We could do this without "AI" being involved. Artificial intelligence is just a crutch and a prop to keep bright minds from fixing everyday problems. How much water and electrical power was consumed to justify a 30% decrease in intersection congestion?
It's not the stoplight people. The bottleneck is too many cars on the road. Fix THAT, AI. https://techhub.social/@Techmeme/112588046384489649
Welp. Currently downloading 19 years of Instagram pictures. Time to jump ship. I did it with Facebook a few years ago, and now it's Instasham's turn.
I rarely post anything, and when I visit it's nothing but ads, and video shorts, and people looking to sell their stuff. What a hot mess. Thanks for nothin' Meta.
I'll delete my account once I confirm everything is on MY drive.
Y'all need to follow @MLE_online because she shares cool (real sleep) dreams and the repurposing of things; along with photos and details of any of her given creative journeys. No fluff about her stuff. Read up! #MakersHour#makers#diy https://social.afront.org/
I have been following the ~8 weeks of live court room reporting from the team at The New York Times. I have shared some key texts via the NYT website, here on Mastodon, hoping to give credit where credit is due and help an audience see some key points during the trial.
There is one particular reporter, Jonah E. Bromwich, who has impressed me the most.
From his About page: "As a Times journalist, I am committed to upholding the standards of integrity outlined in our Ethical Journalism Handbook. I place a high priority on protecting my sources. I strive to be accurate and fair in my coverage and to gain a deep understanding of the issues I cover, from multiple angles."
He (and the NYT team) succinctly communicated, in few words, what was happening in the court room at any given time.
Bromwich was able to deliver updates that were professional, unbiased, and simple enough for us lay people to understand. And for that, I am thankful. Hats off!