With Manifest v3 in Canary it feels like there's no chance it won't reach stable in substantially the same form. Moving to Firefox now gives you a transition period where both browsers are viable.
I didn't know it was in Canary. I used Firefox for several months earlier this year before going back to Chrome. Due to this, my transition back to it will be pretty quick and painless.
It was weird to see people from the jailbreak scene (easily recognisable because they all have names l1ke th1s) in such an exploit... turns out SecureROM is also something from iPhone
It is a drug much like... say, broccoli is a drug. Milk before bedtime is a drug. Running is a drug. It is a drug in the same sense that anything can cause addiction and withdrawal or be unhealthy.
Caffeine is, by itself, a drug in a different sense. It causes a slight addiction and can cause slight withdrawal. It isn't all that unhealthy in itself, however, especially not in the amounts we find naturally in foods. It becomes more of an issue if one is taking caffeine pills and other such things. Eating unhealthily might be more unhealthy, honestly - even though overall, having an unhealthy diet isn't a drug.
"It is a drug in the same sense that anything can cause addiction and withdrawal or be unhealthy.
Caffeine is, by itself, a drug in a different sense. It causes a slight addiction and can cause slight withdrawal."
This seems like a drug in the same sense, can you clarify?
Rather than making stuff up, here's dictionary definition of drug: a medicine or other substance which has a physiological effect when ingested or otherwise introduced into the body.
As a user of both sugar and broccoli I can anecdotally attest that they do not have the same physiological effect on my body.
Nah, that can't be true. Suppose you eat either broccoli or a sugary snack every day at 4 PM. Then I bet that habit is definitely harder to stop if it's a sugary snack.
They can explain, they most likely don't want to. Also how does this guy know this is a "machine-learning algo" and not just a series of ifs and elses?
It’s much more likely a series of ifs and else’s, not a fancy ML model. Companies have been doing automatic credit decisions for decades and there’s no evidence that GS bank is doing anything different than all the others.
> As long as the government (ie the people) don't have to pay for it, what's the problem?
Doesn't necessarily apply here, but there are things that people believe are such a detriment to society that keeping them around would incur an unacceptable cost to the government and it's people that might outweigh any benefits it brings.