I have so many questions about that freaking creature. Can it partially unfold to reach anything arbitrarily far away? And how would it go about washing it's infinite surface area?
I think lemmings is the used term. But judging by the logo we're mice
What's up with the wonky language?
who needs imagination when you have algorithms to do the thinking for you? 😜
This was chat GPTs attempt at writing a funny reply to this post.
A typical quantum entangled hyperbolic non-linear file system, or QEHNLFS for short. This was first described in Einstein's fourth relativity theory. I states the following:
In any QEHNLFS the perceived storage space (used and unused) may vary depending on the reference frame. All reference frames are equally valid and therefore the absolute storage space of the QEHNLFS is not well defined. QEHNLFSs generally appear around a central supermassive black hole, typically located at /dev/null in the QEHNLFS
Rot ist süß
I love putting words together! I'm Swedish but we do the same thing here. It makes new words easier to understand and is amazing in general. Also, here is a long word
Socialdemokratiskaungdomsförbundets talarstolsupsättarsmössasemblem aka The Social Democratic Youth Association's pulpit setter's cap emblem (also pulpit is literally named speakers chair in Swedish)
The CPU should probably be replaced by a ALU in the image. But it's kinda hard to get a good shot of the ALU.
Everything shrinks and expands as you heat/cool it. It's called physics and it's a fucking mess. The more you learn the weirder it gets 😵💫
Now the trash can doesn't seam so lonely anymore
I found this blog post were the author tries to use chat GPT to generate theatre manuscript/narrative. It's based on the paper "Co-Writing Screenplays and Theatre Scripts with Language Models: An Evaluation by Industry Professionals". In the blog post they outline their narrative generation procedure in this chart:
I also found this GitHub repo with links to more resources on this topic.
Also, check the number of contributors to a project. All of those people do (probably) trust the project and have also (probably) read at least parts of the source code for it