![]() ![]() Have a lovely day!Īs always, I’d love it if you’d follow me here on this blog and subscribe to my YouTube channel and my Substack so you can stay up-to-date on all my TV, movie and video game reviews and coverage. I’d love it if you gave me a follow on Twitter or Facebook dearest Wordlers. You can either keep a running tally of your score if that’s your jam or just play day-to-day if you prefer. Here are the rules:1 point for getting the Wordle in 3 guesses.You can also play against the Bot if you have a New York Times subscription. Now you should play against me! I can be your nemesis! (And your helpful Wordle guide, of course). Though Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook have invested in AI tech for years, it’s mostly. I’ve been playing a cutthroat game of PvP Wordle against my nemesis Wordle But. Chatbots like Bing have kicked off a major new AI arms race between the biggest tech companies. The term "taste" can refer to both the sense of taste, which involves perceiving flavors with the tongue, and the broader concept of aesthetic judgment or preference. Microsoft’s new Bing ChatGPT equivalent went rogue in a two-hour long chat with a reporter - insisting it was actually human and threatening nuclear war. In Old English, the word for taste was "tæstan" or "tæst," which evolved into the Middle English word "tasten." Over time, the spelling and pronunciation shifted, and the modern English word "taste" emerged. Chatbot The company knew the new technology. Chatbot - The New York Times Advertisement Microsoft Considers More Limits for Its New A.I. The word "taste" has its roots in the Latin word "gustus," which means "taste" or "flavor." It can be traced back further to the Proto-Indo-European root *geus-, meaning "to taste" or "to choose." This root gave rise to various related words in different Indo-European languages. Microsoft Considers More Limits for Its New A.I. Today’s Score: Alas, today I lost to Wordle Bot, leaving me with -1 for that and 0 for guessing in four for a grand total of -1 points. I guessed thump to knock out a few of those, and immediately had my answer for guess #4: taste! ![]() Taste, haste, paste, baste and so forth, all ending the same with too many letters to choose from. At this point, I did know I only had a few options left, though I was in a bit of a pickle. I did have two yellow boxes and a green box and I decided to just see if I could rearrange the yellows and get a new vowel in the process.Ĭaste did the trick, shuffling everything up into green. I had no idea my opening guess left me with so few choices! Stone reduced my options to just ten words, but of course I didn’t know that at the time. ![]()
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