So Tesla gets that $56 billion back? Kinda funny that that causes their share price to drop.
Deebster
Dennis Muilenburg, the CEO during the 737 Max crashes, was an engineer by training:
He received a bachelor's degree in Aerospace Engineering from Iowa State University, followed by a master's degree in Aeronautics and Astronautics from the University of Washington.
-- Wikipedia
And, of course, even though he put profits ahead of safety and is therefore partially responsible for hundreds of deaths, he walked away with a $62.2 million golden parachute. The incentives are not aligned with safety, aside from how it affects their share price.
Yeah, definitely, and I can share a similar article: The Coen Brothers Finally Address That One 'Big Lebowski' Theory
It's weird how well making it roleplay works. A lot of the "breaks" of the system have been just by telling it to act in a different way, and the newest, best versions have various experts simulated that combine to give the best answer.
No, you don't need to train it, it's just about the prompt you feed it. You can (and should) add quite a lot of instructions and context to your questions (prompts) to get the best out of it.
"Prompt engineer" is a job/skill for this reason.
That would be good - I often want to see what an unfamiliar instance is about by checking out their homepage sidebar and local communities and currently it's several clicks and involves going directly to the site, effectively logging me out. At least the new versions have the new feature that sends you back to your home instance to subscribe.
The only plus is that sometimes the remote instance has interesting styles or other customisations that I wouldn't see unless i visited properly.
This really put me in mind of Max Mad, so I went looking to find out more.
I was commissioned to create a Mad Max tribute poster for exhibiting at the Sitges Film Festival, one of the biggest and most important film festivals in Europe, specialized in fantastic genre movies. In 2019 they dedicated the festival to Mad Max and, as part of the illustrated tribute to the universe of George Miller, I created this piece.
I wanted to mix Mad Max with one of those classic Miyazaki's cranky, crowded with bad guys contraptions, and this is what came out of that crazy mash up.
It was a lot of fun!
José Domingo • Sitges Film Festival — Mad Max Tribute Poster (larger version of the image at this link)
Brilliant stuff, thanks for sharing.
The busyness of many of these gives me real Richard Scarry vibes.
This one in particular made me feel like I was playing a game, maybe a point and click puzzler.
IPs and access logs, plus email addresses aren't public and are the kind of thing law enforcement wants.
I'm confused since Firefox Sync has been letting you sync/backup your passwords, bookmarks and history for a decade or two at this point, and you can even self-host the sync server.
I don't know the complete FF password manager details (Bitwarden user here) but where does Firefox fall short for you?
I asked the various AIs for help, but no joy there. It doesn't ring any bells to me. I guess the leader takes revenge because it happened in their territory?
I was responding to "the bean counters running the company need to be replaced with engineers" by pointing out that the man at the top is, at least by training, an engineer.
Let's look at the timeline:
An aerospace analyst writes:
Are you seriously arguing that a man who is qualified to see the problems and dangers of the 737 Max and then chose to ignore them in favour of pressuring regulators and collecting profits shouldn't be held responsible? He was in a senior position while the development happened and was in the top spot when it was certified. If the head of the company shouldn't be held responsible, who should be?
Ignoring his time as president, four years is definitely enough time to see what kind of leader he was, and all of the internal messages coming out show no attempt to change the culture.