![]() Write articles or blog posts about medieval poetry and include recordings of your recitations as examples.Ģ0. Create a podcast featuring your recitations of medieval poetry and monetize it through advertising or sponsorships.ġ9. Collaborate with other poets to create recitation performances that incorporate multiple voices.ġ8. Offer recitation services for businesses, such as recording voiceovers for commercials or videos.ġ7. Sell merchandise related to medieval poetry, such as t-shirts or posters featuring your recitations.ġ6. Create a subscription service where members can access recordings of your recitations on a regular basis.ġ5. ![]() Record audio books of medieval poetry and sell them through online platforms.ġ4. Work with museums or cultural organizations to offer recitation performances as part of their programming.ġ3. Offer your recitation services for special occasions, such as weddings or other events.ġ2. Create a YouTube channel featuring your recitations of medieval poetry and monetize it through advertising.ġ1. Collaborate with musicians to create recordings of medieval poetry set to music.ġ0. Write a book about medieval poetry and include recordings of your recitations.ĩ. Create a website or blog dedicated to medieval poetry and monetize it through advertising or sponsored content.Ĩ. Partner with schools or educational organizations to offer recitation classes for students.ħ. Host workshops or seminars on medieval poetry and charging a fee for attendance.Ħ. Offer private lessons to individuals who want to learn how to recite medieval poetry.ĥ. Create an online course teaching others how to recite medieval poetry.Ĥ. Sell recordings of your recitations as physical CDs or digital downloads.ģ. Perform at poetry readings or events and charge a fee for your performance.Ģ. Bonus: You can also put Date object to first argĬonvertTZ(date, "Asia/Jakarta") // current date-time in jakarta. Resulting value is regular Date() objectĬonst convertedDate = convertTZ("0 10:10:30 +0000", "Asia/Jakarta") > How can I print out local string as Sun Nov 27 2022? So I would have googled something like "pass timezone to toLocaleString", which would give me this answer. The problem was (depending on your time zone) if you do new Date(" 00:00:00.000").toLocaleString(), you get The tricky part is unlearning how to search.įor instance, I had a timestamp 00:00:00.000 and wanted to display it in local string. I started trying to use ChatGPT instead of google for a lot of my queries. | "peach and mango cocktail recipe" | Yes |ītw, incredibly, ChatGPT actually made that table for me when I said "Please compile all the queries I just asked you about into an ascii table, where the first column is my query, and the second column is your Yes or No answer." The table it printed was correct but formatted as an HTML table, so I asked it to put it in a code block and I got almost exactly what I pasted above (just had to remove two extraneous spaces that made the lines not line up) I tried running that on some sample queries to see its output, and compiled its responses in this table (note the last one is incorrect in my opinion): Give it a prompt like "I want to know if you are likely to generate more immediately useful and actionable results than my web search. Since pricing is roughly proportional to response length (and maybe prompt length?), it seems like ChatGPT could use itself to determine if the search is a good fit or not. > it is non-trivial to predict which searches GPT will be good for Anyway Kagi is great and I wish them the best of fortunes. ![]() Some companies I’ve worked at felt offering their service globally was worth the depressed margins even if they never made it make economic sense simply because it was useful enough - but also it creates a solid global brand. ![]() You can go even further and let larger (in dollar space) regions subsidize smaller regions while they grow critical mass. In that model you can in fact offer regional pricing as long as there’s a critical mass sufficient to justify the localization and regional edge deployments. I would be flabbergasted if my monthly is going to pay for my search transactions rather than the ability to execute any search at all. They may not be breaking even or run at even, but that (I expect) is because they’re struggling to overcome that first hump of the fixed cost, but at the margin they’re doing well. I would assume there’s a huge upfront fixed cost but the marginal unit cost is tiny. ![]()
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