Brian - are you implying that trains don't magically fly parallel to Westminster Bridge?
Brian - are you implying that trains don't magically fly parallel to Westminster Bridge?
Too high to be a Thames ferry.
Earlier in the article it does recognise some limited advancesTitle: AI won't fix a broken system
Conclusion Summary: AI companies, science funders nd policymakers seem to be treating AI as a magic accelerant — something to sprinkle onto scientific enterprise to make it go faster. But, as one recent analysis put it, this is like "adding lanes to a highway when the slowdown is actually caused by a tollbooth" The question is not how to build more lanes, it is why the tollbooth is there in the first place.
(Sorry it's a RSB members printed journal and no public links to the article. It is available through the Wikipedia Library for WikiMedia active editors registered If anybody particularly interested I could scan and private message the two pages but it's copyright and not public and explicit "... its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites without the copyright holder's express written permission." so not something I could post on open forum)."More Of The Same: This is not an argument that AI can't advance science. It already has in fields of protein technology to nuclear fusion. But those breakthroughs involved systems designed to solve specific scientific problems. The broad adoption of AI suggests it could lead to more of what we are already doing but faster — or, worse, simply enable the rapid production of mediocre manuscripts. Science advances not only by solving well-defined problems but by generating new ones, and the institutional problems shaping how most scientists actually use AI are upstream of any technology.
Not sure, but I think @PurplePenguin knows his way around London on public transport.
Have you been on a sleeper train where the bed is parallel to the window?
Only been on one type (SNCF Train de Nuit), and that was a definite no (all six bunks per 'cabin' perpendicular either side of the window), but then they are all ancient rolling stock and no 'business class' accommodation, AFAIK. Some of the modern sleeper trains might offer this for big $s.
I'd be confident they don't. Trains are not that narrow, so perpendicular is always the best option.
Have just come to the same conclusion below your post, same reasoning.
Maybe depends on the train. I found taking the train in India difficult as they are always booked months in advance but I did find a "loophole" so managed and long'ish overnight (SL class is no aircon, lowest class available). Interesting experience and glad I tried it but different challenges from overnight bus travel.I'd be confident they don't. Trains are not that narrow, so perpendicular is always the best option.