Removed by mod
Removed by mod
This article seems to imply they’ll withdraw charges for all parties, but the statement reads like they will only withdraw charges for the people confirmed dead…? Which is it
because the earth is big and you don’t have a hard drive big enough to store it locally?
According to the keynote at least, the integration is literally just Siri offering to defer to ChatGPT for some requests. Basically a more advanced version of “here’s what I found on the web” if it doesn’t know what to do otherwise.
Funnily enough, Apple isn’t even paying OpenAI for that, they’re literally saying it’s for exposure.
you have what i would consider consistently bad takes on this subject
Ah, just saw a comment from OP claiming that Israel was doing “everything possible” to prevent civilian casualties, so yeah, bad take puts it pretty well. What bad faith bs
Your reply refers to a “junior who is nervous” and “how the sausage is made”, which makes no sense in the context of someone who just has to review code
They’re saying developers dislike having to review other code that’s unfamiliar to them, not having their code reviewed.
Not to mention the law firm they hired advertises anti-union action, so that should tell you whether they can be trusted to be fair to workers…
Well yes, I was simplifying because I wanted to address the main (incorrect) criticism by @spartanatreyu@programming.dev. I agree with your comment
Yeah, in Java calling first()
on a stream is the same as an early return in a for-loop, where for each element all of the previous stream operations are applied first.
So the stream operation
cars.stream()
.filter(c -> c.year() < 1977)
.first()
is equivalent to doing the following imperatively
for (var car : cars) {
if (car.year() < 1977) return car;
}
Not to mention Kotlin actually supports non-local returns in lambdas under specific circumstances, which allows for even more circumstances to be expressed with functional chaining.
…what? At least with Java Streams or Kotlin Sequences, they absolutely abort early with something like .filter().first()
.
IntelliJ finds most uses in my experience unless you’re doing something weird with reflection or similar. And if it’s a public facing API only used by the library’s consumers…– it should be used in tests at the very least! Especially if it’s prone to regressions like the comment suggests
If you read the linked article you will find that exterior cameras feeds are plenty invasive enough.
I don’t think they have interior cameras (although other manufacturers do), but the front and backup camera feeds provide plenty of information as well.
Then there’s also this, if you need any more reason to be concerned.
Their privacy policy includes a provision that they can use the cameras and GPS to infer things such as sexual orientation, so yeah.
Windows Recall, the screengrabber they were about to release with an unencrypted database as an opt-out feature.
I mean, in 2012 they didn’t even have 2FA yet. Also IIRC they haven’t started really leaning into the privacy angle until maybe around 2019-20 publicly, and from there it probably wasn’t the highest priority item for the security team. Not excusing how long it took, but they are a business after all and with how scary the warnings around ADP are I doubt it’s a very marketable feature with a lot of reach.
There is a shortcut action to shut down the phone which you could trigger with an automation, I suppose.