I, ChatGPT
-
-
@HardwareGeek said in I, ChatGPT:
makes a reasonable imitation of a thin, crispy crust.
That is the key for that crust.
-
@topspin said in I, ChatGPT:
you still need to cut slices.
-
@topspin Pizza wheels exist to cut it into convenient slice-sized chunks, quickly and efficiently.
Edit
-
@PleegWat said in I, ChatGPT:
I've never felt need to try cauliflower base.
I have, but the toppings on the one I saw didn't appeal me.
-
@Zecc Unfortunately, the assortment of toppings available on gluten-free pizza tends to be quite limited. One of the brands I buy makes buffalo chicken pizza and margherita (tomatoes, cheese & basil) pizza. The Texas grocery store chain H-E-B has store-brand sausage and red pepper, and pepperoni and hatch chili pizzas. Other than that, one is pretty much limited to plain cheese, plain pepperoni, and vegetarian.
-
@HardwareGeek said in I, ChatGPT:
Cauliflower base is actually the best of the gluten free pizza crust alternatives.
If cauliflower is the best option, I don't want to even think about what the other ones taste like.
-
@Zerosquare Cardboard is not a bad approximation.
-
Ugh. Cardboard belongs in the pizza box, not in the pizza.
-
@HardwareGeek said in I, ChatGPT:
@Zecc Unfortunately, the assortment of toppings available on gluten-free pizza tends to be quite limited. One of the brands I buy makes buffalo chicken pizza and margherita (tomatoes, cheese & basil) pizza. The Texas grocery store chain H-E-B has store-brand sausage and red pepper, and pepperoni and hatch chili pizzas. Other than that, one is pretty much limited to plain cheese, plain pepperoni, and vegetarian.
A grocery store will have less turnover of non-gluten pizzas, hence they will carry fewer toppings. If a pizza chain carries them at all, I would expect all toppings to be available. Otherwise, I'll repeat my preference for adding my own toppings, though I'll freely admit at that point it's a meal you need to plan for, since you need to have fresh ingredients in stock, while a pre-topped frozen pizza will keep for months and be tossed into the oven at zero effort.
-
@TimeBandit said in I, ChatGPT:
@dkf said in I, ChatGPT:
Vegetable pizzas
The nope you eat it thread is
They're fine with bacon or pepperoni on top. Or fish, for those of us who like such things.
-
@topspin said in I, ChatGPT:
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
@Carnage said in I, ChatGPT:
@BernieTheBernie said in I, ChatGPT:
@Zerosquare said in I, ChatGPT:
@Atazhaia said in I, ChatGPT:
Swedish pizza culture is an amazing thing. My favorite is the kebab pizza, which is one of the most swedish foods there is.
My opinion of Swedish cuisine just got even lower.
Wait for SĂŒrströmming Pizza !
HEre you go:
Are you fucking eating pizza with a knife and fork? Get out!
Do you just roll and
inhaledeep-throat it??You definitely want the other tube.
-
@PleegWat said in I, ChatGPT:
@HardwareGeek said in I, ChatGPT:
@Zecc Unfortunately, the assortment of toppings available on gluten-free pizza tends to be quite limited. One of the brands I buy makes buffalo chicken pizza and margherita (tomatoes, cheese & basil) pizza. The Texas grocery store chain H-E-B has store-brand sausage and red pepper, and pepperoni and hatch chili pizzas. Other than that, one is pretty much limited to plain cheese, plain pepperoni, and vegetarian.
A grocery store will have less turnover of non-gluten pizzas, hence they will carry fewer toppings.
True. However, AFAIK, there are fewer varieties made from which they might choose to carry. Also, fewer sizes; you have a choice of medium, medium, or medium. The companies that make gluten free pizzas simply don't make anything else.
If a pizza chain carries them at all, I would expect all toppings to be available.
True. However, I would also expect an unacceptably high probability of cross-contamination from glutenous pizzas. My doctor told me that pizza and pasta restaurants have the highest probability of cross-contamination of any restaurants and really aren't safe to eat at. There's one of the big chains of pizza restaurants that has certain specific locations that are certified for safe preparation of gluten free pizza; I don't remember which chain it is, because there were no certified locations in my area.
Otherwise, I'll repeat my preference for adding my own toppings, though I'll freely admit at that point it's a meal you need to plan for, since you need to have fresh ingredients in stock, while a pre-topped frozen pizza will keep for months and be tossed into the oven at zero effort.
Yes, I do usually add toppings to whatever variety I'm using as the base. It's also possible to buy gluten free pizza crust and add your own toppings, but why not start with something that already has sauce and cheese (unless you're allergic to the default cheese, of course) and maybe other things?
-
@HardwareGeek said in I, ChatGPT:
@Zerosquare Cardboard is not a bad approximation.
Reminds me of sri lankan rice...
-
@Carnage said in I, ChatGPT:
@BernieTheBernie said in I, ChatGPT:
@Zerosquare said in I, ChatGPT:
@Atazhaia said in I, ChatGPT:
Swedish pizza culture is an amazing thing. My favorite is the kebab pizza, which is one of the most swedish foods there is.
My opinion of Swedish cuisine just got even lower.
Wait for SĂŒrströmming Pizza !
HEre you go:
-
@Zerosquare said in I, ChatGPT:
Ugh. Cardboard belongs in the pizza box, not in the pizza.
I remember the time when you couldn't tell the difference with any frozen pizza.
-
@BernieTheBernie said in I, ChatGPT:
@HardwareGeek said in I, ChatGPT:
@Zerosquare Cardboard is not a bad approximation.
Reminds me of sri lankan rice...
Not really. Regular cardboard doesn't have that characteristic smell of cockroach.
-
Good advice is good.
-
Status: trying too hard to think of a joke about the original picture mentioning "pzza" and not "pizza."
I guess the picture was too etthhunicially ambrigious for most people.
-
@remi said in I, ChatGPT:
Status: trying too hard to think of a joke about the original picture mentioning "pzza" and not "pizza."
I guess the picture was too etthhunicially ambrigious for most people.
Have we yet talked about the pizza shop charging âŹ50 for a tomato sauce and ham pizza plus a can of diced pineapple?
-
To be fair... Stack over flow without their community sounds great.
-
-
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
To be fair... Stack over flow without their community sounds great.
Remind me, why do they need that many employees, aside from managing infrastructure?
Also, this article is classic "something happened at the same time as something unrelated but clickbaity happened" bullshit.
-
@topspin said in I, ChatGPT:
Remind me, why do they need that many employees
Well, someone has to downvote and close-as-duplicate all of those questions.
Oh wait, this is done by unpaid volunteers. Never mind.
-
@Zerosquare said in I, ChatGPT:
So I can now start referring to them as stochastic mirrors as well as stochastic parrots. Neat.
-
@Arantor said in I, ChatGPT:
@Zerosquare said in I, ChatGPT:
So I can now start referring to them as stochastic mirrors as well as stochastic parrots. Neat.
Wait a couple of years and this priming study will fail to replicate, too.
-
@Arantor said in I, ChatGPT:
@Zerosquare said in I, ChatGPT:
So I can now start referring to them as stochastic mirrors as well as stochastic parrots. Neat.
Polly wants resilvered, awk!
-
@topspin said in I, ChatGPT:
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
To be fair... Stack over flow without their community sounds great.
Remind me, why do they need that many employees, aside from managing infrastructure?
Also, this article is classic "something happened at the same time as something unrelated but clickbaity happened" bullshit.
I ask the same question of most silly valley companies. Half their staff appears to be hr or influencer out reach.
Not sure how either help with the product.
-
@Zerosquare said in I, ChatGPT:
This is basically: Today in humans are stupid.
think of human-AI interaction, itâs not just a one-way street
Very important to remember that your interactions are stored by openai so that they can feed you more junk later.
-
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
This is basically: Today in humans are stupid.
That ain't what she said.
Very important to remember that your interactions are stored by openai so that they can feed you more junk later.
That ain't what she said either.
-
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
@topspin said in I, ChatGPT:
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
To be fair... Stack over flow without their community sounds great.
Remind me, why do they need that many employees, aside from managing infrastructure?
Also, this article is classic "something happened at the same time as something unrelated but clickbaity happened" bullshit.
I ask the same question of most silly valley companies. Half their staff appears to be hr or influencer out reach.
Not sure how either help with the product.
When the product is inherently a Ponzi scheme, sucker outreach is your primary productive endeavor. HTH HAND
-
@Bulb said in I, ChatGPT:
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
This is basically: Today in humans are stupid.
That ain't what she said.
Very important to remember that your interactions are stored by openai so that they can feed you more junk later.
That ain't what she said either.
-
-
Not surprising really. Calling trainers tackies would immediately tell every Irishman youâre from Limerick. Google picked up on that about a decade or so back. When you put everything in the model then you get everything back. I wonder if you asked for directions in Limerick would you get back Todds as a starting point. It was taken over by Brown Thomas in the late 90s but even teenagers say Todds.
-
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
Not surprising really. Calling trainers tackies would immediately tell every Irishman youâre from Limerick. Google picked up on that about a decade or so back. When you put everything in the model then you get everything back. I wonder if you asked for directions in Limerick would you get back Todds as a starting point. It was taken over by Brown Thomas in the late 90s but even teenagers say Todds.
Amazon ditched AI-based screening of job applications years back for this exact reason: it was picking on irrelevant details that it inferred from CVs and concluding "this person is Foo, and since no-one in the company is Foo then Foo must be an undesirable trait".
This is something humans do as well. I remember an anecdote about an orchestra trying to audition for a cellist. They only wanted the person's playing to be relevant, not their appearance, so there was a sheet hung up between the candidate and the panel. The candidate would just walk in, sit down, play, and then leave.
When the panel discussed the performances, they would use "he" and "she" to refer to each candidate; they would all implicitly agree on the pronoun, which would also be the one they would have used had they had met the candidate instead of just hearing them play.
...And the sound their shoes had made on the floor as they walked in and out.
-
@Watson said in I, ChatGPT:
Amazon ditched AI-based screening of job applications years back
do you mean thise automated keyword scanners are gone too? your application's first barrier is meatware?
-
Be more worried about the crash after the AI bubble bursts to be honest. There are a few major players betting half the house on it at the moment and the results have been less than stellar.
-
Ooooohhh real time static analysis telling me that I canât put useful information in logs!
Security Copilot can effectively upskill a security team, regardless of its expertise, save them time, enable them to find what previously they might have missed, and free them to focus on the most impactful projects," said Vasu Jakkal, corporate vice president of security, compliance, identity, and management at Microsoft.
Examples? Maybe a demo?
Jakkal previously highlighted the steep rise in per-second password attacks from 579 to 1,287, underlining the demand for time-saving tech for understaffed security teams.
How in fucks name does your ai stop someone dosing your login endpoint? Going to recommend we use ms auth apps for mfa?
Among the tool's main capabilities is the ability to summarize security incidents into natural language reports. Copilot's generative AI analyzes a security incident by breaking it down into key events such as when a malicious URL was detected, when it was clicked, and what happened after it was clicked.
OMFG the article is an ad written by bing enhanced chatgpt.
With the embedded experience for Security Copilot in Microsoft 365 Defender, we are making the industry-leading XDR solution even more powerful and easy to use.
You mean that tool every IT department replaces with McAfee because its less useless.
There's no general availability date for Security Copilot yet, but the early access program still has spots available for qualified organizations, Microsoft said. It hasn't publicly detailed what these qualifying criteria are.
Probably that you are more clueless than an alcoholic mixing Old Sea Dog with off brand Chinese antibiotics.
-
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
You mean that tool every IT department replaces with McAfee because its less useless.
More useless than a McAfee product? Wow, that's... bad.
-
As ever, pron leads the way:
-
@boomzilla That's actually pretty clever.
-
@boomzilla
at this rate the age of teledildonics will be here before the year of linux on the desktop
-
@Luhmann said in I, ChatGPT:
@boomzilla
at this rate the age of teledildonics will be here before the year of linux on the desktopThe dildos probably run on android so technically Linux won?
-
@DogsB
and lost at the same time
-
@DogsB said in I, ChatGPT:
@Luhmann said in I, ChatGPT:
@boomzilla
at this rate the age of teledildonics will be here before the year of linux on the desktopThe dildos probably run on android so technically Linux won?
The Linux is cuming -Paul Revere, probably
-
@Luhmann said in I, ChatGPT:
@boomzilla
at this rate the age of teledildonics will be here before the year of linux on the desktopGiven that they've been talking about remote-control operating theaters for years now I'd assumed teledildonics were a thing by now.
-
-
@DogsB That's GNU/dildo, please.
Yes, android is a different userland from GNU, but .
-
@cvi said in I, ChatGPT:
GNU/dildo
it works but fugly and the on/off button is weirdly placed and changes at random iterations
-
Isnât that nice. Heâs found a new word for choose your own adventure books. They were suppose to bury the â passive read modeâ experience too.