Let's hope it was a counting error, not a death flight.
evasive_chimpanzee
It's renewable in the same way that whale oil is renewable
I'm not clever enough to come up with a good example on the spot, but you could have something along the lines of a scheme where the word selection corresponds to a not-obvious code. For example, if you wanted to secretly send the word "hello", and you've previously given your receiver a code word "apple":
Hello > 7 4 11 11 14 Apple > 0 15 15 11 4
Adding the code word to the secret message, you'd get:
7 19 0 22 18 > H T A W S
Then your message could be something like:
How are you doing? Today, I went to the store. Avocados were on sale. When do you want to meet up? Saturday looks good for me.
There are definitely way better methods to do the encoding part, and probably also better ways of doing the concealment part.
There's a whole bunch of different steganographic methods. You wouldn't necessarily have to apply them to audio signals, you could apply them to the text itself. It's certainly trickier, so you would want to keep the plain text very short so your ciphertext doesn't get too long or weird
At the end of the day, most of what people care about isn't age, it's cognitive function (though age itself is important; why care about the America of 2040 if you won't live to see it).
Many of these people in power would fight age limits, but they are usually so sure of their abilities, that they may not fight cognitive tests with published results.
For example, if you give someone a Montreal cognitive assessment, and their reaction to it is:
Yes, the first few questions are easy, but I'll bet you couldn't even answer the last five questions. I'll bet you couldn't, they get very hard, the last five questions
And those last 5 questions are:
What month are we in? What year are we in? What day of the week is it? Where are you right now? What city are you in?
You might think that person shouldn't be in charge of the country.
Oops.
Feeder can do keyword filtering on titles, but not on a per feed basis, and only with simple wildcards. I've been able to filter out a bit with it, though.
If you look at news sources that aren't Fox, they mention that there were about that many arrests per day during bidens presidency, too; it's a big country.
I'd believe that there would be some people in government who would hold off of arresting known threats to make Biden look bad/trump look good. There's plenty of documented evidence of that sort of thing going on in the past.
I bet some of the scary examples they sprinkle in there were cases like that, or cases where ice just took custody from local police and called it and arrest.
Oh wow, they really did a good job of explaining it. It's not too complex. I think it probably would be able to filter out some of the fluff.
If it's open source, you could perhaps tinker with the algorithm. My main desires for rss feeds are:
- a way to filter out fluff affiliate link articles (e.g., 8 best gadgets on sale for prime day)
- a way to cluster articles on the same topic (i don't really need to read 5 articles about the same news item)
Any clue if nunti could do that?
For ultimate effect, let's figure out how to turn the ground under solar panels into peatlands.
The main problem with mowers is that they can't get around equipment very well, so there ends up being labor intensive trimming that needs to be done
It depends on what type of licensing. One way it could be beneficial to them (and this is me purely speculating with no checking) is that any work done from outside of their company on their code base is basically free labor. Yeah, they'll lose some potential revenue from people running their own instances of the code, but most people will use their app.