Thanks for your contribution. I really like it and switched to it immediately when it came out. The initial theme was not quite right but it’s good now.
They fixed a bug on a tool that is widely used. In what world is questioning why an organization is checking in a file that you have no context on a “better question”.
“Windows has announced a commitment around the Rust programming language as part of Microsoft’s Secure Future Initiative (SFI) and has recently expanded the Windows kernel to support Rust.”
This article is pure garbage. Here are some of its sins:
* It says that SQL was introduced in 1974 and could be used for web applications (the web was invented in 1989).
* Then it calls AI “Artistical Intelligence”.
* And it never even talks about the topic of its title: what’s next for SQL.
Unless you’re using Internet Explorer, every browser works on every site. I’ve never had Chrome installed even as a backup. Have yet to find a site that doesn’t work on Firefox.
I have the all black GW-2310FB. I’ll be honest, the gray digits on black background can be a little impractical in low light (it does have a very good backlit if you press the button). But it looks awesome and I have no regrets. Love it. And for those of you that are militant about your IDE’s dark mode, this could be the watch for you too.
https://www.casio.com/us/watches/gshock/product.GW-2310FB-1/
Has anyone here tried to read that book (Superintelligence)? I found it impossible to get through it. The author drones on and on seeming to try to reach a high word count as some sort of academic pompous goal and takes so long to make a point that I didn’t stick around for the ending. Incidentally, I have a free copy for anyone that likes lots of words.
Yudkowsky is much more entertaining on the topic, he has a vivid writing style and I think all of Bostrom's ideas on this topic originate with him anyway.
The Alignment Problem book is probably much better. Opens with a banger of a historical backstory. I recommend anyone read the prologue to the book just because of the fascinating history it gives us and how well-written it is as an opener.
So that’s dead on arrival.