Edit: it doesn't seem to do that anymore, but it definitely did at least twice, when I didn't have DND on.
Edit: it doesn't seem to do that anymore, but it definitely did at least twice, when I didn't have DND on.
A few seconds later, he hears a voice say "......no". So he relaxes with a sigh, and goes to report the all clear to his superior.
Dead Comment
“Among other services, Pinkerton offers to send investigators to coffee shops or restaurants near a company’s campus to eavesdrop on employees’ conversations.”
https://newrepublic.com/article/147619/pinkertons-still-neve...
Totally agree. Somehow every good idea gets converted to a rigid ideology after a while. Same for OOP. It’s a solid idea but then the ideologues pushed it way too far. And instead of dialing back a little we see other ideologues declare “X is dead“ and the pendulum swings into another extreme direction.
My company is generally behind the curve so now people have been bitten by the REST, JSON, Microservice bug. They don’t know why or what it really is but things have to be done that way. That together with calling themselves “agile” without understanding what it means besides using JIRA and having fixed sprints.
This resonates with me. My first job out of college was with a big, very old insurance company. My team lead became obsessed with using microservices for some reason, even though we were only building internal web apps that would have about 1,000 users on a busy day. There would be no performance concerns whatsoever that would warrant "breaking up a monolith" to make it more scalable. But microservices were a great way for the team to feel like we were using trendy tech despite not having any idea how to really go about doing it or any particular reason for doing so.
What city do you ride taxis in? Because the taxis I've ridden have spanned a range of tolerably annoying to downright abysmal experiences. Uber/Lyft drivers have unequivocally been more friendly, punctual, and professional. No taxi company I've seen can manage to make a halfway decent app or even guarantee that a driver will show up within an hour of me needing one.
Even if Uber/Lyft become the same price as taxis, I'll take Uber/Lyft any day over a traditional cab company.
Effective writing is an important skill, so I don't think in-person conversations would replace papers, but from a conversation with a student who plagiarized their paper you could probably tell that they didn't really understand what they "wrote."
We are doing absolutely inane projects that have no hope of succeeding.
We serve a niche industry where certified professionals have to do certain tasks personally, instead of being able to delegate to secretaries. Somehow our CEO has been convinced that AI can be trained to do these tasks, at a reliability level not achievable by other humans.
Team motivation is in a weird space: everyone is relaxed because there is no pressure to succeed - we all know the project will fail unless someone develops well-perfoming, human-level AGI before Q4/2020. Lots of long lunches and checking out early in the afternoon.
At the same time, everyone is worried how terrible the fallout is going to be once the project reaches its inevitable conclusion.
Interesting times, but at least we can now tell investors we are a keen company with an AI play up our sleeve!
This is hilarious, and makes me wonder how many similar corporate AI initiatives are under way in the world right now.
It could have been way worse. I've never understood why people sync their personal messages/emails to their work computers. It can and does get watched - gods help you if your friends have a borderline taste in memes and send you something offensive while you're presenting.