You mean x football fields.
Coincidentally both “football fields” are pretty close in length.
You mean x football fields.
Coincidentally both “football fields” are pretty close in length.
Just switched to them. Would recommend so far.
You can also copyright the original character and make AI generate all the motions of that character. Since the originals was (human) created and copyrighted, it doesn’t matter that AI created art derived from that character isn’t copyrightable in of itself.
Plus there is also trademarks for character likeness.
All in all, I agree with you, this is a non issue for Hollywood studios.
This.
YouTubeTV carries network channels that directly charge YouTube TV carriage fees. Those channels charge a pretty hefty fee regardless of who you get the channels through.
https://variety.com/vip/pay-tv-true-cost-free-1234810682/
This is not YouTube premium.
It actually does get higher revenue for content creators for the majority of your creators. Average per view is something like 5-10x vs non premium views.
It’s based around your watch time and something like 50%? of your subscription split across the channels you watch.
Ad impressions pay very little on YouTube.
You can train an effective one for a few hundred bucks now.
No, unless you are leveraging evaporative cooling, that amount of circulation isn’t going to get you much.
Just get a real geothermal hvac system if you have the opportunity. Incredibly efficient.
Back of the napkin conversion: 20btu/sqft recommended cooling capacity. 1btu = 252 calories (small)
A 60k btu cooling needs
15120000 gram degrees C of water. Assuming you have perfect heat exchanger on both ends, that’s 15120 liters-degrees circulated per hour.
Pumping that much water alone is going to be quite a bit of energy.
Then you have the problem of heat exchanger. There are lots of sizing mostly based on the deltaT temperature difference.
Realistically, without some agent evaporating and recondensing, you’ll have a massive water to air heat exchanger that’s not practical at all.
If you want to do more research yourself, heat exchanger sizing can be found in mechanical engineering and chemical engineering handbooks.
But that’s as high as the meter……
This was more or less a reflection of my personal experience.
When I was in school, we were taught how to do research. It involves going to Libraries and looking for primary secondary and tertiary sources via the Dewey decimal system. We were taught how to use almanacs and even had an almanac competition on how fast someone can find information.
Public institutions such as the Library system in the United States, were our “temple” of knowledge. Public support for Libraries was historically VERY high.
However, since the popularization of search engines, it has radically reshaped our expectations of finding information. We expect to find it at our fingertip, in less than 200ms, at the cost of quality and gatekeeping institutions that filtered out a lot of junk knowledge.
I was able to find a few articles talking about this: https://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/2477/2279
I especially love the quote, “Conflation of information retrieval with knowledge”
Sure, just do what California did via the CCPA and CPRA.
You can opt out of that party selling your data.
It 100% is more tax efficient and effective than going through the judicial system for every single warrant they want to execute. Can’t blame them for that.
I think the logic is more that if AI is inevitable, might as well be the first to make a shitload of money from it.
Which total wars though
Or a fart in a blanket :)
Slap some 2D anime girl avatar on it and you got yourself a top grossing v-tuber.
Google search engine destroyed lots of jobs. I would even argue, from a US perspective, it even changed our relationship to institutions of knowledge curation (libraries, news papers, magazines)
We’re all just learning here, but yeah, that’s pretty interesting to learn about effective synthetic data used for training.
The HVAC market has never been hotter!! Buy buy buy!
The cloud givith and the cloud taketh