Bongles
Sex robots/dolls aren't realistic enough yet. I've seen several "attractive women" on Instagram that are entirely AI, but it's not going to progress past that until a real physical body is good enough.
It works for me generally. Asking things like "who was i asking about X" type stuff.
It's available everywhere at this point. My team has the license to have copilot in every main office app, the teams that don't still have the generic web version. There are AI chat bots for various things with some stupid brain related name. There are a couple things we've done with an LLM that have actual business use cases that benefited an automated process (sorry, have to be vague). Another, not Microsoft, product we use is advertising their AI features all the time, which as a side note feels incredibly unprofessional for enterprise type software, if it was up to me I'd find an alternative over that alone. Another cloud database service also has a brain themed chat bot.
What my job doesn't do is force anyone to use it ever (outside of the people that had to set it up). I use copilot in Microsoft teams, as it can pull from emails and chats to answer questions specific to my job: generic stuff like fluffing up a peer/self review, helping me find a conversation that I only vaguely remember, finding emails when outlooks search decides to be shit. Since it's my work device with my work data I'm not concerned about my privacy so that's actually useful to me. I've played around with the word and excel copilots but they're terrible. Word can help you build a doc but if i open a doc copilot tells me it can't actually edit anything in the doc. So what is it for, generic questions? Then excels can physically do things but it gets it very wrong for me. I was almost even excited for it because I thought, maybe I could say something like "Hey copilot, take this sheet, put it into a pivot table, use X for columns and Y for rows" and it would do it for me, rather than me taking those steps. But it doesn't work so I stopped trying after a few attempts at getting it to be useful.
People are still using reddit and Twitter, of course they're still using imgur.
Imgur also has an interesting niche that isn't covered by alternatives yet.
If you know what phone they have you can get one at or a little higher than it's top charging speed. It might end up their fastest charger. (I mention a little higher if you feel like it, since if/when they upgrade maybe that speed will go up a bit and your purchase will be even better. I wouldn't bother doing that with chinese phones that are at 100W anyway.)
I know I'm not the only one familiar with water jets in bathtubs and hot tubs.
Probably not the worst, but legal eagle just did a video on the "kill them all" murders, but his segue into his own legal service still started with the "and this highlights why you need a good lawyer ..."
When it was recipes they claimed it was copyright related. If another site stole your whole recipe plus the story you know it's stolen. Just saying to hard boil eggs, split em, add mayo and mustard.. well that's just any deviled eggs.
Yeah, plex handles all that nonsense on their end. That's why before their recent shenanigans they were a great option.
There's a few ways, but it's similar to hosting anything yourself. You could, if you're not too bothered by it, just forward the port that jellyfin is using. You do this in your routers settings and you can see/change the port in jellyfins settings. Then you give your friends the device that's hosting jellyfin's ip address and they type it in when logging into the app. That's simple and quick and not secure at all. But it's really one of those things that 99 times out of 100 it's fine.
You can use something like tailscale to connect your friends devices to your network, I didn't do it so I don't really know the details, but you'd need it installed on all of their clients. This is (probably) the most secure way but it's a pain in the butt for users, compared to other ways. https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/post-install/networking/tailscale/
I ended up using nginx as a reverse proxy, and bought a domain name so I could just tell people "go into jellyfin wherever you want and type in domain.com, then pick the profile I made you." I was really new to this nginx thing when I did it, so I don't have a deep understanding of why it's better than just forwarding the port but it is.
Read through this https://wiki.dbzer0.com/piracy/megathread/
Once you find a torrent, it will almost certainly include installation instructions, make sure you follow them.