Me in the mid-1990s, to people thirty years older than me: "This is called a 'file' and this is a 'website'. Let me explain..."
Me in the mid-2020s, to people thirty years younger than me: "This is called a 'file' and this is a 'website'. Let me explain..."
@donnywals Hi there. Have you seen this with Xcode 16 RC? I'm using transformable types for certain properties and I'm seeing these errors now:
CoreData: Declared Objective-C type "[String]" for attribute named <nameOfProperty> is not valid
fault: Declared Objective-C type "[CustomClass]” for attribute named <nameOfProperty> is not valid
*advertiser spends billions a year and spies on me through 30 different apps*
"d-do you want to buy... *looks at my receipt for a GPU purchased yesterday* do you want to buy a GPU?"
I’m surprised this wasn’t mentioned in the keynote or State of the Union, but Apple’s model training data is either licensed or publicly available on the Internet. No personal information is used.
You can opt out of the web based training here: https://support.apple.com/en-us/119829 (no idea if it’s retroactive - probably not).
Again, this should have been mentioned in the presentations because it’s a good approach and directly relevant for developers.
https://machinelearning.apple.com/research/introducing-apple-foundation-models