

The main justification is that there’s a decent chance the images are being used without this person’s knowledge or consent. Which seems like a pretty reasonable take.
The main justification is that there’s a decent chance the images are being used without this person’s knowledge or consent. Which seems like a pretty reasonable take.
I work in automotive, and have done a bunch of work on the Bolt.
Unfortunately, vehicles made in the last 5 years or so are protecting CAN bus traffic from exactly the kind of thing you’re looking to do. You’d need to know exactly how to calculate certain values on your messages to be able to replicate them, plus you’d need to block out the messages from the actual OnStar ECU. This isn’t really feasible, unfortunately.
You can probably still read traffic from the OBDII port, but I don’t recommend trying to send traffic (those busses are often pretty loaded up anyways) unless you have an existing tool that you could replicate exactly.
Oh! And if she’s into puzzles, look at Islands of Insight. First person with puzzle solving as the main mechanic, but also some exploration and a bit of mystery to it.
I’d consider what kind of game she finds fun and compelling–that’s more likely to engage her to become familiar with the mouse/keyboard combo.
That being said, Minecraft on peaceful mode would fit and is generally approachable. Stardew Valley is pretty relaxed as well, though I don’t remember whether it uses WASD specifically.
Yeah, but right now it’s about SCOTUS. Sometimes it’s other stuff.
Until there are viable options for ethical AI generation (that is, all training data is used with the authors’ and artists’ explicit permission), I’d suggest banning it, but erring on the lenient side when people aren’t sure whether an image is AI-generated.
Remember the old ThinkPad idiom: “If the cracks are just plastic, it’s still fantastic!”
🏴☠️🏴☠️🏴☠️
The frame really wraps it up nicely. Good work! Here’s hoping we can live to see a time where this kind of art isn’t a reflection of our reality.
Often some sort of coupling pin.