I find the AI summaries of reviews Amazon does on product pages to be fairly inoffensive and generally a decent use of AI.
But it's also clearly marked as auto-generated.
I find the AI summaries of reviews Amazon does on product pages to be fairly inoffensive and generally a decent use of AI.
But it's also clearly marked as auto-generated.
"Tiajuana? No, that's too easy. Ensenada!"
I see. It seems like you may be one of the people that try to coerce relational models into nosql stores like Dynamo.
Or course it's possible. They even trick you into thinking it's a good pattern by naming things "tables".
But if you're using Dynamo to its fullest an ORM is not going to be able to replicate that into a relational store without some fundamental changes.
I am literally in the middle of swapping DynamoDB for a RDBMS.
The idea that you can abstract away such fundamentally different data stores is silly. While I hate doing it now, reworking the code to use relational models properly makes for a better product later.
Thomas Jefferson never added airplane safety regulations to the Constitution ergo, it's completely unregulated. Also, Justice Alito would like to cite a man with tapestries tied to his arms as he jumped off a cliff in the 9th century saying of course it's safe.
RFC 1925(11)
(11) Every old idea will be proposed again with a different name and a different presentation, regardless of whether it works.
They'll still vote for him. The (R) outweighs anything a Democrat could do.
I'd like to know.
I want to go out on my own terms. If that means I don't have to save so much for retirement... Great, I can go on expensive vacations now instead of later.
And then I can do what needs to be done without regrets.
My principle dev asked if we could figure out how to invoke Lambda functions from within postgres trigger functions.
I was like, "Probably. But it's like putting a diving board at the top of the Empire State building.. doable, but a bad plan all around."
It would be better if they got a terrible one. Like Keenan in a blonde wig.
You got it.
It's a sweet deal for the servicers.. the loans are basically zero risk and the servicer gets to keep a lion's share of the interest while only paying for the costs associated with servicing (customer service, mailing statements, pausing repayment for various reasons, etc.)
That said, those loans shouldn't be confused with private student loans, in which the government is. It involved (mostly).
Remember too that the President doesn't write the laws, and pretty much every solution for a single payer healthcare solution involves legislation.
Blaming or crediting a President for something that only Congress can do is a long American tradition, and an exceptionally stupid one we need to get over.