No, thank you for being so reasonable.
No, thank you for being so reasonable.
Fair enough. Can’t say I know enough to really decide what is or isn’t valid criticism.
Were you not being serious when you were calling people systemd-bots?
Gonna be honest, never heard of running before this. Briefly considered switching before OPs presentation in the comments turned me off. I don’t want to associate with his/ her mind of weirdo, they aren’t fun.
But see, that is AI, just not machine learning. It’s classical AI.
By the time they had switched to dvds for me, you couldn’t find floppies at normal school supply stores anymore. As for the dvdrs, my parents ended up buying a pack of them and using them throughout mine and my sisters’ elementary school careers, though I think fully half ended up being used by me to burn playlists from lime/frostwire onto. Those were the days.
Using floppy disks in grade 2, then dvd+r in grade 4 and finally flash drives in 6+
I feel like a fantasy world that you can semi-freely travel to without death is not isekai.
This brings up an interesting point. The snap would have to run a multi pass check to make sure that by killing half of all organic life, it’s not causing the other half to die off. Otherwise, it wouldn’t be confirming to the will of the user, but then does it “scan” individual life types independently or as an ecosystem unto themselves, in which case is there precedence? Do food producing things get a pass, because otherwise the snap is just shortcut the process for half of the population. If it does leave the food producing ones alone, then really he’s just snapping away apex predators.