Chesskid IPick 2 - Medium Effort Version - Day 4

i don’t want to be sunburnt everywhere, also I just like wearing jackets in general. Not saying it wasn’t hot but it honestly was probably cooler with the jacket to hold my sweat

Up until I was 16, I was immune to sunburn. Now I guess I’m just mildly resistant.

It was weird, one winter I became allergic to the cold, next summer the sun slapped me and left a red mark too.

Yeah when I was a kid only my ears would burn, everywhere else I’d just brown.

Now I burn :woman_shrugging:

This is the high quality town play 451 is known for :grin:

glad to be of service but you still have to get your verse in

My ears have never burned. Only things that ever have are the inside of my biceps and my nose and parts of my cheeks next to my nose.

and @Andresvmb on the chorus

r u fully white, genetically?

Nanook is an aquatic organism known as a CLEM

@M2H nothing would please me more than for Andres to be wrong, but unfortunately, he picked the correct conclusion out of the hat this time. I also wish I was online earlier so that it would look like he’s sheeping me rather than me him, but hey… You started posting so late.

are you going to submit a verse or not

Unfortunately, I didn’t study liberal arts in college.

ouch you can think im scum if u want but thats a step too far

tbf im getting skills in college… I think?

talk to me about how humans allow themselves to put their trust into robots like Ellibereth

It can’t get any worse tbh.

This is the best you’re gonna get tbh

Italian and Irish, so…yeah

le rip

end sunburn with racial mixing

1 Like

trust in automation seems to be similar to trust in humans except in varies a few ways due to perceptions of robots. for instance, robots are seen as objective, analytical, and somewhat permanent. that perception may allow robots to be trusted to a greater extent in the beginning but that trust may be damaged much faster based on breaches of trust. for instance, false alarms. in addition, people tend to not trust robots in social tasks (yet) which may stem from our perception of robots as being cold and impersonal. aspects that may influence the effectiveness of trust repair may be whether our perception of an object or person is controllable or not, stable or not, and external or internal. in that regard it seems that robots are set to be trusted less and disused even if they are error prone even if their accuracy is greater than that of a human operator.