Should(or When) said 'bubble' 'pop', AI isn't going away or expected to lose relevance.
If you were around about the time of the Dot-Com bubble, you can better make sense of the saying.
The web never stopped being useful, it was the ridiculous and speculative valuations of companies, and outlandish claims that couldn't sustain themselves and eventually 'popped'.
> My favorite interview question, because we've interviewed quite a few of these folks, is something to the effect of 'How fat is Kim Jong Un?' They terminate the call instantly
I'm sure there were a lot of false positives with that question.
If I was not reading HN and a few other sources I would likely hang up the phone too.
Thinking that it couldn't be a real job,... some phishing scam or hoax, asking ridiculous questions like that.
Depending on the job, it is quite likely the real talent would not be able to take the interview seriously after hearing suck a question.
Maemo really was impressive, and to think how far it could be with more than a decade development and refinements had Nokia managed keep that team on it.
Sailfish OS still seems to be going, and latest and installable on Sony Xperia 10 V. Though that is based on Meego which was what replaced Maemo and ended up on the Nokia N9 and was no longer Debian based IIRC.
Tizen OS was the other offshoot of Meego and Samsung was working with it, but they appear be abandoning it.
I never had the chance to pick up a compatible device try them out.
It seems to me, it would REQUIRE Megacorps datasets to store the information you don't want them to store in order for them to confirm to such a request.
Take off, climb and circles before landng time use considerably more fuel than that of cruising time, so that needs to be considered. Also, as short haul fights generally don't climb as high, they lose the benefits of high altitude cruising.
If you were around about the time of the Dot-Com bubble, you can better make sense of the saying.
The web never stopped being useful, it was the ridiculous and speculative valuations of companies, and outlandish claims that couldn't sustain themselves and eventually 'popped'.