Ryujin
Legend
"I'm not rude. I'm just brutally honest!"Sometimes I’m just amazed by the outright rudeness of some posters.
"I'm not rude. I'm just brutally honest!"Sometimes I’m just amazed by the outright rudeness of some posters.
at least it's not star warsNot the discussion I expected happening in that thread…
I have no idea what this is about, but I absolutely want it to be something someone said as they were abruptly woken up, and those around them asking 'what, uh... were you dreaming about?'"Don't want the cheese to fall off? Have you tried Glue?"
I have no idea what this is about, but I absolutely want it to be something someone said as they were abruptly woken up, and those around them asking 'what, uh... were you dreaming about?'
I remember when AI used to turn out word salad where the text was just coherent enough that it wasn't absolute nonsense, but was still so random that it was legitimately funny. Like "Then Hermione started eating Ron's face"-levels of gibberish.Its from an old AI prompt last year I think, where it didnt understand the context, and suggested adding glue to a pizza to keep the cheese on top.
I remember when AI used to turn out word salad where the text was just coherent enough that it wasn't absolute nonsense, but was still so random that it was legitimately funny. Like "Then Hermione started eating Ron's face"-levels of gibberish.
I miss those days; there was some seriously hilarious content back then. Now, AI is (as a programmer friend of mine likes to say) very convincing at being wrong.
There is a phrasing that comes up from time to time, "does not suffer fools gladly," that I used to think meant someone was awesomely smart and clever and had no patience for people who weren't; now I think it tends to mean they treat people badly. I'm working on ... not treating people badly that way, it's not always easy."I'm not rude. I'm just brutally honest!"
Like many quotes about behavior and wisdom, its both.There is a phrasing that comes up from time to time, "does not suffer fools gladly," that I used to think meant someone was awesomely smart and clever and had no patience for people who weren't; now I think it tends to mean they treat people badly. I'm working on ... not treating people badly that way, it's not always easy.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.