Personally, I have been very pleased with the results despite the limitations.
Like many (I suspect), I have had several users provide comments that the AI processes I have defined have made meaningful impacts on their daily lives - often saving them double digit hours of effort per week. Progress.
It seems that law-abiding citizens often bear the greatest risk by declaring their assets to tax authorities and relying on so-called "trusted custodians" for savings. Ironically, for many, the safest course of action is likely non-disclosure, though this is, of course, illegal in much of the world.
Difficult situation. 5 MBPS was certainly better than nothing in the past...and yet the Sure business (now) appears largely obsolete with Starlink, Kuiper etc.
I worked for signalbox.io and they had this for the London Underground ~8 years ago. There was some impressive maths / approaches behind all of the "magic".
clearly could be a problem...but you are really looking at feature extraction / terrain analysis and best guessing with what is available (little different to a human doing the same job). The main thing here is that storage is so cheap and light that these these systems become easily possible. Terrain, features + building heights...filter if you need on building height / terrain...work with what is left...
I agree - I have used the gimp since 1998 and when using other apps (e.g. Affinity) I often return to Gimp and Inkscape because I understand their UIs best.
I was a massive GWT fan - particularly because it played well with the Java ecosystem.
1. huge programmer pool
2. tried and tested legacy code could be easily used / adapted
3. code quality / checkstyle plugins just worked
4. great testing tools
My main gripe was the compile time (often 2-3 mins)...whereas Adobe Flex would crank code out in 3 seconds.
Now, the new language models should help us push through the noise.
Like many (I suspect), I have had several users provide comments that the AI processes I have defined have made meaningful impacts on their daily lives - often saving them double digit hours of effort per week. Progress.