Recent comments

Dragmire800 t1_jegwfkl wrote

I watched season one and a bit of season two. I stopped because I found it pretty ridiculous that there was a serial killer about and the solution to stop him serial killing was for the high school football team to remove their shirts, put on masks, and record a video threatening the killer.

I’m very surprised to hear it got even more ridiculous than that

7

BaltimoreBee t1_jegwfie wrote

It doesn’t matter at all whether or not she reported an income change during the year. Regardless of what was reported or not reported, a premium tax reconciliation has to take place. If she received more premium tax in advance than her final income qualifies her for, she has to pay it back. There are limits and safe harbors in the tax code so she might not have to pay it all back. But what income change was reported to the marketplace is completely irrelevant to what premium tax calculation being done by the IRS and there is not a way to challenge it.

11

agorathird t1_jegwf73 wrote

It's not naive you have not thought through the implications of what AGI means. You are also ignorant of what is doable with the current technology. Artificial general intelligence is equal to us but also inherently superior due to its computational capacities. There is no need for us after that.

You literally are not describing any useful idea of AGI and are only describing the most surface level uses of text-modality only LLMs in your responses.

The r/futurology work week stuff you talk about is possible right now with current public models of chatgpt. It's been possible for a while. But it's not implemented due to greed and beauruacrats being steadfast in their ways. Luckily, not implementing a change hasn't been critically dire for mass swaths of people thus far.

2

Spiritual_Flounder60 t1_jegwf4l wrote

For future reference, just act like Tate fans are just stupid fucking bratty children (because they are)

Or red pilled alpha males that think they're cool and unique (they're not) they also have the personality of an average 12 year old

7

chilipepr t1_jegwf1l wrote

Sure you can afford it, but buying a new car vs one 2 or 3 years old will extend your retirement a couple years.

You say your single, so what family do you need to transport? Don’t forget another chunk for yearly excise tax. I have lived in a city, you don’t want a new car in the city.

TLDR: You can afford it, but it is not the wisest decision to do so.

3