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Altman introduced the video at 29:00, but a different person is narrating the demo.


Ah, makes sense. Thanks!


It is relevant for trademarks as well. In the US, it's a first to use with regards to trademarks, but China has a first to file trademark system.


Any idea how it compares to the UCL course taught by researchers from DeepMind?

http://www.cs.ucl.ac.uk/syllabus/compgi/compgi22_advanced_de...


The Berkeley course is completely open source with all the lectures, homework problem sets, and exams publicly available on the site. Besides getting a grade, everything is available to you.

Unfortunately I'm not sure about how the UCL course compares as it seems like the materials are closed to non-UCL students. If you have access though, I'm sure there's lots to learn by taking the course!


https://www.tesla.com/autopilot/ -> big text saying "Full Self-Driving Hardware on All Cars" + video showcasing said capability.

You have to go way down to "Enhanced Autopilot" section to read the smaller text that mentions that its subject to regulatory approval, and that the driver is responsible.

If you don't think that's misleading advertising, I don't know what is.


In the purchase section it clearly breaks the capability out including which ones are active/ enabled. In addition on the car manual and UI at enabling also spells it out. It says keep your hands on the wheel and paying attention to pick over immediately.


People don't read manuals. People don't read instructions in the UI. That is well-established reality. People glance at a web page or ad and see the words "full self-driving" and that's what sets their expectations.


They don't apparently read pop-ups prior to driving, ends of sentences ("full self driving capable hardware"), definitions of words, hacker news comments, listen to audible warnings to keep hands on the steering wheel. At what point does a person become responsible for their own actions?


Rephrased: at what point should Tesla remove this ambiguity from their marketing materials?


Depends on the ambiguity. I would agree that they should remove the video unless they put a giant disclaimer on it right now.


By smaller text do you mean the text that is at the same sized font as every paragraph on the page except for the headings? Right in the middle of the page and not in a disclaimer wall of text (which also exists at the bottom with bold.)

I will admit showing a video of full hands off video, not on a highway, underneath a statement about the hardware, showing off software being used in a way that is not recommended in the manual is bad.

As I stated before in my first comment, they shouldn't be selling "self driving" that isn't available. I see no issue with promoting the hardware though and selling future proofing.



Seconded. I use it with the go-bindata backend and Postgres driver. Some notes:

- Migrations are written in plain SQL, so there may be portability issues if you need to support multiple DBs. (Or you need to write the same migration once per supported SQL dialect.)

- It does not `CREATE DATABASE` for you when applying the first migration. For my app that uses Postgres, I wrote some extra code to do that. Feel free to copy if you like: https://github.com/sapcc/limes/blob/ab4245a8f195672b808f990f...


The reduction in battery replacement is only for anyone with iPhone 6 or later, not older models.

"Apple is reducing the price of an out-of-warranty iPhone battery replacement by $50 — from $79 to $29 — for anyone with an iPhone 6 or later whose battery needs to be replaced, starting in late January and available worldwide through December 2018. Details will be provided soon on apple.com."


If you don't like being logged, then having a logless VPN like ExpressVPN, Tunnelbear, etc should be fine. For torrents, some VPNs like Tunnelbear preferred to disable the BitTorrent port completely

So, it's just a matter of finding a VPN that matches your preferences, but I'd avoid using a free VPN.


I'm not sure why Africa and the Middle East specifically aren't really mentioned in that article since the prices would be on par with Australia if not more, also due to having only 1 or 2 ISPs and no competition.


Because CloudFlare doesn't have any data centers there.

https://www.cloudflare.com/network-map


Because we don't operate in those regions yet and therefore don't have data for them.


Yes, but answering the first question would lead to a million other questions since the rep obviously set his mind on something from the start. He said he's moving to a different service, then the rep says why are you moving, don't you want the #1 internet & tv, etc.



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