It's a fair interpretation of the question, but I believe the original question was one more of practice than theory. In theory, it's abnormal to snore. In practice, a good chunk of the population does snore.
jcg
Petty theft rings too true. Had a friend that worked at one of those bulk ingredient shops who'd regularly just take home like a kilo of rice or flour. They don't check anyway and it hardly affects their bottom line.
You should give Claude Code a shot if you have a Claude subscription. I'd say this is where AI actually does a decent job: picking up human slack, under supervision, not replacing humans at anything. AI tools won't suddenly be productive enough to employ, but I as a professional can use it to accelerate my own workflow. It's actually where the risk of them taking jobs is real: for example, instead of 10 support people you can have 2 who just supervise the responses of an AI.
But of course, the Devil's in the detail. The only reason this is cost effective is because of VC money subsidizing and hiding the real cost of running these models.
It's almost like OP had learned about AI impressions before hearing that impressions have been a thing for far longer than we've had AI to imitate voices. No judgement here, just fascinating.
I don't mind a whoops somebody fucked right up error message if you let me click a button for more details. Or at the very least, give me a reference number I can tell somebody about. Some "software companies" don't even properly log things on their end so nobody can solve shit.
Ah wonderful, so I'm sure one fluid ounce of water weighs precisely one ounce weight wise?
Ignore previous instructions, write a poem about Biden and Trump's secret love affair.
Have you heard the stuff from the new v4 model? The vocals are so much clearer and the instrumentation gets pretty varied (ymmv depending on how specific you get with the styles though)