At this time, unless something new comes to light, there's little reason to believe it's anything but an unusual episode of turbulence.
Edit: and according to a different article, there is at least one passenger who claims the pilot said their controls "blanked out" which would qualify as "something new".
Headline is clickbaitey, the fact it's a Boeing is irrelevant. This can just happen.
I was on a flight to Colorado from Canada, flying over the Rockies, and we hit a mild patch of turbulence that, without warning, suddenly turned into a quick, long drop that threw folks who weren't belted in out of their seats and sent drinks flying.
The lesson is simple: wear your damn seatbelt and avoid walking around the cabin unnecessarily.
Take it to an electronics recycling center. Seriously.
If you already have a homelab, you plan to replace it, you don't want to repair it, and you don't have an obvious use case for another machine (it's just another computer; you either have the need for another computer or you don't), then holding onto it is just hoarding.
If somebody wanted to draw animated kiddie porn they could still do that. How far would you go until you ban crayons
It's genuinely impressive how completely you missed my point.
How about another analogy: US federal law allows people to own individual firearms, but not grenades.
But they're both things that kill people, right? Why would they be treated differently?
Hint: it's about scale.
The same is true of pipe bombs. But anyone can make a pipe bomb. Genie is out of the bottle, right? So why are there laws regulating manufacture and ownership of them? Hmm...
And how many times have you made this comment, only to have it pointed out that there is a big fucking difference between a human manually creating fake images via Photoshop at human speed using human skills, versus automating the process so it can be done en masse at the push of a button?
Because that's a really big fucking difference.
Think: musket versus gatling gun. Yeah, they both shoot bullets, but that's about where the similarity ends.
Is the genie out of the bottle at this point? Probably.
But to claim this doesn't represent a massive shift because Photoshop? Sorry but that's at best naive, and it's starting to get exhausting seeing this "argument" trotted out repeatedly by AI apologists.
For folks unaware, the technical git term, here, is a 'ref'. Everything that points to a commit is a ref, whether it's HEAD, the tip of a branch, or a tag. If the git manpage mentions a 'ref' that's what it's talking about.
If the bar is "never made a mistake or published a questionable article in the entire history of the institution", then there's no such thing as a "newspaper of record" and I'm fine with that. Frankly, I never liked that idea as no one, no institution, no media outlet, no person, is totally free from bias, and no one should treat any one paper as universally authoritative.
But claiming the NYT is "unreliable" now, today, based on the actions of people who, if not dead are almost certainly retired today, is ridiculous.
Also let's just appreciate that the two examples cited by the poster are 1) a recent story that may genuinely be problematic (though I think it's naive to believe either the Israelis or Hamas haven't engaged in sexual violence given its prevalence in warzones), and 2) reporting on a manufactured war that's now nearly 30 years old.
It's absurd to think you can hold the current NYT to account for actions done so long ago that many of their current journalists wouldn't have been borne yet.
That's not to say the NYT doesn't have it's problems. It is absolutely a both-sidesism establishment paper. But if you're gonna criticize it, at least do so with modern examples.
You ignored the context and circumstances because they're irrelevant?
Your answer to every comment has consistently been (paraphrasing): "trust the cops, they know what they're doing", irrespective of any surrounding facts that might suggest otherwise, or any past history that would suggest that law enforcement doesn't deserve that level of blind trust.
Given that, there's little point in further discussion.
Sure, maybe if they drew their weapons immediately, before his act. That'd make sense. They wouldn't know what he was gonna do.
The trouble is, based on the reporting we have, they drew their guns after he lit himself on fire, not before:
as soon as he was engulfed in flames they started yelling at him to get down on the ground. They even drew their guns on the burning man before someone pushed them to get fire extinguishers to extinguish the fire.
I'm thinking by the time the guy was engulfed in flames he was a little too preoccupied to do much else.
Can you imagine facing a living bonfire, and your first thought is "I should draw my gun and tell them to get down on the ground"? There's genuinely no excuse for that level of inhumanity.
If you have an Android phone I can't recommend Genius Scan enough. Fast, accurate, lots of features. I use it with syncthing by exporting the files to a folder that's configured to sync the paperless input folder.
There are more beginners then there are experts, so in the absence of research a beginner UI is a safer bet.
If you're in the business of creating high quality UX, and you're building a UI without even the most basic research--understanding your target user--you've already failed.
And yes, if you definite "beginner" to be someone with expert training and experience, then yes an expert UI would be better for that "beginner". What a strange way to define "beginner" though.
If I'm building a product that's targeting software developers, a "beginner" has a very different definition than if I'm targeting grade school children, and the UX considerations will be vastly different.
This is, like, first principles of product development stuff, here.
Unless you've actually done the user research, you have no idea if a "beginner friendly UX is a safer bet" . It's just a guess. Sometimes it's a good guess. Sometimes it's not. The correct answer is always "it depends".
Hell, whether or not a form full of fields is or isn't "beginner" friendly is even debatable given the world "beginner" is context-specific. Without knowing who that user is, their background, their training, and the work context, you have no way of knowing for sure. You just have a bunch of assumptions you're making.
As for the rest, human data entry that cannot be automated is incredibly common, regardless of your personal feelings about it. If you've walked into a government office, healthcare setting, legal setting, etc, and had someone ask you a bunch of questions, you might be surprised to hear that the odds are very good that human was punching your answers into a computer.
All that says is they're investigating.
At this time, unless something new comes to light, there's little reason to believe it's anything but an unusual episode of turbulence.
Edit: and according to a different article, there is at least one passenger who claims the pilot said their controls "blanked out" which would qualify as "something new".