Cognitive surrender” leads AI users to abandon logical thinking, research finds
Experiments show large majorities uncritically accepting “faulty” AI answers.
Experiments show large majorities uncritically accepting “faulty” AI answers.
Ars Technica
"Cognitive surrender" leads AI users to abandon logical thinking, research finds
Experiments show large majorities uncritically accepting "faulty" AI answers.
UI UX Pro Max
An AI skill that provides design intelligence for building professional UI/UX across multiple platforms and frameworks.
An AI skill that provides design intelligence for building professional UI/UX across multiple platforms and frameworks.
Stand out with a 3D logo.
Convert 2D to 3D in seconds.
Built by Ethan. Say hi on Twitter
#tools #finds #3D
Convert 2D to 3D in seconds.
Built by Ethan. Say hi on Twitter
#tools #finds #3D
formia.so
Stand out with a 3D logo.
Forwarded from Pavel Durov (Pavel Durov)
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Forwarded from Pavel Durov (Pavel Durov)
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Inside Googlebot: demystifying crawling, fetching, and the bytes we process
How Googlebot accesses your site
#Googlebot #google #seo
The Google 2MB HTML Limit Is Now Official. Here Is Why Site Owners Should Care.
What does this mean for the bytes your server sends over the wire?
1. Partial fetching: If your HTML file is larger than 2MB, Googlebot doesn't reject the page. Instead, it stops the fetch exactly at the 2MB cutoff. Note that the limit includes HTTP request headers.
2. Processing the cutoff: That downloaded portion (the first 2MB of bytes) is passed along to our indexing systems and the Web Rendering Service (WRS) as if it were the complete file.
3. The unseen bytes: Any bytes that exist after that 2MB threshold are entirely ignored. They aren't fetched, they aren't rendered, and they aren't indexed.
4. Bringing in resources: Every referenced resource in the HTML (excluding media, fonts, and a few exotic files) will be fetched by WRS with Googlebot like the parent HTML. They have their own, separate, per-URL byte counter and don't count towards the size of the parent page.
How Googlebot accesses your site
#Googlebot #google #seo
Google for Developers
Inside Googlebot: demystifying crawling, fetching, and the bytes we process | Google Search Central Blog | Google for Developers
You can test your own pages using the free G-Bot Limit Checker tool. It checks whether your page HTML fits within Google’s 2MB crawl limit. Takes two seconds.
Tool created by Charles Migaud.
#tools #finds #seo
Tool created by Charles Migaud.
#tools #finds #seo
#UX Research → Solving real user problems.
High-Fidelity #UI → Modern, grainy, and aesthetic layouts.
#UserFlows → Making the journey seamless.
High-Fidelity #UI → Modern, grainy, and aesthetic layouts.
#UserFlows → Making the journey seamless.
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The Artificial Intelligence Bill 2026.pdf
1.1 MB
THE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE BILL, 2026 (SENATE BILLS NO. 4 OF 2026)
The Artificial Intelligence Bill, 2026 (Senate Bills No. 4 of 2026] was read a First Time in the Senate on Thursday, 2nd April, 2026 and thereafter stood committed to the Standing Committee on Information, Communication and Technology for consideration.
The Committee is required, under Standing Order 145(5] of the Senate Standing Orders, to facilitate public participation on the Bill and to take into account the views and recommendations of the public when the Committee makes its report to the Senate.
The Bill seeks to establish a legal framework to regulate and govern artificial intelligence (AI) in Kenya, ensuring ethical, transparent and accountable use while fostering innovation and safeguarding human rights, data protection and public welfare. It also establishes the Office of the Artificial Intelligence Commissioner.
The Artificial Intelligence Bill, 2026 (Senate Bills No. 4 of 2026] was read a First Time in the Senate on Thursday, 2nd April, 2026 and thereafter stood committed to the Standing Committee on Information, Communication and Technology for consideration.
The Committee is required, under Standing Order 145(5] of the Senate Standing Orders, to facilitate public participation on the Bill and to take into account the views and recommendations of the public when the Committee makes its report to the Senate.
The Bill seeks to establish a legal framework to regulate and govern artificial intelligence (AI) in Kenya, ensuring ethical, transparent and accountable use while fostering innovation and safeguarding human rights, data protection and public welfare. It also establishes the Office of the Artificial Intelligence Commissioner.