We should call the fake stick "NAM" for "no access memory." Then you can tell your kids that they couldn't possibly understand, man, because they weren't _there_.
We should call the fake stick "NAM" for "no access memory." Then you can tell your kids that they couldn't possibly understand, man, because they weren't _there_.
They couldn't possibly understand NAM, man
Signetics was first with their 25120 Fully Encoded, 9046xN, Random Access Write-Only-Memory[0].
0. https://web.archive.org/web/20120316141638/http://www.nation...
I'd call it write-only memory.
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Can you just follow me around and do this to all my one-liner posts?
You just need to work in "All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain," and "Time to die".
Cue Wagner's Ride of The Valkyries in the background.
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"Manufacturing Content" is such a stupendously fabulous multi-faceted pun, someone please make this real.
> someone please make this real.
But it already is.
This is quite good.
I'll leave you, Mr. ChompSkie, to decide if that's an AmE or BrE "quite".
I've been 8 years on this site, and I have 8 favorite comments. This comment just made it into a very exclusive club.
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If you compose a text of enough references and (well-known) in-jokes, and get the perplexity/burstiness stats right, you too can reliably produce text that the AI-detectors think is inhuman. I suspect that doesn't work so well for the latest-generation AI-detection systems (e.g. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.inffus.2025.103465), but there's definitely a way to fool those, too.
You can make 100% AI content by just adding a short summary at the and of any text.