toy trumpet sandstorm still cracks me up
imagine walking by the practice sessions
https://youtu.be/esMnme69t2M

Toy Trumpet Virtuoso (Official Version)
YouTubeThese ads are trash and should be illegal.
Stories like this should be “whoops that was awkward” and not “next time tell us first, we could have killed you”
https://denverite.com/2024/06/21/denver-stolen-cars-recovered-police/
If you report a stolen car and realize it wasn't actually stolen, let Denver Police know
Otherwise, you could be accused of being an auto thief.
DenveriteAmusement for the day, imagining the Brits surveyed by these German researchers might not have been 100% honest about the terms they use for being drunk:
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/drunk-words-synonyms-alcohol-drunkonyms-michael-mcintyre-b1140836.html
From 'hammered' to 'bladdered', study finds Brits have 546 words for getting drunk
Have you ever found yourself cabbaged or owly-eyed?
Evening StandardPet peeve: SaaS products that charge per seat, even though the value we get doesn’t scale that way and neither do their costs. It’s a proxy for ability to pay, but bears no relation to my willingness to pay. Grrr! Charge me for the scale and complexity of my usage please, happy to pay for SLAs, features, support, etc. Pay per seat is not it.
People who have been designing and building products with LLMs: do you make them super visible (chat bots, animated writing, interactive prompts) to show what they’re doing and demonstrate value, or do you make them invisible behind the scenes? Do users have a preference? Any good research or writing on this out there? Any emerging best practices?
I speak extremely limited Spanish but I’d like to be more conversational with the Venezuelan immigrants who come to my door looking for work. Apart from Google Translate, what apps should I try?
“I’m going upstairs to wrap presents… I may be some time” he said, continuing a century long tradition of false equivalences
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Oates
Lawrence Oates - Wikipedia
While I said the challenge puzzle has no border, it really does. The border just looks like the other pieces. So we started to ask what if a puzzle really had no border, What would that look like? Pieces from the left could connect to the right and the top to the bottom. In that way, we create a tiling puzzle, which can be assembled in thousands of different ways. We can think of this topologically like a closed surface. Mathematics teaches us that something that tiles like this has the same topology as a torus. We decided to call this an "infinity" puzzle.