Be part of history: Design Cumbria's first Community Flag!
It's worth saying the number of minors is absolute, so they could've been in a single period (eg if they knew they made a mistake on the reverse park, so were nervous and drove slower for a bit and stalled a couple of times)
I had the same thing where I racked up around 10 minors during/after my emergency stop was partly botched but still safe. I was explicitly told I passed because they were all still safe, within a short interval and I recovered quickly from it.
That said, 1.5 years of learning is a long time to still be shaky after
Interesting to see they're using chatbot arena ELO rather than some unrepresentative benchmark designed to make them look good, that actually gives me higher hopes for this
We basically have professional ministers already - it's the senior members of the civil service, they're just less public facing as their job is to make things happen, not headlines.
Threats to the US
A lapdog isn't a threat except to reputation, even if they're not on your side. Same reason North Korea isn't on the list of threats.
Even if they have influence, it's not exactly domestic policy, otherwise you'd have to add the IRA to the list also.
I did some experimenting - I can't sleep above 67 at most, 65 comfortably.
Anything above 68 is too hot generally indoors and I begin to lose the ability to focus.
I don't have AC but my house is from the 1860s when people had fires running pretty much nonstop so is designed to keep cool, so even when it's 80+ outdoors the indoor temperature rarely goes above 70
A lot of what we consider 'artists' weren't really making art
I think that's extrapolating too far... I think the overwhelming majority made art outside of their job, with with minorities making art for their job and a minority not making any art at all. It's hard to create commissioned works without a strong skillset which overlaps significantly with that required for art, just that if they were just taking a commission without going above and beyond, that isn't art.
I'm not convinced your take is different - drawing an accurate sketch of a hand isn't art, telling AI to generate a hand isn't art, it requires someone creative or expressing something to be art, regardless of the medium(s), including diffusion/noise removal models being a medium.
Nobody's going to claim illustrator or inkscape "made" your graphic design, so why claim the same for AI - doing so just shows you don't understand the medium or what goes into finetuning models, parameters, inpainting, step control of loras, block weights, noise removal level and regional prompting and all the other things that differentiate a piece of AI-generated art from AI slop (not to say that you have to use all of these for it to be art, just that once you do it probably passes the threshold for it to be art)?
the joke is 0300pm => 3pm = 15:00
You're taking miltary time but putting it on a 12 hour clock, so you have to specify am or pm
Art isn't about making something pretty, nor is it really about design, it's about wanting to do or make something with no ulterior motive, or going beyond what you have to go make something inspiring (these are the same thing when you think about it).
Clip art, a lot of corporate design, a lot of architecture and more isn't meant to be art, it's meant to fulfill a purpose and maybe look pretty doing it. That's not what art is.
Cameras largely killed off commissioned portrait because people don't care about the process, they just want a picture of themselves, therefore the portrait wasn't art, it was utility.
That doesn't mean that it's impossible for a portrait to be art, nor that photography isn't art, just that unskilled people were suddenly able to make what they were looking for to a "good enough" standard much more conveniently.
The same can be seen for so many things, including AI being used for clip art or supplementary images in articles. In the case of AI, if all you want is any picture that help support part of an article you're writing, you didn't want art in the first place. If you use AI to help you make a statement, or to match a vision you have in your head, or even do things like poke around at the internals to distort the output, then that is art.
If I'm driving, almost always, the exception being if it's a highway off ramp I'll indicate to go into the off ramp lane, then stop indicating as it should be clear.
If I'm cycling then very rarely, as the position in the lane or lane you're in is far more noticeable than if you're driving, so I'll only stick my hand out to indicate if I have to merge into traffic to turn (eg a right turn from a single lane road, or to get into the turn lane to begin with)
That study is for notetaking though, as you copy verbatim when typing but more concisely when writing, making you process the information and not just the words.
When you're doing something that requires thought anyway, you're already processing the information so they're equally good?
The UK manufacturing sector for raw materials and basic products was on the way out anyway due to costs being so low in Asia, so it was more to be able to shut it down and save the government from needing to bail it out while also destroying labour unions while they were at it, hence why the advanced manufacturers (JCB, Rolls Royce, etc.) were largely unaffected
I've even seen van gogh paintings get wrongly labeled
That's way less surprising than an indie artist's art being wrongly labelled. It's nothing about the quality, just that van gogh paintings are likely to be very overrepresented in the training dataset
Obviously UK consumer protection is different so they may not have the "feature" here, but cars get their milage recorded yearly (after the first 3 years) as part of roadworthiness testing, available online given the licence plate, so I can see I did 7041 miles in the last year.
Does the DMV not have something similar?
I can understand that if you're from a seal-on-bedsheet state, but I'd figure especially at the moment democrats in Maryland, New Mexico, Texas, Colorado (I definitely saw a lot of state flags alone in Denver), California, Hawaii etc. have a lot of reasons to prefer their actually nice flags
In England there's two flags, a flag for if you're racist (English flag, except if there's a major sporting event), and the British flag for if you're proud of your country in a non racist way
Does it work the same way in the more reasonable US states with the state vs national flag?
I think there's something to be said for removing the power of their symbols by using them for other things, but of course some things are too far yes
There's a few like this, when's the last time you met a nigel?
What if it's a convolution though 🤔
The thumb muscle being the intersection bayern the thumb and palm right?
For me it's my middle finger but same effect I guess
Although listening it sounds more like the sound is coming as it moves past the knuckle

Cumbria Community Flag Competition
It's open for the next month, it'll be cool to see what people come up with

Can we shut up with the "EEE" shit already?
Meta exist to make a profit, however they're never going to be able to advertise to most people in the fediverse, who also happen to be some of the most knowledgeable people in some fields. If they accept that they're never going to be able to advertise to those people, they go for the next best thing: monetising their content. Some here may rightfully have an issue with a corporation monetising their content, however by federating with the fediverse and being the first company able to monetise the content within it, Meta have a vested interest in not extinguishing the fediverse.
Complain about their privacy violations or them monetising content they don't generate as much as you want, but remember they're smart & money hungry, and the smartest thing they can do in their position is to make money out of people they otherwise wouldn't be able to.