We've spent a lot on nuclear and it's still too expensive for all but the largest countries to afford. We've spent a lot on wind and solar and every country can afford them.
When I was first granted access to Bing Chat, I had it writing comedic screenplays and sea shanties. Although it often clammed up after realizing it was mocking public figures, creating an story of incest(!), or using intellectual property that it was told not to. (Bing Chat's way of clamming up was hilarious; it'd output several paragraphs and then sweep them all closed and retell its response as "I'd rather not talk about that, because <XYZ>.")
I am perhaps one of the "testers" who helped Microsoft to put the kibosh on long-form responses. As of last week, I could still extract limericks from the thing, though.
well, that would mean this kind of task is moderated away, not necessarily that it isn't chatGPT4, which I believe they openly advertised as a joint operation
Tried it. Didn't feel the natural conversation that ChatGPT has, felt more like a regular old 'how can I help you' chatbot. Asked a few questions, picked out some keywords and pasted a very generic bit of advice that wasn't really conversational and didn't seem to take into account information already provided.
Just a one note text page. I have a normal list, and linked a set of sub lists that link from the top. Then I have a 'today' list of the really important stuff that must get done that day.
That's great if we all live in control rooms. The part 'calories in calories out' misses is that what you eat, how you eat, where you eat, how your body reacts to what you eat, who you eat with, where you live, what food is available, the price of food....all impacts how much you eat.
I think of 'calories out' as including all the the what, how, where, etc. I think 'calories in calories out' is true, but I think often only things like exercise and BMR are considered in the sum of the out.
The part that it gets right, though, is that way too many people are lying to themselves about how many calories they are actually consuming. It's not like the average overweight-obese person is sitting at 2000 calories a day and can't figure out why they aren't losing weight. They're eating 1000 calories a meal, drinking soda, eating snacks.
Sure there are metabolic outliers and everyone loves to bring them up. They are, however, outliers. Horrible diet and a sedentary lifestyle are the main culprits where calories in/out very much holds.