@regehr An interpreter is a compiler that does not produce any output at all it just executes the code. How about not letting the AI produce code but just let it execute your prompts? 🤔

That way I don’t have to deal with the garbage code AI produces and the prompt “engineers” can fix their own bugs. 😇

#whydontyou

🎶Just Switch Off Your Television Set And Go Out And Do Something Less Boring Instead!!🎶
#WhyDontYou #Wildlife
I’m getting a little bored with this #WhyDontYou so I think I’m going to switch off the TV and do something else instead.
It's been so lovely watching the old kids' TV programmes on #BBC4. I've just been transported back to happier times courtesy of #AnimalMagic and #ThinkOfANumber. Can't wait for #WhyDontYou next week 🙂

‘Otterspool House’ the grand home of “John Moss” stood In what is now Otterspool park, South Liverpool. The house was demolished in 1931, leaving stone steps and the raised stone terrace that we see today as the only clues that such a house existed. The house was originally built alongside the “Otters Pool”, a tidal creek where the sunken field opposite is today. The Otters Pool was fed from the ancient River Jordan that flows from Sefton Park Lake and out into the River Mersey.

The Old Octagonal Café in Otterspool Park, where the house of John Moss once stood

On the stone terrace where the grand house once stood, is the Octagonal Café that was built and opened in 1932, the same year that Otterspool Park opened. I remember having ice cream’s from the Octagonal café when I was a young child. Whilst those of a more senior age, may also remember the children’s television series “Why Don’t You”, which was filmed within the café building during the 1980’s.

Sadly, this small but attractive building has lain empty for many years and is now in quite a dilapidated state, being at the mercy of vandals. Whilst the café building may not be a historically important building, it would be nice to see the old café saved and given a new lease of life, before it collapses or is burned to the ground. You can still see that it was once an attractive & well constructed building in its day.

Newspaper article reporting on the opening of Otterspool Park and the Octagonal Café from the ‘Liverpool Post and Mercury’, Saturday 2nd July 1932. Curtesy of The British Newspaper Archive.

Whilst walking the dog, I passed by the café as I often do, only to find that the building had been broken into. Two of its doors and the security panelling had been ripped off to gain access. This has sadly revealed the ruined state of it’s interior. There are still visible signs of the building’s past when it was a Café.

I didn’t stay inside too long though to take more pictures for fear of what dust maybe inside…

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River Jordan, Aigburth

In Liverpool’s historic past, there were ancient rivers, which strangely do not seem to exist anymore. However, many of these rivers still flow down to the Mersey. There existance largely hid…

Chris Iles - Photography | chrisiles.co.uk

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
We come from the land of the ice and snow
Where the hot springs spring
And the ice floes flow!

#ValhallaIAmComing
#SheeshTellAllTheAesir
#WhyDontYou