EldritchFeminity

joined 10 months ago

Ah, the usual case of English and American being two entirely different languages despite pretending otherwise.

[–] EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone 0 points 1 hour ago (1 children)

Bitcoin dropped 0.68% 2 days ago, rose 1.13% yesterday, and has dropped 0.93% today. By comparison, the dollar dropped 0.00995% in the last 24 hours compared to the Euro, with the largest change being a +0.14703% change compared to the Australian dollar.

On Jan 1st, 2018, 1 bitcoin was worth $15,196.60. One year later, it was worth $3,851.92. As of this moment, it's worth $61,721.47, has dropped 6.11% this week, and gone up 10% in the last 30 days - making it worth $5,613.31 more than it was at the start of September.

Since 2017, 1 bitcoin has gone up 1,291.05% in value. 1 USD in 2017 is worth $1.28 today - an increase of 28% over 7 years and an average inflation rate of 3.64%. The current inflation rate compared to the end of last year is now 2.53%. If this number holds, $1 today will be worth $1.03 next year.

Tell me which one is the more stable currency to base your product's prices on. Pricing things in Bitcoin is like pricing them in stocks.

Nailed it on the last one. I was going to say, you can probably thank the American education system if it's common enough to be recognized by dictionaries like those. And Zahille7 is probably American, too, which caused the snarky comment in the first place.

Just the usual case of English being a crazy language that ruffles through other languages' coat pockets looking for loose adverbs.

That's why we need people to repeat it loudly and often to really get under their skin.

[–] EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 points 3 hours ago (4 children)

The English language? I have never heard the phrase "inverted commas."

But as to your point: "Both? Both is good."

[–] EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

AI art is human expression in the same way that the Gaussian blur tool is. It's a bunch of math spitting out a pattern based on specific inputs.

All while currently being as ethical as the fast fashion industry producing scam versions of high fashion products.

It has the potential to be very useful in certain applications, but right now, all it really does is create Content to be consumed. Kinda like elevator music or that horrible Corporate Memphis style that has invaded every piece of corporate media/advertising in recent years. Soulless and without meaning. It's pretty high quality slop, all things considered, but slop nonetheless.

[–] EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 points 3 hours ago (3 children)

Crypto is a speculative market. That doesn't make it a good currency - in fact, it makes it a very bad currency. Bitcoins changing in value so much and so rapidly makes them awful for use as a daily currency, and they're backed by fiat currencies anyways because otherwise, they'd have no value.

The only reason people care about crypto is because they think they can make a lot of money off of it when they hand the bag off to somebody else.

They'll be useful for gamers, at least. With the increasing trend of companies caring less about properly optimizing the size of game installs and expecting gamers to have SSDs for texture loading on the fly, these drives will definitely see use. I currently have a 4TB HDD that has over 2.3TB of Steam games installed on it right now (roughly 100 games from tiny indie games to big AAA releases that are 40-80 gigs in size), and several newer games have an SSD listed as one of their minimum requirements.

Those windows with the curtain drawn the exact same way and the on ramp looking like something out of Cities: Skylines look like AI, but everything else looks too logical to me. They even have the sign accurately laying out the nonsense traffic pattern of the road looping around and underneath the highway.

It's very well done and I hate that it takes this much effort to check whether or not a photo may or may not be fake.

[–] EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Parts of Massachusetts are like that as well. As far as I know, flood insurance basically no longer exists on Cape Cod.

That is the original post, as it appeared on the person who took the screenshot's dash.

Tumblr posts aren't like Reddit or Lemmy or Twitter where you have the post and then you go into the comment section underneath it. The post itself is a chain of comments from whoever commented on it by the time that it appears on your timeline. They're like one of those cursed work emails that gets forwarded and responded to so many times that by the time it's relevant to you, you could use it to paper one of your walls if you printed it out.

To get rid of the comment, you'd have to go backward up the chain of reblogs until you found a version without that comment on it.

I posted this in the other thread, but it's relevant here, too

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