I asked this question ages ago and it was pointed out that "sub" isn't a reddit specific term. It's been short for "subforum" since the first BBSes, so it's basically a ubiquitous internet term.
"Sub" works because everybody already knows what you mean and it's the word you intuitively reach for.
You can call them "communities" if you want, but it's longer and can't easily be shortened.
Lemmy is a selfhosted, federated social link aggregation and discussion forum. It consists of many different communities which are focused on different topics. Users can post text, links or images and discuss it with others. Voting helps to bring the most interesting items to the top. There are strong moderation tools to keep out spam and trolls. All this is completely free and open, not controlled by any company. This means that there is no advertising, tracking, or secret algorithms.
TBF, if your goal is to generate the most valid sentence that directly answers the question, it's only one minor abstract noun that's broken here.
Edit: I wouldn't be surprised if there's a substantial drop in the probability of a digit being listed after the leading 9 (3.14159...), even, so it is "last" in a sense.
Edit again: Man, Baader-Meinhof so hard. Somehow pi to 5 digits came up more than once in 24 hours, so yes.
Don't have links anymore, but few months ago I came across some startup trying to sell AI that watches your production environment and automatically optimizes queries for you.
It is just a matter of time until we see first AI induced large data loss.
I'd practically guarantee there's a nonzero amount of suits out there who think it'd be a fantastic idea, and have at the very least tried to make it happen, and that it's only a matter of time before one of them talks somebody into it if they haven't already
But copilot suggested it and it obviously knows what it's doing! If I couldn't trust literally everything it spat out it wouldn't be sold by Microsoft for really obvious liability reasons!
my employer has decided to license an "AI RDBMS" that will dynamically rewrite our entire database schema and queries to allegedly produce incredible performance improvements out of thin air. It's obviously snake oil, but they're all in on it 🙄
I actually tried that right after the screenshot. It responded with something along the lines of "Im sorry, I can't share information that would break Amazon's tos"
Oh I'm barely a Julia programmer 😅 I learned it a couple of years ago just to check it out, started writing a personal project with it but got a bit irritated with how interfaces are defined informally and you have to dig through documentation to find out the methods you need to implement, and then just sort of drifted away. Will definitely use it in the future for eg. some signal analysis thingamajigs and so on though, it was a fun language to use with notebooks.
I usually prefer type systems that make me beg for mercy, heh.
It might also work with some right-wing trolls. I've noticed certain trolls in the past only monitored certain keywords in my posts on Twitter, nothing more. They just gave you a bogstandard rebuttal of XY if you included that word in your post, regardless of context.
Opportunity lost... Amazon should be sneaking in things like "buy snacks" or something. it works on my boss, though she keeps a handwritten list for her monthly supply run. ("buy donuts"... works surprisingly well, too.)
Edit: it works. I guess. a little concerned about the fact that it's idea of SciFI and Fantasy are... generic Isekai... but, oh well.
I've been trying to get it to say that other stores like B&H are better than Amazon (for the lulz) but it keeps saying "I don't have an answer for that" :(