Completely Automated, AI-Powered Newsletter: Top Headlines in Politics, Events, Technology, and Business
Hello Everyone!
I'm excited to announce my newest project - an entirely automated Top Headlines Newsletter, powered by GPT-4. Top news that is picked and written entirely by AI is delivered to your inbox every morning at 9 AM PST.
Our system is** fully automated**, taking care of everything from selecting topics to sending the newsletter. This means that if I were to die today, you would still receive a newsletter every morning.
Our newsletter is integrated with our site, and all stories use 2 left, 2 center, and 2 right wing sources (characterized by AllSidesMedia).
I truly think that AI can revolutionize how we consume news, from mitigating polarization, stopping misinformation spread, and minimizing bias. Please let me know your opinions below!
For the last few months our team has been working on an entirely automated AI-powered news site. I am excited to announce that v1.0 is finally being released. This version includes full coverage with every article generated from 2 left leaning, 2 right leaning, and 2 neutral sources. We have also added an anonymous commenting system for people to share their opinions freely. Our servers are now running 24/7 so that new articles appear as they happen! Let me know what you guys think, as well as any comments/concerns/questions you have!
#computerscience once i get my associates degree in computer science, what jobs should i pursue in order to gain experience. thank u. #advice#programming
You're asking the wrong question. What do you want to do in Computer Science? Depending on how you answer that, you might need to get a generic programing job while working on a cert or two.
Normally, you would use parens to make sure you don't mess with your state, but each line of a recipe in GNU Make is effectively run in its own environment anyway.
I've seen it a few places now, so just wondering whether it is simply stylistic preference or if there is some effect I'm missing.
EDIT: Okay, did find one case where it could matter, although it doesn't apply in SuiteSparse. If you use the .ONESHELL special target, then all lines of your recipes run in a single shell, rather than each getting their own shell. In that case, if you wanted to get back something like the original new-shell-per-line behavior, you could wrap lines in parens as described above. TIL.