Seems like foldable phones are taking over (e.g. Motorola Razr making waves) and only Apple is missing an entry in this form factor now. Almost everyone who can afford one swears by it with the exception of weak build quality....
it's very much borrowed from one of the reddit subs i frequent(ed) often, but the idea is to share what we're playing weekly and hopefully create discussions around those games (or simply have a sort of "check-in").
I was not a fan of turn based jrpgs before but this game is winning me over with great writing, actually fun gameplay and suprisingly alright gacha implementation (got my team up with 20$ which is a fair deal!)
I'm on world 2 in the story and there's just so much to do in this game I only wish it supported a controller on Android/iOS.
Say what you want about Meta but no other headset is even close to quality of the Quest headset line. Exciting for this one even if my Quest 1 is gathering mold somewhere in a drawer.
The full color passthrough is really interesting. I'd love a Tilt Brush like app that integrates with this so you can draw and model around real objects.
I must confess to getting a little sick of seeing the endless stream of articles about this (along with the season finale of Succession and the debt ceiling), but what do you folks think? Is this something we should all be worrying about, or is it overblown?...
I'm actually very optimistic and here's why - it changes education and research completely.
Generally when learning new things the initial step is the hardest. Where to start and what to learn is extremely overwhelming and we basically got rid of that. It's amazing.
I'm a fullstack engineer and honestly I feel that with LLM I have the tools to switch to basically any career I'd want to. If AI takes away coding then I'd happily let it build stuff for me and pivot somewhere else. The things get a bit weirder for people who can't do that but that's not a new issue - we already have people who need assistance and if anything we should be able to support them better now.
AI being bias is not a new problem. All of our tools are bias and we have humans to moderate them to adjust. This goes all the way back to basic algorithms and even physics - e.g. darker skin people were harder to capture on primitive film but we did it.
I think addressing bias is an easy problem to solve as we'll have a surplus of work force and AI moderator/training might as well be a big, new career path.
Also regarding finance and politics - there's really nowhere to go but up imo. As someone who worked in fintech and real estate it's all complete an utter joke that can't get any worse.
What do you think of foldable phones?
Seems like foldable phones are taking over (e.g. Motorola Razr making waves) and only Apple is missing an entry in this form factor now. Almost everyone who can afford one swears by it with the exception of weak build quality....
what are you playing this week?
it's very much borrowed from one of the reddit subs i frequent(ed) often, but the idea is to share what we're playing weekly and hopefully create discussions around those games (or simply have a sort of "check-in").
Meta announces its Quest 3 VR headset, which will cost $499.99 (www.theverge.com)
Is the whole AI apocalypse thing overblown or not?
I must confess to getting a little sick of seeing the endless stream of articles about this (along with the season finale of Succession and the debt ceiling), but what do you folks think? Is this something we should all be worrying about, or is it overblown?...