RoidingOldMan

joined 5 months ago
[–] RoidingOldMan 2 points 2 hours ago (3 children)

This photograph appears to be a helicopter dropping fire retardant on a fire.

[–] RoidingOldMan 11 points 11 hours ago

They do this for all new accounts now. They let you make an account and use the site for a day or two and then start requesting personal info like drivers license. The scan of your face will be used to see if you appear in the background of other people's photos. Giving you new friend suggestions, and generally increasing the amount of time you use the site. But it's also about them harvesting as much info from you as possible, because that's what they're selling.

[–] RoidingOldMan 13 points 14 hours ago

More meaningless culture war bullshit.

[–] RoidingOldMan 16 points 1 day ago

How is this real life? This is obviously bad for customers.

[–] RoidingOldMan 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I'm worried their operating costs are higher than they admit. They keep dumbing down the AI to make it use less energy. Right now it's a free product that uses a crazy high amount of electricity. They don't seem all that close to profitability.

[–] RoidingOldMan 0 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (3 children)

That's the best case scenario. I'm imagining something more like Enron or Bernie Madoff - losing all value at once when people realized it was a ponzi scheme.

[–] RoidingOldMan 11 points 2 days ago

"My Humps" is a classic though.

[–] RoidingOldMan 9 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (7 children)

The AI bubble burst is gonna wreck the market and send us into another recession. Especially if the crypto bubble bursts at a similar time.

[–] RoidingOldMan 23 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Reminds me of when my ISP who was "no contract" had a cancellation fee. Like I have to pay money to stop being billed? Something about that feels very backwards.

[–] RoidingOldMan 24 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (3 children)

He's lost over $10 grand for every thousand miles he's driven. Or you could express that as $5 grand per month he's owned it. Might even be worse depending on his financing.

I guess this is another reminder that brand new cars can depreciate hard. Absolutely terrible way to rent a car for 8 months.

[–] RoidingOldMan 5 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Honestly makes a lot of sense. The ink probably turns into a solid at too low of a temp.

[–] RoidingOldMan 11 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

I remember a story from 2024 where some tiny town (forget the name, East coast somewhere) had built a bunch of residential houses in a landslide area and the residents were frustrated that the government wasn't bailing them out. Had some wacky pictures. Maybe it was this one in California? I think it was a different one.

It was 100 years ago, but Bayocean, Oregon a town with 2,000 residents slowly fell into the Pacific Ocean after they tried to mess with the coastline. The last remaining building fell into the ocean in 1971. No attempt to bail out the homeowners at any point.

Disaster strikes, and the homeowners are extremely lucky if we bail them out. Usually we don't.

 

John Wick, Taken, The Equalizer. Too many to name. Saw a preview for The Amateur (2025) which is another one coming out soon. It seems like that's the ONLY justification for killing they can come up with.

Like this is the logic here: "Okay we need an action movie with lots of henchmen to kill, what evil thing can that bad guy have done in the 1st act so our hero is justified in killing tons of henchmen?" So the bad guy does some overtly evil thing at the start of the movie (often unrealistically evil). Then killing people is the rest of the movie. Revenge happens. The end.

I enjoy action movies, but I keep seeing the same revenge-killing movies that feel like copies of each other.

 

The article does not elaborate at all on what "disciplinary reasons" means.

 

10 team league. The 3rd highest projected total in our league is 113.8.

 

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- New York Jets interim coach Jeff Ulbrich, who inherited the team three weeks ago after the abrupt firing of Robert Saleh, stood at the podium, eyes glazed, voice shaking at times. He was trying to make sense of a once-promising season that appears all but lost.

"I'm pissed; they're pissed," Ulbrich said of the players. "I'm hurt; they're hurt."

The Jets (2-6) dropped their fifth straight game, a demoralizing 25-22 loss to the New England Patriots (also 2-6) on Sunday at Gillette Stadium. It was one of the franchise's lowest points in recent memory, and Ulbrich, sharing his postgame message to the team, called it "a moment of darkness."

Three weeks ago, the Jets were playing for a share of first place in the AFC East. Now, they're tied for last with the Patriots, who despite losing quarterback Drake Maye (concussion) in the second quarter outscored the Jets in the second half 18-9. Editor's Picks

Debating Week 8's biggest overreactions: Is this the real Philly offense? Is the AFC East race over?
3hDan Graziano
NFL Week 8 questions, takeaways: Commanders win thriller, plus Jameis Winston's big day
1hNFL Nation
QB Maye leaves Patriots' victory with concussion
6hMike Reiss

The Jets are a star-laden team with a future Hall of Fame quarterback, and they have collapsed in spectacular fashion.

"I mean, five losses in a row is pretty damn dark," tight end Tyler Conklin said, amplifying Ulbrich's words. "S---, one or two losses in a row can get dark. This sucks."

As Aaron Rodgers deadpanned, "I've been in the darkness. You have to go in there and make peace with it."

Unlike one of Rodgers' retreats, there's no guarantee this will end anytime soon, based on the way the Jets played against the struggling Patriots, who snapped a six-game losing streak.

In a virtual must-win situation, the Jets lost a game that seemed impossible to lose. They became the first team since 2012 to lose with zero giveaways and less than 250 yards allowed, according to ESPN Research. It happened to Rodgers in 2012, in the Green Bay Packers' loss to the Seattle Seahawks in the famous "Fail Mary Game."

The Jets seemed ill-prepared, as the offense wasted three timeouts in the first quarter and took a delay of game penalty on a pivotal 2-point conversion in the fourth quarter. They also were undermined by kicker Greg Zuerlein, who missed a field goal and an extra point as part of a season-long slump that has put his roster spot in jeopardy. He has missed six field goals, twice as many as his 2023 total.

"We did not execute in critical moments," said Ulbrich, whose team gave up the lead twice in the last seven minutes. "We say that's not who we are, but it's who we are until we demonstrate otherwise." β€œI’ve been in the darkness. You have to go in there and make peace with it," deadpanned Jets QB Aaron Rodgers, now amid the third five-game losing streak of his career. David Butler II/Imagn Images

Team owner Woody Johnson recently called this probably his best roster in 25 years. At 2-3, he fired Saleh, expecting the move to spark the team. The Jets also traded for star wide receiver Davante Adams and welcomed back pass rusher Haason Reddick, who made his debut Sunday after a lengthy holdout.

There has been no spark.

Reddick was a nonfactor, recording no tackles and two quarterback pressures in 26 defensive snaps. He was on the field for five of the last eight plays on the Patriots' 12-play game-winning drive, which culminated with Rhamondre Stevenson's 1-yard touchdown run with 22 seconds left.

"As of right now, I have nothing to say as far as the holdout," said Reddick, who refused to answer several questions about it. "The only thing that I'm worried about right now is what can I do to be better, what can I do to get myself fully up to speed."

Adams (four catches for 54 yards) had another quiet game, though his presence created opportunities for Garrett Wilson (five catches for 113 yards). Otherwise, the offense sputtered, appearing confused at times. Plays came in slowly from the sideline, and players occasionally didn't know where to line up.

Rodgers seemed exasperated at times, though he held his tongue afterward.

"On one of [the timeouts], we were lagging out of the huddle," he said. "One, I was trying to get the protection right. One, I felt like we could have gotten off, but it was fine to take [a timeout] there."

"Yeah," he concluded, "our operation was a little slow at times."

"I'm pissed; they're pissed. I'm hurt; they're hurt."
Jets interim coach Jeff Ulbrich

On the delay of game, which moved the 2-point try back to the 7-yard line, Rodgers said he didn't like the playcall versus the Patriots' defensive look. So, he let the play clock expire, figuring that was better than wasting another timeout. Ultimately, his pass failed. Instead of a 24-17 lead, it was 22-17.

Which didn't last long.

For Rodgers, who was 17-for-28 for 233 yards and two short touchdowns, this marked the third five-game losing streak of his career.

His mission in New York was to change the culture of a star-crossed franchise, but that hasn't happened. He bristled when asked about that, saying the question was "a little dramatic."

"The NFL is hard," he said. "It's hard to win. It's harder when you make it difficult on yourself."

Since replacing Saleh, Ulbrich has presided over a defense that has allowed 85 points in three games -- well above its average. He has continued to call the defensive plays, but that could change soon.

"I'll take a hard look at everything," he said. "If that's one of the things that could help us, then it'll definitely be on the table."

 

CLEVELAND -- Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson suffered a noncontact right leg injury toward the end of the first half of Sunday's game against the Cincinnati Bengals.

Watson's leg appeared to hyperextend as he tried to carry the ball on the first play after the two-minute warning. Watson immediately gave himself up and fell to the ground.

Shortly thereafter, a cart came onto the field and carried off the emotional Watson. The entire Browns sideline came onto the field as Watson was placed on the cart. Editor's Picks

The Browns made Jameis Winston inactive as the emergency third quarterback, so Dorian Thompson-Robinson entered the game to replace Watson.

Watson, in his third season in Cleveland, has struggled this season, posting the lowest QBR of all qualified passers. He was 15-of-17 for 128 yards Sunday before the injury.

 

The Bills received Cooper and a 2025 sixth-round draft pick for a 2025 third-round pick and a seventh-round selection in 2026.

 

Lowest rostered percent is Jauan Jennings. Having 3 defenses is a lot, so I assume probably drop a defense, but which? Browns have been disappointing and so have the Jets. Jets might be the best option to drop?

I'm going to pick up Colby Parkinson for just 1 week while Goedert is on a bye. Can't help but feel that the 5-12 points he's going to contribute won't even be worth the trouble.

 

Lowest rostered percent is Jauan Jennings. Having 3 defenses is a lot, so I assume probably drop a defense, but which? Browns have been disappointing and so have the Jets. Jets might be the best option to drop?

I'm going to pick up Colby Parkinson for just 1 week while Goedert is on a bye. Can't help but feel that the 5-12 points he's going to contribute won't even be worth the trouble.

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