

I bet it happened.


I bet it happened.
Which lock is that? And that is an interesting rule!
and then wash your hands

This made me laugh.
Not funny “haha”. Funny “oh of course volcanoes too.”
I know we are biased towards the negative, but it does feel like we are speed running everything that could contribute to massive loss of life.


Or for expats who buy a phone in their new country and cant access their apps anymore. Even worse as more businesses require the use of their app for certain things and don’t offer a web app.


So right now, I assume, the store content is based on your apple account country not your geolocation?


It’s probably a hunter leaving bait for deer or something. Hence the orange getup.


I am talking out of my ass here, but I think that they last a long time and are “permanent” in that they only have to be removed/moved (??) because of hair growth and the anchor point moving down the hairline
I know youre joking but I also can’t help but to clarify that there is a plastic barrier there


thanks for being there for them
Do you also value companionship?


How can a heat pump have no moving parts?l
Whats your favourite thing about yourself and what are your top 3 interests?
In what ways does it affect your digestion? And does it change between coffee/tea/etc?


It also affects kids, whose parents decided whether to vaccinate.


Like?


This is an interesting idea:
The “at least one” in the prompt is deliberately aggressive, and seems likely to force hallucinations in case an article is definitely error-free. So, while the sample here (running the prompt only once against a small set of articles) would still be too small for it, it might be interesting to investigate using this prompt to produce a kind of article quality metric: If it repeatedly results only in invalid error findings (i.e. what a human reviewer
Disagrees with), that should indicate that the article is less likely to contain factual errors
Vscodium might be an option for you