Bring back a closed tab - useful tip when browsing.
Accidentally closed a tab? Simply press Ctrl + Shift + T to reopen the most recently closed tab and get back to what you were doing (Cmd + Shift + T on Macs).
Janis Hellew Tips and tricks for computers http://pc-guru-help.com
Bring back a closed tab - useful tip when browsing.
Accidentally closed a tab? Simply press Ctrl + Shift + T to reopen the most recently closed tab and get back to what you were doing (Cmd + Shift + T on Macs).
Find your Wi-Fi password In Windows, go to the "Network and Sharing Center." Right click on the Wi-Fi network connection icon > Wireless Properties.
Click on Show Characters box to show your Wi-Fi password.
YouTube keyboard shortcuts
If you thought using the spacebar to pause a YouTube video was effective (except when focus is elsewhere and it doesn't work),
try using K for pausing,
J and L will step backward/forward 10 seconds.
M works for mute. Super handy.
YouTube keyboard shortcuts
If you thought using the spacebar to pause a YouTube video was effective (except when focus is elsewhere and it doesn't work),
try using
M works for mute. Super handy.
YouTube keyboard shortcuts
If you thought using the spacebar to pause a YouTube video was effective (except when focus is elsewhere and it doesn't work),
try using K for pausing,
J and L will step backward/forward 10 seconds.
YouTube keyboard shortcuts If you thought using the spacebar to pause a YouTube video was effective (except when focus is elsewhere and it doesn't work),
try using K for pausing
A matter of life and death - can we predict when we are going to die?
It is amazing ChatGPT analyzed human lives...
Although most folks aren’t in a massive rush to learn when they’ll bite the big one, a newly developed AI death calculator can now forecast when a person will die with eerily exact accuracy.
“We use the technology behind ChatGPT (something called transformer models) to analyze human lives by representing each person as the sequence of events that happens in their life,” Sune Lehmann, lead author of the December 2023 study “Using sequence of life-events to predict human lives,” told The Post.
In the report, the professor of network and complex systems from the Technical University of Denmark, and co-authors introduce an algorithm known as “life2vec,” which uses select details of an individual’s life — including income, profession, residence and health history — to determine life expectancy with 78% correctness.