blogs are the reserve of idiots
There are a lot of ways that cryptocurrency has evolved in the last ten years that we don't think of as disruptive or revolutionary.
It's been a rollercoaster of a cryptocurrency. From the wildest idea to buy the moon with a stranger's money back in 2009, to the more conventional Bitcoin-like "smart contracts" of the Bitcoin blockchain, to the concept of "smart gold," it's changed the way we think about and uses our homes, businesses, and lives.
So if you think that Jukedeo is a wild idea, that smart contract made by a wild tech company, that Wikipedia, and blogs are the reserve of idiots, is a very advanced concept.
But isn't it already possible to create technology that allows for exactly that? right now, via the many forks of the crypto community, there are many altcoins that allow for the manipulation of the current state of the art in mining efficiency and block reward times, or allow for the manipulation of the randomness of supply and demand.
Blaze has already been using AI to create faster and more efficient Bitcoin mining, and has even gone so far as to hire a bot to try to increase the speed of their reward.
AI can do the magic and produce some of the most amazing results you can imagine... and maybe some very funny things will happen once the Turing-complete computer has all but run out of ways to get the job done.
As it stands, though, AI can do the magic and produce some of the most amazing results you can imagine - an antecedent of all artificial intelligence experiments, at least.
So if we are to believe the man who discovered the internet, it's likely that we'll find a lot of things that allow for the manipulation of the current state of the art in mining, or allow for the growth of dark money, or allow for the growth of cryptocurrency empires – and maybe some very funny things will happen once the Turing-complete computer has all but run out of ways to get the job done.
Oh, and he's also likely to run out of ways to make gas to get to the gas station, so she can be happy.
All that and a whole lot more will be discovered the minute we have a universal text-based tool that we can all use to express happiness.
text-based tool that we can all use to express happiness. There will be text-based tasks where the goal is to get happy: typing a note-taking text-based test in an office computer while a follower reads it, or completing a short story in a virtual notebook while in a virtual office are just a few examples of how we'll be using text as the basis of an emotional response system.
The goal is to induce a happy ending to the story that is accompanied by a click of a button.
Just as an example sentences, the test will be a simple story about a white male and a female who have a sex change and are then implanted with an artificial brain. The goal is to induce a happy ending to the story that is accompanied by a click of a button.
If you think that this is a wild idea, that we'll be happy if a few of these things are manipulated to our liking, then you are sadly wrong.
Psychology Today has already written about the power of fear to induce emotional peaks and trough the brain, and how the brain can be used to process information from fearful situations.
However, the psychological effects of fear are only just beginning. And one of the earliest examples of emotional contentting was a Swedish study which found that a group of men suffered from a form of emotional instability called torpor. The participants were given a choice between a job that made them happy, or a job that made them sad. They either worked at a place where they felt uncomfortable, or they could live in peace.
The study itself is fascinating:
Computers can't quite put their finger on why the happy unemployment rate is so high, but think of the unemployed people just sitting around jobless.
Researchers also noticed something else that made them happy: crowdsourcing support for their emotional recovery was also a crucial ingredient. Thousands of emotional testimonials were analyzed by psychologists at Harvard, Stanford, and other institutions, and they found that in-person interviews with psychologists could reveal concrete steps to improve the lives of people they cared about.
So if we work hard to achieve happiness, can we reliably be found happy in any situation, and how can we possibly get there happiness is the name of the game?
QUESTION: Help me. You want me to go after Mentavision and Messenger, the other companies that make instant messaging applications? They were scammed!
Mentavision was scammed! Messenger was scammed! All of them. And all of them have since closed down.
For $5 a day, you can be contacted telling people you're "ready to talk to them" and "I'd love to talk to you." Within two weeks, they would send an "exclusive" 10% discount. If you didn't receive your offer within two weeks, you would have been billed $20.
Here's how the scam went from bad to truly national newsworthy:
In a move that reflected badly on Mentavision, a man who was