This game came out in 2022.
calculuschild
Oh interesting. Do you know if there is a way to get Windows Explorer to support tags for files so they can be searched? I know there's a roundabout way to do it through the properties menu for specific file types but perhaps there is a better way?
If you haven't already, look up Graphic Audio. They make a lot of popular books into audio dramas. It felt a bit cheesy to me the first time but it's grown on me. I find them often on Hoopla or at my library.
"We're Alive" was a pretty fun audio drama that I think started as a podcast, but they edited into more seamless "books". Available as a freebie if you have Audible.
"Impact Winter" is another Audible freebie I think, about Vampires.
Alternatively, you may be interested in the Magnus Archives. It's a podcast with a short horror story in each episode, but all tied together by the researcher who narrates it. Eventually some connections form between the stories but each one is pretty short so you don't need to be super dedicated to the whole podcast if you just want a few stories.
How much "lower carbon" is the soybean biofuel compared to standard Diesel petroleum?
What do you mean by keeping bookmarks? You mean like recording your place in the book so you can continue where you left off? I'm not understanding the benefit of that over a normal paper bookmark?
Yep, if you liked the author, Project Hail Mary by the same guy has very similar vibes. Optimistic scientist dude stuck in space using science in creative ways to save the day.
Just finished Doom 2016. Runs smooth as silk, and the controls are great. Just starting Hollow Knight now.
The problem is they aren't comparing apples to apples. They asked each version of GPT a different pool of questions. (Edited my post to make this clear).
Once you ask them the same questions, it becomes clear that ChatGPT isn't getting worse at math, because it has been terrible all along.
My understanding is this claim is basically entirely false. The tests done by these researchers had some glaring errors that when corrected, show gpt-4 is getting slightly better at math, if anything. See this video that describes some of the issues: https://youtu.be/YSokS2ivf7U
TL;DR The researchers gave new GPT questions from two different pools. It's no surprise they got worse answers.
Ender 3 V2 Neo. Low cost, good quality, easy to put together, and includes most of the "upgrades" you would usually end up buying separately anyway (auto-leveling, etc.). Good entry-level printer that performs very well and will handle most anything you throw at it (large bulky parts, or small detailed miniatures). May be all you need for a good long while. I've had mine printing 2-3 things a week for a year and a half without any issue.
Nice job! What are you going to use them for?
Is it available right now? What do they call this feature so I can search for it?