Gene Hackman and wife's death is still 'full of loopholes' as investigators keep case OPEN
Santa Fe Sheriff Adam Mendoza has insisted that Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy Arakawa's cases will remain open so authorities can tie up 'loose ends' and 'loopholes.'
Shocking moment high-school track star is attacked by baton-wielding opponent during race
The indoor track championships in Virginia were marred by a brazen attack by one runner when she used the baton in her relay race as a weapon against an opponent.
Man who worked at Amazon when it was just starting reveals what Jeff Bezos was REALLY like
Steve Yegge, 56, from Washington, started working at Amazon in 1998 as a technical program manager, four years after Jeff launched the company out of his garage.
Male influencer reveals insane amount he earned last year
Brandon Edelman, better known as Bran Flakezz, revealed the immense amount of money he made last year on Vivian Tu' Your Rich BFF podcast.
London council chiefs spend £140million to send homeless people out of the capital by snapping up hundreds of properties in deprived areas elsewhere in England
Local authorities in the capital have acquired more than 850 properties across England since 2017 - with plans to ship individuals as far afield as Liverpool and the northeast.
Insane moment deranged California driver rams into CarMax showroom injuring eight people
A deranged driver was seen driving a car through a CarMax dealership in Inglewood, California on Saturday around 2.10pm. The driver left two people in critical condition and six with minor injuries.
Tributes to Chelmsford City Council youth leader who 'touched many lives' among this week's death and funeral notices
Our thoughts are with those who have lost a loved one
Fury at Pam Bondi over no Epstein files 'client list' update as another deadline looms
The Justice Department is taking heat over the botched release of Epstein files as another deadline regarding the release of files on the assassinations of RFK and MLK loomed on Sunday.
Chloe Grace Moretz shows off her HUGE engagement ring while heading out in Paris after appearing to confirm she's set to marry girlfriend Kate Harrison
The actress, 27, appeared elated as she left her swanky hotel in the French capital wearing her huge gold ring which was set with a huge diamond.
'I Used to Teach Students. Now I Catch ChatGPT Cheats'
Philosophy/ethics professor Troy Jollimore looks at the implications of a world where many students are submitting AI-generated essays. ("Sometimes they will provide quotations, giving page numbers that, as often as not, do not seem to correspond to anything in the actual world...") Ideally if the students write the essays themselves, "some of them start to feel it. They begin to grasp that thinking well, and in an informed manner, really is different from thinking poorly and from a position of ignorance. That moment, when you start to understand the power of clear thinking, is crucial.
"The trouble with generative AI is that it short-circuits that process entirely."
One begins to suspect that a great many students wanted this all along: to make it through college unaltered, unscathed. To be precisely the same person at graduation, and after, as they were on the first day they arrived on campus. As if the whole experience had never really happened at all. I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit. That faith has been obliterated over the past few semesters. It's not just the sheer volume of assignments that appear to be entirely generated by AI — papers that show no sign the student has listened to a lecture, done any of the assigned reading, or even briefly entertained a single concept from the course...
It's other things too... The students who beg you to reconsider the zero you gave them in order not to lose their scholarship. (I want to say to them: Shouldn't that scholarship be going to ChatGPT?â) It's also, and especially, the students who look at you mystified. The use of AI already seems so natural to so many of them, so much an inevitability and an accepted feature of the educational landscape, that any prohibition strikes them as nonsensical. Don't we instructors understand that today's students will be able, will indeed be expected, to use AI when they enter the workforce? Writing is no longer something people will have to do in order to get a job.
Or so, at any rate, a number of them have told me. Which is why, they argue, forcing them to write in college makes no sense. That mystified look does not vanish — indeed, it sometimes intensifies — when I respond by saying: Look, even if that were true, you have to understand that I don't equate education with job training.
What do you mean? they might then ask.
And I say: I'm not really concerned with your future job. I want to prepare you for life...
My students have been shaped by a culture that has long doubted the value of being able to think and write for oneself — and that is increasingly convinced of the power of a machine to do both for us. As a result, when it comes to writing their own papers, they simply disregard it. They look at instructors who levy such prohibitions as irritating anachronisms, relics of a bygone, pre-ChatGPT age.... As I go on, I find that more of the time, energy, and resources I have for teaching are dedicated to dealing with this issue. I am doing less and less actual teaching, more and more policing. Sometimes I try to remember the last time I actually looked forward to walking into a classroom. It's been a while.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Sam Elliott shows he's the ultimate old-fashioned gentleman while grocery shopping with wife Katharine Ross
Hollywood veteran Sam Elliott was spotted grocery shopping with wife Katharine Ross in Los Angeles in a recent rare outing offering a glimpse into their enduring 41-year marriage.
Grieving Coleen Nolan 'putting on a brave face' as she prepares to celebrate milestone birthday just eight weeks after beloved sister Linda's tragic death
The Loose Women star will mark the milestone on March 12 with a family party, but the big day will be 'bittersweet' due to her beloved sibling's absence.
'I hope you rot in hell... you snowflake!' Listen to female pub landlord's extraordinary foul-mouthed rant to staff member after handing in her notice
The female manager, believed to be aged 44, launched into the expletive tongue lashing, branding the Gen-Z employee a 'snowflake' for quitting ahead of her Friday shift.
The derelict Essex school where naughty or ill children were sent to that could be transformed into new homes
Plans could see the old school be torn down and replaced with nine new homes
Pro-Palestinian Columbia graduate apprehended by ICE after leading on-campus protests
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Manchester United vs Arsenal - Premier League: Live score, team news and updates with Gunners FIFTEEN points adrift of Liverpool after being held at Old Trafford as Bruno Fernandes' fine free-kick is cancelled out
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Our one-year-old daughter collapsed while playing with her brothers on holiday and is now in hospital fighting for her life - but the British government says it can't afford to help us
Sienna-Rose, from Liverpool, who is just 19 months old, suffered a brain haemorrhage and swelling while on holiday in Cancun.
Charlotte Dawson looks on cloud nine as she and fiancé Matthew Sarsfield are seen heading home from the hospital with their newborn daughter - hours after welcoming their third child
The reality star, 32, announced she had given birth to their third child on Saturday, after sharing a slew of updates of the labour on Instagram.
Paris Fashion Week turns heads with very provocative tank: Would you wear it?
Designers from across the globe gathered for Paris Fashion Week to push style boundaries - with one creator's statement pieces standing out among the rest.
Professor Ends Bulwer-Lytton Bad Writing Contest After 43 Years
Slashdot covered the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest in 2008 and 2010 — though it's been running since 1983. Entrants competed to write the worst-possible first sentence for a novel, in a contest started by English professor Scott E. Rice at San Jose State University (which sponsored the contest). In its first year it drew over 10,000 entries!
Over the years the bad first sentences were even collected into actual books (that were edited by Rice). But after 43 years, Rice delivered his own disappointing first sentence. "It is with deep regrets that I announce the conclusion of the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest."
Being a year and a half older than Joseph Biden, I find the BLFC becoming increasingly burdensome and would like to put myself out to pasture while I still have some vim and vigor!
When I initiated the competition in 1983, inviting entrants to submit bad opening sentences to imaginary novels, I never dreamed that we would receive thousands of entrants from all over the U.S. and the globe, or that the contest would survive for over four decades.
I am especially grateful to our entrants for keeping the contest alive and to our Panel of Undistinguished Judges who dutifully selected each year's "winners." And, of course, I would like to thank my daughter, EJ, who has been indispensable the last several years of the contest. It's been 42 good years but, alas, all good things must come to an end. Rest assured we're keeping the BLFC spirit alive by maintaining our archive for posterity so that generations and generations hence may witness your greatness!
His daughter EJ added their own words of thanks:
Lastly, any little bit you could spare towards helping us keep the archive going (a few bucks is great!) would be greatly appreciated (EJ's Venmo is @elizabeth-rice-12). Thank you so much for your joy and enthusiasm — the noble Bulweriers have made working on the contest a treasure!!
Read more of this story at Slashdot.