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Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: June 4th, 2025

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  • I get the sentiment behind this post, and it’s almost always funny when LLM are such dumbass. But this is not a good argument against the technology.

    It’s a pretty good argument against the technology, at least as it currently stands. This was a trivial question where anybody with a basic reading ability can see it’s just completely wrong, the problem comes when you ask it a question you don’t already know the answer to and can’t easily check and it give equally wrong answers.




  • As @takapapatapaka@tarte.nuage-libre.fr said you want plans for how to get anyone vulnerable out, how to secure valuables (if, and only if, safely possible), where to meet (really important for kids, especially as you may have been incapacitated). But you should also know things like; how to shut off the gas (again, only if safe), where the door keys are so you can get out if they’re locked at night, which upstairs windows you can jump from if the stairs are blocked and which rooms have solid walls and door to act as a refuge if all else fails. CPR training could save a family member’s life, as could basic fire escape or rescue training.

    Basically, imagine you wake up at 3am to the sound of your smoke alarms, the fire is already well developed and smoke is starting to fill the house. What do you need to know, or have planned, to get you and your family to safety in the next few minutes?







  • That depends on your team composition. Decoupling story points and hours means that the points indicate the complexity of the task; each developer might take a different amount of time to deliver that depending on their ability and expertise in that part of the system. The points give you a simple metric to show how much complexity the team have left to deliver, and tasks get assigned to whoever is best placed to deliver them at the time.