> "My friends were in danger and they [the police] were getting quite hands-on.
They were petulantly resisting arrest (it looks on camera to scream instead of just complying calmly) while committing destructive/violent crimes. The police were very restrained here. There was no danger from the police, at all.
Now a police officer doing their job has a spinal injury. Palestine Action says they will not stop doing 'direct action' (sabotage, property destruction, violence). They deserve the proscription.
> The quote from the article continues. You cut it off.
I quoted three separate snippets from the article that I wanted to draw attention to, and gave you the URL to read the rest yourself.
I'm of the opinion that, someone who sledgehammers an unaware opponent and claims in their defense "I was just trying to help", they are being disingenuous. Especially as one of Britain's most elite and privileged youngsters.
If you'd like to quote more of the article:
> When asked by his barrister Tom Wainwright whether he was willing to injure a person or use violence during the break-in, he replied: "No, not at all".
Read that back to yourself while watching the attack footage again. Is this credible testimony?
Wow, thanks. It was really shameful for amiga386 to intentionally hide that critical context. They even omitted the comma showing that there was additional context (and replaced it with inappropriate snark).
can you talk a little more about your replacement extention? I get copilot from my worksplace and id love to know what I can do with it, ive been trying to build some containerized stuff with copilot cli but im worried I have to give it a little more permissions than im comfortable with around git etc
The entire extension and agent framework is in that repo too
extensions/vscode and lib/agent
I let my agent do whatever because I know exactly what it can and can't do. For example, it can use git, but cannot push, and any git changes are local to its containerized environment and don't get exported back to my filesystem where I do real git work. I could create an envelope where they could push git, and more likely I'll give them something where they can call GitHub ali, that's really more useful anyway
How do you do the multi agent setups in containers? I keep trying to figure out ways to start with stuff like this but it always boils down to I don't want to give entirely autonomous agents access to my entire filesystem and/or github perms. I just want them to be able to hack away in their own container and produce a pr I can read or test. I think something like a local git with the remote in the container pointing at the version on the machine could be a start but setting all that up is not trivial. As far as I can tell Steve is just running everything on the base machine in multiple worktreees/multiple clones of the project - which seems to put enormous amounts of trust on agents to actually create branches in a disciplined way. I can't imagine they can be trusted to?
If its observed that at least some conditions are comorbid or often seen together (high blood pressure and heart disease, taking two examples from the abstract), would one not expect to see at least some correlation?
I expect its discussed in the paper but couldnt see it on the abstract (though ill grant even there maybe I didnt read hard enough)
This happens in other languages too - danish and Norwegian are almost the same written, such that most products just combine the two on the packaging. But spoken it can be very difficult to comprehend
So... codified written languages are similar but real spoken ones have diverged? Is this only in the way things are pronouced or the differemce is deeper?
I absolutely don't understand how vacuum works. So I absolutely cannot model how a Dewar flask which has 15 billion light year thickness between the inner and outer wall - a wall that is very close to absolute zero will behave.
if you believe that you haven't been paying attention. Have you actually used AI much? Current ones couldn't subtle their way out of a paper bag. I have no real reason to believe anything in future would be different.
In general, any textual embedding in the ad or system prompt would result in an abjectly terrible user experience. I must assume it will just be banner ads etc
I don't really like firefox translate, despite having made the switch many years ago. For a long time it didnt have the (european) language of the country I live in. Now it does have it. Every time I want it to translate I have to manually find both languages in the insanely long dropdowns. It will not save it the way I want it, but impressively seems to manage to always save it in the other direction...
the concept is too nebulous to "prove" but the fact im operating a machine (relatively) skillfully to write to you shows we are in fact able to generalise. This wasn't planned, we came up with this. Same with cars etc. We're quite good at the whole "tool use" thing
"It was me not really knowing what I was doing, I was trying to protect Leona, or Zoe. I couldn't tell who was screaming."
"My friends were in danger and they [the police] were getting quite hands-on.
"I remember just feeling like I had to help somehow. I would never think to do that to someone, I was just trying to help," he said.
I don't have any opinion on this but I think its important to have the full quote
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