Area 6 didn’t disappoint. Still the epic set piece as it always has been in Star Fox 64.
I loved watching Rob blast away from the great fox and then he does a fly by when he’s done.
There’s just so much detail In every level.
Star Fox is really good.
The music hits hard, it looks great and it's just fun to play.
I've never been the biggest Star Fox fan before this, but I think this game is going to make a lot of new ones.
Star Fox 64 is inarguably the best Star Fox game, so of course I was going to love this remake. It’s absolutely gorgeous (maybe one of Nintendo’s best-looking games ever?), but more importantly, it *feels* like Star Fox. I’m loving it and can’t wait to get all the medals.
Every exec on earth should be deeply worried about building human teams as sycophantic as the AI tools they rely on. It's imperative execs are not just open to but DEMAND feedback like "you look truly ridiculous" before shipping hardware so repulsive it makes national news.
@Polymarket I’m with Verizon and had to deal with it the other day and I didn’t love it at all. I had to do a ton of research because it wouldn’t answer me directly on what I needed.
I always wonder about the validity of data like this, “hey guys the cheaper option scores better, trust us”
Yes, ESPN used AI to alter this photo of Tony Parker, an ESPN spox told @colincsalao@FOS
- ESPN also used AI for two other "moving portraits" during the broadcast
- ESPN is now "evaluating" whether it will continue to use AI in its broadcast:
https://t.co/Eo2kbM2zEs
@awfulannouncing Why don’t good things like this happen to me? Feels like you’re there, or even baseball in summer getting to hear the crowd murmur and pop on a home run.
This line 😭— “For an algorithm, an error is a flaw to be corrected; for a person, however, an error can be a catalyst for profound change.” — Pope Leo, #Magnificahumanitas
Let me trace the timeline here because nobody's connecting it.
Step 1: Scrape the entire internet. Every book, every article, every conversation, every piece of art, every forum post. Do it without asking. Do it without paying.
Step 2: Train a model on all of it. Call it "artificial intelligence."
Step 3: Go to BlackRock's Infrastructure Summit and announce: "We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter."
Step 3 is where you sell people's own knowledge back to them. On a meter.
They took the collective output of human thought, compressed it into a model, and now they want to charge you by the token to access a version of what you and everyone you know already created.
One Reddit user put it perfectly: "They stole all this data from us, the people, our life's work, creativity, art, by devouring the internet and blowing through all copyright laws. Now they want to sell it back to us in the form of a utility."
Imagine if someone photocopied every book in the public library, burned the library down, and then opened a subscription service for the copies.
That's the metered intelligence business model.
And they're pitching it to infrastructure investors as though they invented water.
Fox McCloud and his crew are back in the cockpit for #StarFox, a remake of the Nintendo 64 game, coming to #NintendoSwitch2 on June 25th.
Watch Star Fox Direct: https://t.co/KBVScGu2Rf