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So the Gen Z stare is usually defined as a blank face, deadpan expression, and oddly intense eye contact.
So the Gen Z stare is usually defined as a blank face, deadpan expression, and oddly intense eye contact.
With her is a talking black cat with a similar blank face named Gigi.
With her is a talking black cat with a similar blank face named Gigi.
Well, you're absolutely right that the attention machine learning gets has grown dramatically. 20 years ago, going to gatherings and telling people what I was working on and seeing the blank face or the like, where's the turn and walk away, like, oh no.
20 years ago, going to gatherings and telling people what I was working on and seeing the blank face or the, "Where's the turn?" and walk away like, "Oh, no." The accessibility of the tooling, we can now do in five lines of code something that would have taken 500 lines of very mathematical, messy, gnarly code even five years ago.
If you're just sitting there with a blank face, it's basically like talking to a brick wall.
The blank face that you want to go towards is looking blanker and blanker as we get closer to it.
Just as critics could smear prose on her blank face, the press could hang a reputation on those empty hooks in the wall.
"Mona Lisa" isn't a portrait, but a blank face.