What, jessvj is not baffled? That's an odd thing to study
I think you're fairly safe here. People using AI tools professionally generally like them, only overuse and careless use are seen as bad here
Out on general Lemmy though you'll get down votes for comments in favour of AI
Imagine getting that design past review
The insecurity of SMS is the inability of telcos to secure number porting. If someone wants to compromise your shit, they can easily steal your phone number, if your phone number is sufficiently public
One defence is to have a second service that is only used for authentication, and never share the number except to those providers that need to message you codes
It's just marketing. Australia shares a lot of American culture and we still have car based utes, though larger vehicles are also becoming popular here
Maybe as autocorrect becomes more LLM powered it will get better at correcting spelling of similar words
And also Dr Frankenstein working on his monster, though he worked in a lab attached to his apartment in a city
Dr Frankenfurter OTOH worked in an isolated gothic mansion and made a much better man, not monstrous at all
- XKCD for Frankenstein (mobile view)
- Another XKCD for Frankenstein (mobile view)
- Wikipedia for the other doctor's movie
- OTOH stands for 'on the other hand'
I had to turn off dark mode for this to work well
My normal dark mode is "AMOLED black". I also tested it with dark grey and it also worked. Higher contrast with the image's background works better
You should be able to long press unwanted notifications and stop the system showing that class of notification or all notifications from some app
"Turn off" stops that class of notification from that app
Settings gear takes you to the notification section of the app that threw the notification and toggle any or all of that apps notifications
You can also get to the notification a couple of other ways:
- Settings/apps go to whatever app's settings including notification settings
- In your switch application view tap the icon above the app's card
I feel like it's really hard for people who learnt after smartphones. When autocomplete gets it wrong they don't notice
Obviously the way of remembering which is which is "you're" is short for "you are" (hence the apostrophe) and "your" isn't. But they also need to practice while keeping that rule in mind
English as a second language people seem to do better than first language users
I feel like there's a bit of trying to scare the kid off from that life course and get married like a proper person in that letter