<span>Kerosene is a thin, clear liquid formed from hydrocarbons obtained from the fractional distillation of petroleum</span>
In this excerpt, one of the women who is at the market place, in front of the jail, waiting anxiously to be a witness of the punishment that Hester Prynne is about to receive, voices that, if she could have her way, she would be glad to be the one in charge of condemning Hester Prynne, much more severely and implacably, it can be inferred (notice that she says "would she come off <em>with such a </em>sentence..."?, as if suggesting that the punishment had not been severe enough).
The answer is a statistic.
<span>The answers are the following:
1. The ancient Chinese board game
Go was invented long before there was any writing to record its rules. A game from the impossibly distant past has now brought us closer to a moment that once seemed part of an impossibly distant future: a time when machines are cleverer than we are.
2. </span>For years, Go was considered the last redoubt against the march of computers. Machines might win at chess, draughts, Othello,
three dimensional noughts and crosses, Monopoly, bridge and poker. Go, though,
was different.
The game requires intuition, strategising, character reading, along with vast numbers of moves and permutations. According to legend, it was invented by a Chinese emperor to teach his subjects balance and patience, qualities unique to human intelligence.
3. This week a computer called AlphaGo defeated the world’s best player of Go. It did so by “learning” the game, crunching through 30 million positions from recorded matches, reacting and anticipating. It evolved as a player and taught itself.
That single game of Go marks a milestone on the road to “technological singularity”, the moment when artificial intelligence becomes capable of self-improvement and learns faster than humans can control or understand.
Answer:
smash bugs
Explanation:
pick up a book and smash it