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My approach of theoretics goes in that direction, more or less accentuated on different goal settings. Your approach must work for you as for sheer efficiency. You will spend more time on relevant issues, if so desired, of producing meaningful content. Now include hardware into the same philosophy, the long term into shelf live, a single programming language worked on by dedicated knowledgeable individuals ideally. You are on our side of things. A page (web/print) should be written, locally, off-line, in the same editor of always, in open-source code, preferably the blob of compiled code at it's nucleus, if there is any neeeded also. Content should have a seven hundred year lifeline, readable, view-able in minimal software allowances. Then it cannot be said too often, hardware-software is in-extricable. For all those that think phishing in the public domain for the soul of the crowds, well, that is fine, but nothing the matter. And be prepared for a frustrated life-time of scratching your itches. Theodore Kackzinski, people who vouch for the "hundred year", robust hardware, for the fashion of the ages, they seem to be on the right side of history. That same observation de-obfuscates the evidenced in what is going on in AI, and statistics, mining data. ...when the data are repeats, high-level, junk, outright meaningless, no amount of AI or tweaking using computer power will assert anything but junk outcomes. People scale badly, that makes for the most efficient workflow to be a-synchronous, for nuggets of which as an individual we have as a rule none, and few individuals very little, that sort of data merits a long life-line, that data need to be tailored for the above allowances as you point rightfully out. You might be fake, or limited in your ambitions, but from what I read, I must concede you make sense before any back-ground check is at order. |