![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/91b2f6cf-99c2-4027-ac9c-f86254b8abf1.png)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/d3d059e3-fa3d-45af-ac93-ac894beba378.png)
As far as I know, Apple’s implementation of LLMs is completely opt-in
Check out my blog: https://writ.ee/pavnilschanda/
As far as I know, Apple’s implementation of LLMs is completely opt-in
Head over to !aicompanions@lemmy.world and find out
I’m not allowed to learn to drive. Where I live, people drive like crazy and they follow some sort of “law of the jungle”. Having ADHD doesn’t help either.
This sounds like a very specific question and you should ask an India-specific lemmy community (and before you ask, I’m not Indian despite my username)
Vivaldi would agree with you there. Just listen to his Summer piece.
deleted by creator
I had to look it up and apparently it’s “mencurahkan garam ke laut” a.k.a. “bringing salt to the sea” (Indonesian)
deleted by creator
It’s been trending since COVID
For what? In a literal, empirical sense, no, you can’t. But there could be underlying motives that can be addressed through alternative means
I haven’t personally used YouTube as often as before, since nowadays many creators just try to be clickbaity (and yes, I do use the DeArrow extension). I watch YouTube on the TV with my family, though
I’m single but I notice everyone has a specific smell. Try smelling some of your loved ones’ clothes and you get what I mean. I figure that this would be especially apparently for the visually impaired.
I can relate to this. I feel like if a medium relies on getting as many eyes as possible, be it from the studios or even the creators themselves, they aren’t as engaging, since I’ve seen the same thing over and over. I sort of understand, though. Any time-based visual media can spend a lot for its production, so you gotta take in as much as possible to make up for it. Nowadays I read books that don’t have as much pressure or certain movies, but that’s it.
True, I suppose it depends on the country. In my country, many Papuans live in remote areas where it’s hard to access basic necessities like medicine, let alone the internet.
Three hours and no answers only one answer, which is understandable. Many of these people don’t have access to certain technology because of their economic situation, and even when they do, their voices are so small that they get overshadowed by the majority. I’m not of a dying culture, but I am aware of the many tribes in Papua and how they’re vulnerable from Indonesia’s interference. While many of the Papuan tribes aren’t dying per se, it’s very difficult to get online opinions from (indigenous) Papuans in regards to whether their land is colonized by Indonesians, let alone from tribes that are dying.
Interesting concept for sure. And the collective report system may even tell the morality of the overall userbase. For example, a right-leaning comment may get mass-reported, but the same can apply with left-leaning comments, depending on the demographic of the platform’s users.
Have you tried cross-posting? It posts the same thing to multiple communities without making duplicates on the front page
What about volunteering groups? I’m in my 20s but volunteering groups tend to have people on the older side. It helps that people in their 40s and over tend to be financially stable and would spend their free time to volunteer.
True. As a kid I’d fall for scams all the time, constantly downloading malware that would crash the family computer.
Reducing people from third world countries to “language models” as an attempt to critique AI aint it