Some Porsche headlamps are popular amongst thieves because they emit light in the proper frequencies and efficiencies plus have advanced cooling. These are often used to grow certain indoor crops that might end up getting transported using the Airtag method mentioned in the last episode...
I just bought a 3 pack of grow lights for my indoor herb garden (basil, thyme, oregano, etc.) for $20 Prime deal. Sad to think someone would go to all the effort to steal headlamps from a luxury vehicle to save $20. But that's some serious dedication to "maker tech" there, so I have to give them props for their innovative "herb growth" setup. 😂
@@LinuxTechShow I have my shades in the car at all times, as it's while I'm driving I have the most need for them. So I have a long standing habbit of taking them off when I leave the car, and they are always in the same place in the car - which is only accessible from the drivers seat.
Regarding terms and conditions, copy and paste it into AI and ask it for a TL;DR summary. Or, at least ask AI "is there any reason why I shouldn't agree to this?"
Actually, you don't even need to copy and paste the terms and conditions. You can just ask AI something like "Is there any reason I shouldn't agree to RU-vid's Terms and Conditions?"
That's really clever, but also a wee bit frightening: What if Google's AI that you're using to summarize the RU-vid TOU comes back with "Nope: Nothing to be wary of here - just accept it. Trust me." ? 😬
I remember I installed something back when I still used windows 20 years ago. When the installer came to the EULA, the text said exactly this: «Have some EULA, sure.» :-)
Hey, quick question: where exactly is this «getting started» guide you keep mentioning? I mean, if it was important, wouldn't it be tattooed on my forehead by now? ;-) Clearly you're developing it _wrong_ … :-) It's ridiculous some of the explanations from people who didn't even _attempt_ to read any instructions.
The problem I see with it is that the person who logs in today and does this to the developer doesn't realize that 10,000 people have done the same thing before them. So the devs / support team are exasperated, leading to a terse "RTFM!" We wrote the manual to make it so people don't have to ask this question, after all. We don't intend to be brusque, but it's a very real problem. Perhaps this is where AI can really excel: Use chat logs as the training data where the devs / support answered user questions, and then allow it to monitor for those same questions again and again and provide a GPT chat-style reply (as opposed to a verbatim reply).
Of course, our intention isn't to be negative... but real, honest, and a little raw. Unfortunately, seeing into my heart may be dark at times, but it all comes from a place of good intentions. 😔