I've never had much success having Copilot write actual code. Where is been very helpful is in writing documentation, boilerplate, and just being a very smart autocomplete. That alone has saved me so much time and energy already.
You know that not having time doesn't mean there's no way to make time? It means there's other things you would prefer to spend that time on. You have a finite amount of time per day. If I spend more of it heating food, that's less time I can spend here, and I gain nothing in return, so why would I do it?
Do you know of a faster way to heat food that we don't know about?
To be fair, R is a pretty awful experience to use, even as a seasoned programmer.
What makes trans people a cancer?
Behind a paywall, so couldn't read the full article. My questions:
- What does the growth refer to? Is it growth in valuation? Growth in number of users? In revenue?
- Of the non VC funded startups considered, why were they not funded? Was it because they decided they didn't need the funding? Did they fail to obtain funding? If it's the latter, how do they decide which ones to omit, considering that the majority of startups do not go anywhere.
If I had to choose only one, it would be a desktop. The experience of using a machine with a good keyboard/mouse and large monitors can't be beat, plus it's much cheaper for the same quality of hardware. The main downside is that it's not portable. Whether I'm working or gaming, I'm confined to that one desk. I can't work on the couch, in the park, in the waiting room at the doctor's office, or anywhere else I might find myself that day.
The ideal setup is to have both. A desktop for when I can be at my desk, and a cheap laptop that I can use to remote into said desktop. That way, you get the convenience of a laptop with the power of a desktop at a much more reasonable price.
You mean AI tells us what the average artist who depict future humans think we'll look like in 1000 years.
Imagine disrespecting the people who work their asses off to give you a clean space without expecting anything in return.
Hold up, HP printers don't let you SCAN without ink? You can make up some believable bs argument about why DRM ink is necessary, but there's no way you can convince anyone that scanning needs ink.
I don't know how it is in the US, but i can tell you that public transit is pretty good here in my city. A self-driving taxi would still be the ideal experience for sure, but taking a bus isn't that much worse, and it's definitely better than driving myself.
What do you mean we can't explain it? It's designed specifically to make up some text that is very statistically likely. If it doesn't have anything similar in it's training data, it will try to extrapolate, and that gives you hallucinations.