Buffalo Wild Wings offering all-you-can-eat wings and fries deal for limited-time If you need dinner plans tonight, Buffalo Wild Wings has you covered. The company recently announced that it’s offering an all-you-can-eat deal on boneless wings and fries for $19.99. The deal is only ... 05/20/2024 - 12:59 pm | View Link
The Manifestation of Inspire Brand’s Collective Strength Inspire Brands has said at times in recent years there’s whitespace to double the footprint of each of its six concepts—Arby’s, Buffalo Wild Wings, Dunkin’, Sonic Drive-In, Jimmy John’s, and ... 05/20/2024 - 5:08 am | View Link
Unlimited Boneless Wings for $19.99 on Mondays and Wednesdays Buffalo Wild Wings is rolling out a special deal where you can eat as many boneless wings as you like for $19.99. This offer is good on both Mondays and Wednesdays, and it includes fries too! They ... 05/20/2024 - 4:30 am | View Link
What's that being built by Bowlero off Stage Road in Bartlett? If you've driven along Stage Road near the Bowlero in Bartlett, you've likely spotted a new building under construction. 05/19/2024 - 11:03 pm | View Link
All-you-can-eat boneless wings, fries for $20: Buffalo Wild Wings deal runs on Mondays, Wednesdays Buffalo Wild Wings is offering customers an all-you-can-eat deal on boneless wings and fries every Monday and Wednesday through July 10. 05/19/2024 - 12:41 pm | View Link
The friendly rasp of ChatGPT’s ‘Sky’ voice is getting the AI company into hot water.
Last week, OpenAI launched ChatGPT 4o, a new model of its chatbot assistant that converses in almost real time. Users could choose from five voices, including Sky, whose friendly intonation had a slight rasp vaguely reminiscent of Scarlett Johansson—an actor who, not coincidentally, had voiced an AI assistant in Her, a 2013 film that follows a man who falls in love with his computer’s operating system.
The pages of fine print that skiers and snowboarders must agree to when hitting the slopes in Colorado — waivers of liability — do not protect ski resorts when resorts violate state laws or regulations, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled Monday.
The ruling, handed down in the case of a 16-year-old girl who fell from a ski lift at Crested Butte Mountain Resort and was paralyzed two years ago, likely ends a years-long push by the ski industry to use waivers to shield resorts against almost all lawsuits, even in cases where ski areas violated state law, experts said.
“It’s a sea change, in terms of ski areas’ responsibilities and consumers’ ability to be protected from ski areas’ negligence,” said Evan Banker, a personal injury attorney at Denver firm Chalat Hatten & Banker.