lilbro93
lilbro93 t1_j8xkhzo wrote
I will never use it, but millions of people who aren't good with tech, like my parents, will use whatever is set to their devices by default. They each have their own iPhones and ipads. There is definitely a market.
lilbro93 t1_j7owwxy wrote
Cars from 2003 are dirt cheap compared to cars from 2013.
Bonus points for 2023 being present day.
lilbro93 t1_j6izpop wrote
Reply to OpenAI executives say releasing ChatGPT for public use was a last resort after running into multiple hurdles — and they're shocked by its popularity by steviaplath153
>If you're surprised how quickly ChatGPT has taken off, you're not alone. Even executives at OpenAI, the company behind the viral chatbot, are shocked by its popularity.
>In a Fortune article published Wednesday, executives at the company said they weren't sure what to expect when they released it in November.
>"I'll admit that I was on the side of, like, I don't know if this is going to work," OpenAI co-founder and president Greg Brockman told Fortune. Mira Murati, OpenAI's chief technology officer, added to Fortune, "This was definitely surprising."
>Brockman told the magazine that the idea to release ChatGPT for public use a few months ago was a bit of a last resort after OpenAI ran into some initial hurdles with the AI chatbot. For one thing, beta testers didn't know what to ask ChatGPT about in the first place, Brockman told Fortune, and an effort to create chatbots that were experts in certain areas flopped.
>In the end, ChatGPT amassed more than 1 million users in the first five days since its release, according to Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI.
>Altman has cautioned, however, that for all of its possible benefits, artificial intelligence can be susceptible to dangerous misuses.
>"The bad case — and I think this is important to say — is like lights out for all of us," Altman said in a recent interview with StrictlyVC's Connie Loizos. "I'm more worried about an accidental misuse case in the short term...So I think it's like impossible to overstate the importance of AI safety and alignment work. I would like to see much, much more happening."
lilbro93 t1_j1npd91 wrote
I really wish Google would allow people to switch the back button to the right. I know they are pushing for gesture controls by default, but I like the screen buttons and I've always used a Samsung phone, which has the back button on the right.
Shouldn't they want to make it so people want to switch to Pixel phones?
If Asus phones, One Plus, and Samsung give the option to switch the back button to the right no problem, why is Google so stubborn about having the option in stock android. They even went out of their way to patch out an adb workaround.
lilbro93 t1_ixto1eb wrote
Reply to NBC’s Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade Scores Its Most Viewers in 5 Years With Streams on Peacock (27.7M Viewers) by MarvelsGrantMan136
It's wild that Goku has become a yearly staple in the parade.
lilbro93 t1_ixj3bye wrote
Reply to Netflix's Kaleidoscope is an ambitious TV experiment that will thrill heist fans by fdjadjgowjoejow
I wonder if they named the last episode White so even people who pirate it and don't know the unique watch order will get that episode last based on alphabetical order of the episodes.
lilbro93 t1_iwug3b6 wrote
Reply to Hulu's Welcome to Chippendales Tells a Salacious, Humorous, & Outrageous True Crime Story by PetyrDayne
November 22^nd
lilbro93 OP t1_jcvwob0 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Is HBO's watergate series White House Plumbers still coming out this month? by lilbro93
Nice research.