Apple took Gemini out of Google, but can it take Google out of Gemini?

Macworld

You humans don’t handle nuance very well.

Before you complain about that being racist, remember that the Macalope is _part_ human, so he can say that.

He’s not saying that when he gets together with his antelope cousins, it’s like a friar’s club roast of humans. He’s not _saying_ that.

Now, you’re probably asking yourself if, after weeks of discussing AI, the Macalope is finally…

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Vela Spila in Vela Luka, Croatia

From the town of Vela Luka, follow the signs to Vela Spila. The walk is uphill (genuinely, significantly uphill, but you'll be used to that if you are in Dalmatia!), but if you can manage it, do. The path winds through sweeping views of the Adriatic, past fig and olive trees, and in April, wild irises that stop you in your tracks. The trail is easy to follow, and driving is apparently possible,…

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Hatchet Bay Cave in Alice Town, The Bahamas

Most people visiting Eleuthera never know this cave exists, which seems like a real shame. Hidden off Queen's Highway near the Hatchet Bay silos, it's the largest cave system on the island and one of the more genuinely weird and wonderful things you can do in the Bahamas. A descent down a set of rough stairs puts you in the first chamber, where natural light still filters in and a few stalactites…

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Eldon Hole in Buxton, England

Located on the southern flank of Eldon Hill (etymologically "Elves' Hill"), the peaceful landscape has a hidden evil scar of just a hundred feet long and twenty feet wide.

Long before 18th-century geologists dared to measure its depth, Eldon Hole was feared as a "bottomless pit." In 1636, the philosopher Thomas Hobbes famously wrote of a stone dropped into the abyss: "The lowest deep descending,…

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