I think you’re asking for a duplicate finder that can tell where that file came from(source of truth?)
Most duplicate finders work by hashing the files and looking for matches. If the file indicated where it came from it would have a different hash and not be found to be a duplicate.
So I don’t think what you’re asking for can be done. But I’m not sure I understand what you’re asking.
I think the specialized hardware for this task will be better than you expect. It’s like using a sledgehammer to carve something. Pretty soon a chisel will be given to the computer and it will be able to do its job much easier.
I thought ever actor who has portrayed Spock has done a decent job. I really like Ethan Pecks Spock, and Zachary Quinto is a good actor and did Spock justice.
Like breaking into someone’s house, but instead of stealing their TV, I just upgrade it to a top of the line one and leave a mess of boxes and styrofoam so it’s obvious it’s been replaced in the middle of the night.
I actually use Linux on everything other than my work computer due to needing a few programs that absolutely will not work on Linux and do not have Linux alternatives.
I’d have the students each type the same prompt into chatgpt. For example, let’s say it’s about George Washington. They have an initial prompt and can ask up to 5 additional questions.
Once that is done, they write a report on this topic, using what chatgpt told them. They submit the report and the chatgpt log.
Teacher reviews/grades as normal, but also checks for inconsistencies.
The students who have conflicting information can lead a class discussion about this topic about who’s accurate.
The class can vote, and the teacher can reveal the truth.
Great way to have an interactive class and demonstrate that chatgpt should not be blindly trusted.
I would be so happy if they just let browser extensions work on 3rd party browsers. They already force them to use WebKit. Why are the extensions not working?
Siri just woke up. I meant Dropbox.