
I tried it once at the start of covid. My food finally got to me lukewarm ninety minutes after I ordered it. I’m sure the restaurants and drivers have improved since then, but I just can’t justify paying almost double for my food.

I tried it once at the start of covid. My food finally got to me lukewarm ninety minutes after I ordered it. I’m sure the restaurants and drivers have improved since then, but I just can’t justify paying almost double for my food.

Seems like the software could have been updated to batch orders similar to how the drivers were.

I don’t know about tesla motors, but my car hasn’t had any issues and it’s a 2017. I also haven’t heard of “solenoids and computers” that fail at a very high rate. My experience has been that it’s the most reliable car I’ve owned. The lack of routine maintenance also lets you buy a used car without having to trust that the previous owner took good care of it.

Absolutely. I didn’t even consider this when I bought my EV. After about six months I had to look up the suggested service schedule to make sure I wasn’t missing anything.

Cost savings just when looking at fuel costs, but if you add in the lack of routine maintenance and moving parts that can wear out, the cost savings multiply. There’s the big ticket high voltage battery, but typically that’s a matter of reduced capacity rather than a complete failure.

AI is incredible if you ask it about stuff you’re not an expert on. Once you ask it those things you already have expert level knowledge on, especially nuanced questions, you’ll start to see the issues. It won’t be every question it gets wrong, but it’s often enough to be an issue.

I would argue that there is no such thing as a good reason to store plain text passwords.

All these ai agents sound interesting on paper, but who actually wants them? A salesman was talking about a company that used one to let customers initiate returns like it was impressive. I can accomplish that with any app, email, or phone call today. How is an agent doing it better?

It will get rid of the ads though.

I’ve always used Pandora. I don’t remember exactly in what way, but it’s significantly different from Spotify. I prefer it, though, but I know that’s just because it’s what I used first.

But it’s going to be amazing! Incredible capabilities are just 6-12 months away!
Why all these products and implementations and spending can’t wait for those capabilities to be real is beyond me.

Salesforce recently got rid of their “crate a case” form and replaced it with a chat bot to do the exact same thing. Of course it tries to talk you out of creating a case first, but will begrudgingly create one eventually. It’s one of the most asinine uses for a chat bot I’ve ever seen.

Could be like auto zone where all points expire after 90 days. Kohls is still worse somehow.

“You can get pretty good results most of the time and save money on labor!” Not like our whole business model is focused on expertise and compliance or anything. Surely our clients won’t mind a few little mistakes here and there, as a treat.

A salesman for an AI consulting company made the comment that we don’t expect perfection from humans, so why should we expect it from AI? He was smug about it, too, like it was his big gotcha. Joke’s on him, I’m the one that talked the bosses out of spending money with them.

Just typical “science journalism” sensationalizing journal articles.

We can already copy DNA with PCR (polymerase chain reaction), but creating it from scratch seems unnecessary. Embryos by comparison are infinitely more complex. We do have the technology to fertilize one egg with the genetic material of another, though, so maybe it’s not as far off as I’m imagining.

I use fox replace to do this, except mine is to replace slams with criticizes.

But the source has such a long history of truthful reporting on matters related to children!
Wasn’t that Amazon and their “just walk out” grocery store system?