Off to Arcade Club this weekend with some friends! It’s going to be like an oven in there…
Off to Arcade Club this weekend with some friends! It’s going to be like an oven in there…
On the other hand, I’ve been on my fair share of sites that only need an email address to open an account - they don’t ask for anything else, and you’re straight in. Can’t think of any examples off the top of my head, typically, but they do exist. It’s weird.
I’m going to say Hokus Pokus Pink. It’s not the greatest adventure game ever made, and its puzzles are fairly simplistic if I recall, being aimed at a younger audience. But it’s got a certain weird charm to it. It’s compellingly bizarre!
The writing is surprisingly good too, and the Pink Panther and his utter cluelessness about what’s going on makes for a fun protagonist.
Hello there! Thanks for making this, looking forward to being a part of it.
Conversely, I work in IT Support and I get asked programming questions far too often… even to the point where I’m asked to fix applications despite not being a dev.
Then again, I basically have to deal with anything that’s got a plug on the end. I guess code falls into that category in some peoples’ heads.
I just created a sub for prog rock - hopefully I’m not stepping on anyone’s toes. @prog
EDIT: also made a couple more, while I was at it!
@speedrun
@browncoats
Or a transcript of the entire Spanish Inquisition sketch.
Side note, is there an agreed-upon ‘fediquette’?
But if we know that it makes things up and gets things wrong, how can we trust any information it gives us? Fact-checking is one thing, but at that point, you might as well skip the LLM and just look the information up yourself.