But most SPAMs are HTML, so you'll have a good default last-stage in-client filtering in place in case some SPAM actually makes it through the other setup on the server (greylisting, DNS based filtering lists, policy-based filtering, etc.) :)
A couple of weeks ago, I decided to write a GUI utility to propagate my new PuTTY default settings to existing sessions. I took the Go Walk package, which is Win32, and was done in several hours, most of those spent hunting down an obscure layout bug. So long with memory-unsafe languages.
Yellowstone rangers taught us that building an effective anti-bear trash container is impossible because the top 10% of bears are smarter than the bottom 10% of tourists.
They obviously didn't teach us that, because it isn't true. It's trivial to provide a container that can only be opened by following instructions that a human can understand and a bear can't.
That container won't work to stop bears from having access to trash, because tourists have the alternative of just throwing their trash on the ground, but being unwilling to bother using a bear-safe container is a very different thing from being unable to.
My prediction is that when Chinese factory-cities adapt to tremendous demand, we will see a new digital Renaissance with teraflops of compute in toasters and kettles. And we will laugh at laptops with 8 GB of RAM so hard.
I think every sane person today should abstain from insider trading markets (stop calling them "prediction markets", BTW). If you are not an insider, you are a sucker - someone who will definitely lose out to insiders' gains.
On the interview for my current job, they asked me what I would do if I needed to download the entire Wikipedia. They expected me to design a scalable system with a separate crawler, parser, download queue, exponential backoff, and stuff. I said that I would just download a tarball. To their credit, they quickly accepted the answer as correct.
This is because in Japanese, the verb (or the main predicate) almost always comes at the very end of the sentence. Half of the time, you have a chance to get the whole phrase wrong.
The same, but rarer, may happen in German when a long, complex sentence ends with "nicht", flipping the whole meaning.
There's no stickiness per se. The thing is, all modern LLMs are good enough to answer everyday questions most people ask. Moreover, I really think most people using LLMs for more specific tasks (e.g., coding) will not be able to distinguish top LLMs in a blind test.
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