In refining 2126C5:9B4FF3 (Minsk) in 00h 04m 42s 365ms I have brought glory to the company.
Praise Kier.
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#mdrlumon #severance
lumon-industries.com
> You know that an LLM is not going to provide any meaningful narrative, or craft a thought provoking story
The title of the paper is "Exploring the POTENTIAL of LLM-based agents..." Right now, yeah, just play BG3. But the context of the discussion is its potential, which is certainly worth discussing imo.
I find that incredible (in a good way!)
My idea of govt organizations was strict dress code, clock in at 8 AM on the dot, leave at 5 PM sharp, unknowable bureaucracy above your head.
Yep, that was my idea at first too! But in the summer I see people in flip flops and shorts :-) Execs still wear suits, but us lowly engineers not so much.
As someone born in 1995, I don't have any real emotional connection to the Challenger explosion. It's pretty bizarre to think that children born after the 9/11 attacks will probably feel the same indifference.
If you are an engineer, it would be good to try to learn from this and similar accidents. I.e., noting your lack of emotional connection is beside the point, the question is, what can you take away from what happened?
Of course, it's extremely important. I'm currently listening to the Freakonomics podcast on the Challenger explosion[0]. I was only noting the difference being born a few years apart can make when it comes to significant shared cultural memories.
You will notice this sort of thing more and more as time goes on.
For me the "ah hah" moment was when it hit me that "Where were you when you heard about Challenger?" was my generation's version of, "Where were you when JFK was assassinated?"
Another easily observed one is music. Very few people are aware of much that happened in popular music after they hit 25.
You can listen through 65 years of pop music made so far. Then, if you live 80 years, you only lose about 45,8% of all pop-music you could have heard during your lifetime. That's not half bad.
If you include some blues, jazz and classical, that percentage goes down significantly.
Regards, 29 year old with 4 year long amnesia about music.
As someone born well before the 9/11 attacks -- were there any positive consequences to the emotional attachment they provoked in the public? Indifference would obviously have been the correct response. What actually happened was not dissimilar to stabbing yourself in the face because you think a mosquito might have landed on it.
I think every generation has their big events and I think they overlap. For baby boomers, it's the JFK assassination (maybe other things). For Gen X'ers like me, it's the Challenger (and 9/11 I'd argue). For Millennials, it's 9/11.
Congratulations on 4 million users! The visualization works really well, IMO.
A couple thoughts on its implementation:
1) The dropdown list of countries is not alphabetized. Makes it difficult to find reviews from a given country, although it does make you use the map:)
2) If you click on a country that doesn't have a review, it produces a blank, instead of the country name and flag with no reviews.