CEO @AlignLayerNine. Business Technology Advisor. IT Solutions Architect. Husband. Father. Woodworker. Cook. YouTube Fanatic. (Not necessarily in that order)
@vishaltweetup You're really asking if developers wanted to be photographers or photo technicians at a Walgreens. If the latter than no you're not a developer otherwise you're a visionary which is what most developers wanted to be in the first place.
It just occurred to me that terminator has human teeth. You're telling me these robots could make perfect looking humans with all the other bits but the teeth had to be separately manufactured and embedded in the otherwise metal skeleton...
@HackingDave It will be short lived. The end game is that all these people become irrelevant and everyone just gets whatever they want with a prompt. Then nothing is sellable and software is irrelevant.
I just had a guy drop by to drop off some stuff, tried to ask him if he could check the drop box for me and he had his headphones in the whole time and couldn't hear me, finally takes them out and goes I've never done that before so I don't know how. Like where are these people coming from? They have absolutely no training. Horrible
Anyone have any opinions about @UPS vs @FedEx?
My office building seems to have a problem with FedEx actually picking up their drop box and scanning packages. UPS shows up on time every time and no issues.
That said in the past FedEx has been generally more reliable and sometimes a little faster but this pickup issue loosing packages is really becoming a problem for us.
@aakashgupta What would be a better resolution? What would be the other options and how would you operationalize them? They're probably doing the lowest risk workflow.
Actually the better thing to do would be to go through that file and make examples of copy for each instance the AI can reference as replacements, where you see em dashes use comma's instead etc. Giving it a giant negative prompt against examples is only going to work like half the time
Unfortunately I know many people who have these with no subscription. It may have taken them time because they may not have even known what account was associated with the camera. It could have been setup by a grandkid who shared access with her and she wasn't the owner. I could see the rabbithole taking a couple days to figure out even with their resources and potential legal hoops. There's no doubt they have the rest of the video that camera captured until a couple seconds before it went offline.
The thing is I'm pretty sure you can on nest activate a subscription and your video activity data gets restored. The subscription is only how much data is exposed not what is being captured. Google has a multi step data purging process and I'm pretty sure data can be in their system for up to 6 months.