That's what this is about... Continual training of new models is becoming difficult because there's so much generated content flooding data sets. They don't become biased or overly refined, they stop producing output that resembles human text.
TheOneCurly
The helicopter example sounds like it would make for a great What If?. There's so many good things in there I want answered.
Doing good work takes time to make money, execs need those quarterly bonuses right now. Much easier to do a bunch of layoffs and get that line up now.
The prime minister went to the scene to talk to reporters, they certainly seem to consider it a big deal.
These are off-brand machines with extremely low end cpus. I would expect zero warranty support and extreme cost cutting measures everywhere. I would suggest taking a look at some of the better known brands and what they offer in this price point. Lenovo has the IdeaPad 1 line with several machines around this price point, I'm sure some of the others do as well.
But to answer your question: the 16" has a newer and much faster CPU, more memory, and a better display ratio (this one is somewhat preference but I really like 16:10 on laptops).
Roku, android TV, samsung, webOS, and a bunch of other random smart tv platforms all have plex apps. For direct hdmi I assume most people run a media center like kodi (xbmc).
Nope, both go directly from your PC to your tv. Plex does a log-in thing to their servers but that's just an account. Jellyfin is 100% local.
For a PC and a roku on the same network I would highly recommend Plex or Jellyfin. You store the video on your pc and stream it over to the tv over the network. They're both free, Plex is closed source and has some paid features if you want that, Jellyfin is totally open source.
I've been using Plex in this setup for a lot of years and its been rock solid.
And the realization they need to actually do work and know what people are doing to figure out if the people reporting to them are doing their jobs. With everyone in an open office you can just walk around with a cup of coffee and assume on vibes.
Imo star wars is the outlier in his work. Looper, knives out, and glass onion are all worth a watch.
Subatomic particles act in insane ways that are absolutely not mechanical or predictible. A very limited size of object behaves "normally". I think believing that the universe mostly acts like our everyday objects is the skewed perspective.
It's a form of parasocial relationship. It can trigger the same feelings as if you were in a room with some friends chatting. You get to "know" the people's personalities, you can anticipate their reactions to things, you get invested in their personal relationships.