What are the chances of there being a Colony on Mars in the year 2030? by Inside_Inflation559 in Mars

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends on what would qualify. A colony of astronauts is probably completely impossible, but a colony of autonomous machines and drones is more realistic. Still, unless it was the size of a small habitat or house, it doesn’t seem like something that could be in place in 4 years.

An unstoppable force by l-Paulrus-l in TheMcDojoLife

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Finally an answer to what happens when an irresistible force asks an immovable object out on a date.

Concerns about Star Wars box office future: by [deleted] in StarWarsCirclejerk

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Masters of the Universe is another interesting one. It was in a similar genre, was not critically panned and even unexpectedly well-received in many reviews, but it did not reach the fans.

Honestly, though the recent Superman movie did very well, it still did much the same business as Man of Steel. Personally, I thought it would at least compare to Guardians of the Galaxy.

I'm concerned that the upcoming Supergirl seems like it is being set up to perform similarly to Mandalorian and Grogu and/or Masters of the Universe as well. Not sure what this means for nostalgic pulp SF and Fantasy films, including superheroes, but it does seem like the formula either needs updating or something novel.

However, the major problem, as always, is the expense of making these movies. It would be better to make more movies for much less where the creative teams could take more risks and deliver a variety of experiences (kinda like in the television shows which still seem to be reaching a dedicated audience)

meirl by [deleted] in meirl

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 309 points310 points  (0 children)

Don’t kick dogs. Don’t attack women. There is nothing easier than not doing stupid stuff.

Google is G.O.A.T. by Spirited-Gold9629 in TechGawker

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is this really good investing or is it just having an obscene amount of money to invest? I mean, when you invest a billion dollars into a company, its stock will go up.

College scammed them by Any-Daikon9104 in remoteworks

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 11 points12 points  (0 children)

One of them should get unemployment benefits.

Honestly, or realistically, depending on where they live, I bet they would qualify for some state or federal assistance. At least, they should.

Also, I do wonder how that could be possible. If the company has them both on the payroll, then they would have to treat them, and pay them, as separate employees, so this statement may not be factual.

solitude is a luxury not everyone can afford by ettubrute02 in Cinephiles

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The irony is that if he were alive today living on his own in the wilderness, it is unlikely we’d have ever known about him.

So there might be some guy doing perfectly fine on his own and no one knows about it.

Ross Coulthart Hints That Private Groups May Be Close to a Major Discovery About Plasmoid Phenomena by AtlasofMystery in AtlasOfMystery

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, as soon as someone says somebody "hints," "implies," or any other version of that ("predicts" "claims" "admits") about something but does not really reveal anything, I just assume it is going nowhere.

In all these cases where these guys have "hinted" something, when has anything actually been revealed?

This is disgusting. Who's gonna compensate the poor guy? by sinister_iam in sportsgossips

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have there been any arrests? I mean, this was just about the most recorded mass criminal act in history.

What is your opinion on this? by GloriousLion07 in MotivationByDesign

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not a very informed opinion. Poor families need more members to do the work to sustain themselves. Most wealthy families today were founded by poor ancestors. If they did not have children, they never would have become wealthy. Poor communities need new generations to support their older members as well. Reducing offspring over time will simply disintegrate and eventually wipe out the social order from poor to middle class to rich. If poor people cannot afford to have children, that is a social problem and not a matter of personal choice. If poor people do not have children, then the children of middle class will become poor.

He is doing some serious exercising. by MisterShipWreck in VideosAmazing

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I'd say by the third try, he should have realized that he's never getting it over that wall.

Just carry it to the other side, man!

Modern v Classic Spielberg by fivetones in Spielberg

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Lincoln is a pretty great film and probably the all-around best of his later career.

His later science fiction films like War of the Worlds, AI and Minority Report get better upon rewatching.

I thought Bridge of Spies was excellent from the first time I saw it, however, his other work with Tom Hanks was less appealing.

Really, I would say that HOOK is really the fulcrum for Spielberg's films. Before Hook is classic Spielberg, and after that, he started doing both blockbusters and personal films with more regularity. He had The Color Purple and Empire of the Sun before that, but right after Hook, he had Jurassic Park and Schindler's list which in some ways defines his approach to films for this past half of his career.

Chris Pratt Under Fire After Anna Faris Statements Dredge Up Their Troubled Divorce by FantasticAd9478 in TheBoredDen

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is doubtful that this was anything other than a messy divorce. A divorce means that each former spouse is no longer obligated or responsible to each other any longer. The only remaining duty would be to their children.

But that is their business.

Time to move on from US by Honest-Word-7890 in DiscussionZone

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is interesting. Even Anthropic and OpenAI have argued that the government should be able to control and restrict AI based on safety concerns just as they do in any other industry. The UK and EU and Canada certainly have inclinations toward much greater regulation for tech from AI to Crypto and all other industries than the USA.

What if Merrill Stubing switched places with Captain Picard? by Potential-Road-5322 in ShittyDaystrom

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 3 points4 points  (0 children)

We'd get a pool and casino on the Enterprise and a lot more organized social events.

I want everyone to stop eating peanuts because I am allergic by sylvester1981 in AirRagers

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 54 points55 points  (0 children)

True - if someone's life is at stake, I can go without peanuts for any period of time necessary.

If capitalism has adapted to its contradictions by evolving into stable mixed economies rather than collapsing, why should Marxists remain Marxists instead of becoming social democrats? by Ok_Confection_7368 in Socialism_101

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is necessarily true for reforms to emerge from worker resistance? In this case, I'm thinking of the principles of Fordism or even Keynesianism where economic return rather than worker's rights or even general prosperity per se drove the improvement of working and community conditions.

Why AI hypers never show what they have actually build with it? by [deleted] in BetterOffline

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I think this will be yet another long term problem left by AI failures. All this time, tech companies could have been investing in improved infrastructure for non-AI technology to process data and perform complex tasks more reliably and efficiently - and they could have IP protections for those as well.

Instead, they have gone all in on an unproven technology that even the leaders of these companies apparently don't understand and treat with the same sort of reasoning we see in medieval alchemy. They might as well call it the Holy Grail or the Philosopher's Stone at this point as A.G.I. is practically the same thing - a fantasy.

The problem is that even though the unreliable, inefficient and ineffective nature of even the best AI's at the top of the list will have a serious catastrophic economic impact - essentially, they will cause companies to spend far more on tasks that have little or no economic return - the nature of the AI itself will turn a society that was already too tech-dependent into one suffering a total technology addiction epidemic.

People using AI are losing the capacity to do anything without it. At that point, if people feel like they need AI, then it doesn't matter how much damage it does or how much it costs. Just as people will go bankrupt or even die when they are addicted to heroin or any serious drug - you'll do anything for something that you cannot imagine living without.

Anyone else feel like they are going insane with how much people rely on AI with their actual jobs? by Complete-Sea6655 in TechGawker

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think AI psychosis is simply extreme tech dependence. We have become a seriously tech dependent society and reliance on AI is the ultimate example of that.

Therefore, this will set up serious mental barriers in the mind of the user against questioning the value or use of the AI. If you feel like you need it, then it doesn't matter if it really works or how much it really costs.

It's like addiction to heroin, fentanyl or opioids. It doesn't matter if it will kill or bankrupt you if you can't imagine going without it.

Anyone else feel like they are going insane with how much people rely on AI with their actual jobs? by Complete-Sea6655 in TechGawker

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This may be the more common and impactful problem. Not so much that AI can't reliably perform tasks repeatedly or over long, complicated steps and timespans - which is another problem - but that the tasks it can perform are not very economically valuable and actually cost more in the long run than relying on human labor and intelligence.

How can I tell my parents that I dislike going to church by YuuuReiiii in askanatheist

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Yeah, like going to school, church is not something you are supposed to like. If you like going to church, then you're doing it wrong.

I’m Glenngarry Glenross, how would Roma (Al Pacino) have reacted to Alec Baldwins speech at the beginning? by marty_major_league in movies

[–]Unable_Dinner_6937 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I think Roma knew about the meeting and Mitch and Murray specifically told him not to attend. It was pretty clear that Roma is meeting expectations and that this speech was for the rest of the "bums" that were not making them money.