I suspect that by using AI to write a cover letter that companies explicitly do not want you using AI for, to the extent that they’re trying to check for AI use, will help you “stand out”-but not in the way you probably want.
I agree that the decision made by the train here sucks, but I think it's pretty clear that the use of "kidnapped" is hyperbole. You are not "kidnapped" if the bus driver refuses to let you get down in the middle of the freeway. The situation is a little similar if the driver is taking you to somewhere you don't want to go, because that is also what a kidnapper does, but that's where the similarities end.
I'm not asking the bus driver to stop in the middle of a highway. I'm asking the bus driver not to go past 15 actual bus stops before letting me off. With the drivers rationale being - "This bus is not registered at any of those stops".
The ad absurdum of this situation would be DB escalating it into a full on hijacking scenario where they run the train in a loop, forever claiming the train cannot ever stop.
In that situation - you do what is necessary to stop the train, because nobody else will, which might involve killing the driver.
The reason you don't jump straight to shooting the driver is that doesn't achieve your goals. There is a long list of things to do before needing to kill anyone, so do those first.
Ok, I think I understand your viewpoint better. You will do the minimum necessary to make the outcome you want happen, regardless of what it might be. The goal you want and the actions needed to make it come about need not be proportional.
Google Chrome ships as a 500 MB binary on my machine, so if you're embedding a web browser, that's how much you need minimum. Now tack on whatever else your application needs and it's easy to see how you can go past 2 GB if you're not careful. (To be clear, I am not making a moral judgment here, I am just saying it's possible to do. Whether it should happen is a different question.)
I just checked Google Chrome Framework on my Mac, it was a little over 400 MB. Although now that I think about it it's probably a universal binary so you can cut that in half?
It is always amusing to me to watch people (gamers, in this case) slowly end up at “capitalism must be destroyed” when the market affects something they care about (PC parts becoming more expensive because of AI).
I think you're conflating executive rhetoric for the markets with what the average developer at any company believes. Do you really think the average Uber dev cares any more than an Uber janitor about summoning taxis on demand?
No, I'm actually quite pleased. It has historically been very difficult to get the average person to care about monopoly law and international relations, or even politics in general. I think our society has done a lot to try to insulate citizens from the consequences of policies, because groceries continue to show up in their supermarket, they need to keep going to work, and they can still visit their family on an individual basis even if statistically and in aggregate many of these may change based on what is going on.
Every so often, there are events that really get people upset about the state of things. I think the Taylor Swift Ticketmaster thing would be one of them. In this case a guy who mostly wants his games to run fast is now caught in the middle of supply chains for the AI race and is finding out that when a trillion dollars are involved, his hobbies literally do not matter in comparison. So when someone ends up realizing this, I am hopeful that more people will as well and do something about it.
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