxed myself.
Otherwise, I leave it. Nobody really cares, anyway. They’re not gonna remember you the next day and call you out like “hey weren’t you that guy that said Daffy Duck had leather-daddy energy and that you would die on that hill?”
It’s fine.
The queer black mom AI is the one I keep seeing right-wing commentators putting on their thumbnails for their videos/articles. They’re putting more focus on the character rather than the tech, from what I’ve been seeing.
People are taking issue with the fact that the AI was black and queer, not that it wasn’t a real person in the first place. Once again, the right is angry at something that literally does not exist in real life.
Elon should’ve been in that Cybertruck.
No. OP seems to be asking in good faith, and has been receptive to the answers provided. Genuine curiosity should never be condemned.
Then it’s probably time to wipe.
Dubya dodged them shoes like he dodged the draft.
I’ve always believed that they develop/test aircraft there. Big empty area in the desert, wide open skies to play around in and not a whole lot to worry about on the ground below, predictable weather patterns, lack of population to complain about the constant sonic booms, etc… seems like the perfect spot to do it.
I think for household settings, a bipedal robot may be more ideal. Homes and the furniture inside are laid out according to the way humans move. That 2-foot space between the couch and The Good Chair that you walk between 20 times a day without any issue? A wheeled robot may struggle to navigate that, and may instead have to take a longer and slower route around the couch to get past. Got stairs in your house? Don’t even get me started on trying to get a wheeled robot up the stairs. Bipedal bots would be more plug-and-play in these settings, and would require less supporting infrastructure.
But for commercial/industrial use cases, I think the mode of ambulation should be purpose-built to the task and setting.
Given that we’ve already had a few suicides caused by (or at least exacerbated by) LLM chatbots, I think we’re already there.
Yeah, the book was meant to feel a bit cringey, because the story is told from the perspective of a teenage gamer obsessed with pop culture. It’s the entire reason he wins the egg hunt, because he’s always got these obscure references floating around his head.
I don’t think they can do much at all, actually. They’re not allowed much wiggle room when it comes to being DMCA-compliant. They pretty much have to take every takedown request at face value, because DMCA requests are a legal process, and I imagine that any intervention on YouTube’s side could be seen as arbitration. I doubt they could do much to interfere with an impersonator, since even a falsely-submitted DMCA complaint is still a legal request that has to be processed accordingly.
The DMCA needs to be gutted.
Nintendo can do something, though. They’re the ones being impersonated, so they can actually take the guy to court.
Torment Nexus CEO.
It’s pretty standard when a highly-publicized murder suspect’s online profiles are discovered. Platform admins will typically disable/hide their accounts from the public while investigations/trials are ongoing. This is hardly unique to Luigi.