

Well it is recyclable, it’s just so expensive most don’t bother.
Well it is recyclable, it’s just so expensive most don’t bother.
At this point the cat is out of the bag, I’m doing uni currently and have used ai to assist, though I’ve only used the ai to help me understand topics, or asked it to give me practise questions, never given it an assignment question or asked it to gen my answers for me.
As a sort of personal tutor it can be really great. I was thinking about how you can try to encourage students to use it without cheating, and the only thing that came to me was if the education system maintained its own “virtual tutor” ai, one that was specifically designed to prevent cheating and encourage ethical use.
Not sure though, it’s a tough problem to deal with, I guess the other option is just more controlled tests, which no one likes.
The hospitals have hostages?
How do you establish networks?
I play devil’s advocate in most friend-space conversations, it’s just who I am, I don’t do it disrespectfully (I hope) but it’s just the first thing my brain goes to.
The main thing that keeps me away from Stellaris (and all Paradox games) is the stupid amount of DLC content.
When a game makes me feel like I have to spend some stupid amount to buy all 30 different dlcs just to get the whole game, then I just avoid the game entirely. If I see a steam page and the dlc list is the longest section on the page then I just close it down.
I’ve never really thought about it, but my first instinct is to say it’s referring to the time “it is raining right now” shortened to “it’s raining”?