Minor copy correction : "Owning four homes and not having to let any, even on a short-term basis, is a position few can aspire to." should read "Owning a home, even on a short-term basis, is a position few can aspire to."
Would anyone care to say what they think would have happened if the BoE had raised interest rates directly in one step from say 0.5% to say 12% a year ago?
Apropos the question "..whether there is still a role for tax advisers", to double mis-quote Mandy Rice-Davies, "Well AI would say that, wouldn't it?"
At a deeper level, could AI remove our ability to get access to original source information, or even to break our cognitive capability to know what is fact and what is fiction because it makes everything in the spectrum of information highly plausible and difficult in human brain compute time to distill?
It still astonishes me that a computer can write English copy so fluently, making the answers highly readable and engaging. The output makes you actually *want* to read tax advice.
That, in itself, could be a huge win. Imagine HMRC producing tax documentation that's actually stimulating, accurate, concise, easy to understand and a pleasure to read.
The owner was operating as a sole trader. Given the time and plaice of the events in this story, it cod be just a red herring. Batter off to just to fry and ignore it.
My answers
This guy gets it.
In other HMRC news, two bald men fight over comb. More on p.94.
Reminds me of this Fonejacker masterpiece, only to see a comment on the video from 6 years ago, "This reminds me of the HMRC helpline"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAasJs5EMnA
Minor copy correction : "Owning four homes and not having to let any, even on a short-term basis, is a position few can aspire to." should read "Owning a home, even on a short-term basis, is a position few can aspire to."
Would anyone care to say what they think would have happened if the BoE had raised interest rates directly in one step from say 0.5% to say 12% a year ago?
Apropos the question "..whether there is still a role for tax advisers", to double mis-quote Mandy Rice-Davies, "Well AI would say that, wouldn't it?"
At a deeper level, could AI remove our ability to get access to original source information, or even to break our cognitive capability to know what is fact and what is fiction because it makes everything in the spectrum of information highly plausible and difficult in human brain compute time to distill?
Very high quality post, much appreciated.
It still astonishes me that a computer can write English copy so fluently, making the answers highly readable and engaging. The output makes you actually *want* to read tax advice.
That, in itself, could be a huge win. Imagine HMRC producing tax documentation that's actually stimulating, accurate, concise, easy to understand and a pleasure to read.
> reminded of relevant xkcd cartoon
> came to post this cartoon
> mfw already posted.
Bobby Tables next week then?
The owner was operating as a sole trader. Given the time and plaice of the events in this story, it cod be just a red herring. Batter off to just to fry and ignore it.