I can't prove it but I am more certain that the first bit of worn armour ever made was to protect some guys dick than I am about gravity.
peto
You know, I needed that.
I don't know. Weight alone is likely a poor measure, and one we see exploited in combat sports to the harm and even death of competators. Working that specifically out is a question for sports scientists I think, rather than basing it on the feelings and biases of spectators.
What I am talking about is the cultural acceptance of sectioned competition, and that it doesn't reduce the achievements and glory of competators.
I assume you mean something like weight classes in combat sports? No one expects a welterweight to fight a heavyweight. And the existence of either class doesn't reduce the achievements of anyone not in it.
Authority doesn't exist. He does likely have the power however.
I'd warn against opening the cells if you don't know how old it is. Modern ones are safe, older ones might contain heavy metals.
Just follow Baldrick's recipe.
See the problem with this is that even if I write code with this font, I can't force people to read it in this font.
I suppose if they killed it to make the lamp. If it was already done using the body though?
I mean it's not great taxidermy but I'm not sure it's bad. It's not even a case that I question who would want it. I know several people who would love to receive it as a gift.
Perhaps the only mistake is that the eyes don't light up.
A lot of the issue with this is that we are talking about a really energy-intensive way of solving this non-problem.
A better way is to train humans to stop falling for the bait. That is also rather hard though but I'm pretty sure you can already get browser plugins that identify click bait headlines and just, hides them.
If we can get the costs to read an summarize an article down (and get an AI that understands things like facts and source quality) then there are a bunch of things it could do for us. Interpreting contracts and TOS bollocks come to mind, but LLMs as we have them today can't do that. They might end up part of the tool chain but they are presently insufficient.