A lot of the issue with this is that we are talking about a really energy-intensive way of solving this non-problem.
A better way is to train humans to stop falling for the bait. That is also rather hard though but I'm pretty sure you can already get browser plugins that identify click bait headlines and just, hides them.
If we can get the costs to read an summarize an article down (and get an AI that understands things like facts and source quality) then there are a bunch of things it could do for us. Interpreting contracts and TOS bollocks come to mind, but LLMs as we have them today can't do that. They might end up part of the tool chain but they are presently insufficient.
I mean it's not great taxidermy but I'm not sure it's bad. It's not even a case that I question who would want it. I know several people who would love to receive it as a gift.
Perhaps the only mistake is that the eyes don't light up.
You are always going to have to adjust your approach to the space you are actually mapping as they are going to have different features you want to highlight. Even with a 3d model you will often want to see from the outside or otherwise generate projections of it rather than use the actual thing. Generally I prefer schematic maps for the most part. I care more about how you move through a space than where precisely things are.
When I have done more traditional dungeon maps, the best tool I've had is using a stack of tracing paper, with multi-level features drawn on each layer they intersect. This is because most built dungeons are going to be built by human-like folk and we go sideways much better than we go up and down. For natural spaces Insuggest you look into the maps cavers draw. They care much more about distance from intersection and rate of descent than precise direction (which is actually hard to get right in caves in any case.)
He's out doing what I am sure he thinks of as diplomatic meetings. The pope might be the leader of a criminal organisation, but he is generally thought of as a legitimate world leader. JD spoke with the Italian PM while he was there as well, and I think he has moved on to India now where he will meet with various politicians and attend cultural events.
VPs do this kind of thing all the time, it just seems weird because no one can take him seriously.
A lot of digital signage runs on windows or a cut down version thereof. If you are already running a Windows office, and larger orgs often do, it means you can leave it in the care of that same tech team. If all you are doing is showing a slideshow you can run it on a cheap mini pc, even multiple screens off of one, but the screen is likely the expensive part.
No idea about that program. It's the most generic-ass icon you could have these days. Google thinks it's a weather app but that AI crap doesn't know anything. It might even be a web page running in application mode.
Folk always seem to underestimate the effect of training and experience. In a match between two unpracticed players, sure, the more analytically inclined of the two will have an edge. This is true of any game with a strategic component. General intelligence helps but specialist knowledge is better.
This would be my suggestion too. If possible, I'd remove the cart handle and attach the belt with two lines as wide as possible on the steering bar (two lines, not one threaded through the belt) should help the cart to turn with you.
I use a Dilemma Max (another model by BK) for work and I ended up taking the trackpad off as it just didn't suit me, and added extra bulk. I went with that over a Charybdis because, aside from the extra bulk, I think it sacrifices too much as a keyboard to make space for the trackball.
As for price... Welcome to custom keyboards. You can save a chunk getting the kit, though that means sourcing your own switches. The soldering isn't much hassle though. You can actually source everything yourself if you really want to, though I'm not sure if you'd make much in the way of savings.
If it is a standalone (and most x Borg type things are) there is no need to get Mörk Borg itself. It isn't like it is a core rulebook that others need to build off of. If anything I would say that this family of games is the opposite to that. The books are so much about communicating the vibe of that particular game and the underlying rules are very simple. I'd even say you don't need to use the game a particular supplement or module is explicitly 'for'.
You might get some clashing aesthetics but that isn't exactly out of place here. Buy the one(s) that looks cool to you, hack at them how you like.
You've played Blades, and FitD/PbtA is probably the closest to the Borg ecosystem out of the games you mentioned. There is no one 'core rule book' just different games founded on the same principles.
This is also known as the 'nice' rule.