I think they're basically saying that if the kitchen staff spits in your food and doesn't tell you, then you wouldn't care. It's only when you find out that you care.
@lemmy.ca
That's the wrong question to ask. "important people are more likely to be in a plane than unimportant people" is valid as a partial explanation only if we assume that all aircrafts have similar crash probabilities and are flown with a similar number of passengers.
The frequency with which I personally fly does not impact how often other people fly. All it does is give you one data point on how often other people in my situation might fly, and we don't know how many others are in my situation, so that information is also useless.
There isn't really a single standard for how to perform a close grip bench, which is probably why AI is telling OP that some elbow flare is fine. What a typical powerlifter considers "close grip bench" is probably what a typical body builder calls a regular bench press.
I've been experimenting a bit with adding LLMs into my workflow, and even when using it constantly for a full 8h workday, it barely uses any of my quota. I'm guessing that those who burn through an excessive number of tokens are probably just letting a bunch of them run unattended and automatically allowing everything. There's just no way to verify that much of its output.
I don't know if homemade pizza is any different, but I get very nice crispy crusts with a tray. Store-bought frozen pizza goes directly on the rack here only because they don't fit on my trays.
thanks for using Leebra!
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