Genuine curiosity, what would someone have a bot post for them that they wouldn't post for themselves? I can think of edge cases, and genuinely good use cases, but what is the general purpose use you're thinking of that would see everyone use one?
Some wars for public opinion, are lost and won on social media.
Those who post quickest have a higher chance of not getting lost in the noise and that is where bots will probably be used first by individuals as well.
With that said, hopefully this not the future and new ways of moderating and presenting information will be invented, but the way things are now, it's a slug-fest and the fastest and loudest often wins.
I'm genuinely curious as to why you think the bot would be posting "faster" to someone's opinion or statement than a person who can read the statement and respond as fast as they can type..
I can see people setting up some form of pre-loaded opinion/responses based on what they want to be seen as..e.g. if $OPINION_I_DISLIKE print $YOU_BAD else print $YOURE_RIGHT! but that seems like it's pretty limited as to completely not work in practical human communication
Why would you want to have a bot post for you? Once we have general AI available, there will be much better applications than posting for you on social networks.
What drew me to Horizon EDA was that it has interactive router (based on code from KiCad) with push and shove functions. It also has straightforward interface, and it's fast. Recently ODB++ support was added, probably the first (and only?) for open source EDA.
I wish it had ready to use footprints (other than basic resistors, caps, etc), especially from LCSC catalogue.
I saw old footage, posted on yt, with three sailors lifted of the ground when Akron was landing, tragically, two could not hold on. I recall that, because I though to myself that today's news would not have shown all the gruesome details, specially with such sensational commentary.
Even claimed 100% sRGB isn't the whole 100%. I'm aghast at how only recently 100% P3 coverage is finally becoming normal at the high-end (and is still uncommon for gaming-class laptop displays). I can't even consider System76 or Framework or similar for this reason. If you edit any visual content or work with designers, you owe it to yourself to get a P3 display that is calibrated.
Still, genetic regulation changes would somehow have to end up pushed into gametes in order to make it to the embryo. Or maybe there could be a placental mechanism for passing genetic regulation from the mother to the embryo. The latter would be more likely to work, so I'd bet on that if the mechanism exists at all. Either way, finding a bit of Lamarckian flavor in nature would be something else, after all these years.
"the average Core i5-1135G7 in our database is just as fast as the Core i5-10400H, Core i5-8300H, and Ryzen 7 3700U in multi-core benchmarks. The CPU acts even nicer when under single-core load, reaching similar heights as the Ryzen 7 5600X and Core i7-8700K."
Understood, I actually have a m.2 to PCIe adaptor on hand now that I use with success with my honeycomb lx2. I'll test a nic for you with the framework m.2 port.
4. There are companies that will not even consider an applicant w/o BA degree, no matter what experience (HR filters).
Anyway, in large measure, we are only talking how college is not for everyone because it's so expensive. It's fine to have alternatives but education needs to be more accessible to those that want it.
In way way those are two sides of the same coin. College has become so expensive because it's so indispensable. You earn more money with it than without it.
It's become almost a Veblen good -- the more expensive it is, the more desirable it is. And that pushes all colleges to be more expensive.
Having people treat non-college experience as valuable would decrease the necessity of college, and hopefully lower the price. The prestige factor would still exist, but hopefully it would reduce the costs on the lower end that more people can afford the education (if not the networking and prestige benefits).
> It's fine to have alternatives but education needs to be more accessible to those that want it.
As long as funding for college is a lifetime of debt, college as a delivery vehicle for education may not be a very good choice. There are many alternatives to college.
Networking and collaboration is hard to substitute though. As to the costs, looking for a substitute to college because it's expensive it's like treating a symptom rather than the cause.
Solution is straightforward, although often not plug and play - only use IoT devices that you can control, based on ESP8266 or ESP32, that can be flashed to Tasmota, ESPhome, etc and controlled with Home Assistant.
Similar here. I'd rather set up my own home tech than pay for some connected service. My stuff isn't actually smart home stuff, but stuff like PoE security cameras with ZoneMinder, home assembled cycle timers to run sprayers or air bubblers (agriculture related), etc.
I built it, so if it breaks I know how to fix it. No chance of the cloud shutting down bricking my devices.
1. as a public company, they are afraid to lose so many accounts - see Netflix as an example on what could happen to their stock
2. bots are the future, at some point I think everyone will have a bot to post for them