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question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. What are the keywords in the following sentence: rays of sunlight reflect off chilly waters

answer:Sure, little buddy! In the sentence "rays of sunlight reflect off chilly waters," the keywords are "rays," "sunlight," "reflect," "chilly," and "waters." These words are important because they help us understand the main idea of the sentence. "Rays" and "sunlight" tell us what is shining, "reflect" tells us what the rays are doing, and "chilly waters" tell us where this is happening.

question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Dialogue: Jan: Hello dear, you ok? Jodie: Hi Jan, yes, all fine! How's Adrian? Jan: Oh alright, his leg has healed up nicely and he's getting about fine now, they even said he can drive again. Jodie: Oh, that's lovely! You don't have to chauffeur him around any more, then! Jan: No, but I enjoy doing it most of the time. Just glad he's better. Jodie: Yes, that was a horrible burn and then the infection setting in, poor thing! Jan: Yes, the hospital had to do a skin graft, as you probably know. It is a bit bumpy now, but almost back to normal. They are very clever nowadays! Jodie: Just make sure he doesn't decide to make chips again when he's just come home from the pub. Jan: Yes, I watch him like a hawk now! But he's only been out a couple of times since the accident and he only had a few drinks. Jodie: I hope you've chucked out that chip pan! Jan: Oh yes, it was ancient anyway. We've got one of those Actifry things now, much safer and less fattening. Jodie: That sounds good, we could get one too. Jan: Well Mark used to love chips. Jodie: He still does but we just cook them in the oven. Anyway, looking forward to seeing you both soon. Jan: Yes, us too. Keep us up to date on times etc and we'll see you next Friday! Jodie: Bye Jan! What is a summary of this dialogue?

answer:Jan and Jodie are having a conversation about Adrian's leg healing from a burn and infection. They discuss how Jan has been helping Adrian by driving him around, and how they've made changes in their home to avoid future accidents, like getting a new Actifry instead of using the old chip pan. They also mention seeing each other next Friday.

question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Summarize this article: “Put a key logger in Kogan’s computer in Russia and you’ve got everything,” Mr. Wylie said. He added: “It would make it incredibly easy for them to get access to this data. For me, that’s concerning and I think it should be looked into.” Mr. Wylie’s appearance has coincided with a surge of collective dismay over data-mining, and many found themselves riveted by his testimony on Tuesday. Georgia Rakusen, 33, a user researcher at a technology firm in London, urged her Twitter followers to tune into the hearing, which she called “absolutely gripping stuff.” His testimony, she said, “was something that, as a lay person, you could watch and start to grasp the enormity of how your data is used.” “I think maybe people are just beginning to open up, to realize that maybe it’s not just about ads, maybe it’s not just what bands I like,” she said. Ms. Rakusen, who described her own work as “a space where we are supposed to make people click more,” said she hoped that employees of large technology companies would come forward more, looking at whistle-blowers like Mr. Wylie and Edward J. Snowden. “I didn’t watch the whole three and a half hours,” she said. “But I basically didn’t get any other work done during that time.” Mr. Wylie, who has described himself a “gay Canadian vegan,” dropped out of high school but discovered a genius for coding and, still in his teens, began working for political campaigns. He came close to losing his composure at only one moment on Tuesday, when he was asked what prompted him to turn against the technology he had helped create. He said his views had changed when Mr. Trump was elected. “It was no longer this niche, shady firm,” he said. “It was a firm that was making a massive impact on the world. It’s a process of coming to terms with what you have created, and the impact that has had.” ||||| Whistleblower Christopher Wylie who alleges that the campaign for Britain to leave the EU cheated in the referendum in 2016, speaking at a lawyers office to the media in London, Monday, March 26, 2018.... (Associated Press) Whistleblower Christopher Wylie who alleges that the campaign for Britain to leave the EU cheated in the referendum in 2016, speaking at a lawyers office to the media in London, Monday, March 26, 2018. Chris Wylie's claims center around the official Vote Leave campaign and its links to a group called... (Associated Press) Whistleblower Christopher Wylie who alleges that the campaign for Britain to leave the EU cheated in the referendum in 2016, speaking at a lawyers office to the media in London, Monday, March 26, 2018. Chris Wylie's claims center around the official Vote Leave campaign and its links to a group called... (Associated Press) Whistleblower Christopher Wylie who alleges that the campaign for Britain to leave the EU cheated in the referendum in 2016, speaking at a lawyers office to the media in London, Monday, March 26, 2018.... (Associated Press) LONDON (AP) — The computer expert who alleges a trove of Facebook data was improperly used to help Donald Trump's White House bid said Tuesday that he strongly believes the information was also used by the Brexit movement that persuaded Britain to quit the European Union. In a 3½-hour hearing, Chris Wylie told the House of Commons media committee that he believes the breach exceeded the 50 million Facebook users reported earlier — though he didn't give an exact figure. And he said the data compiled by the political consulting business Cambridge Analytica was available to other firms with links to it. "All kinds of people had access to the data," said Wylie, who helped develop Cambridge Analytica's methods for using the information to target and persuade voters. "It was everywhere." Among the companies that had access to the data was AggregateIQ, a Canadian political consultant that did work for Vote Leave, the official campaign backing Britain's withdrawal from the EU, Wylie said. Wylie described Cambridge Analytica as just one arm of a global company, SCL Group, that gets most of its income from military contracts but is also a political gun-for-hire, often in countries where democratic institutions are weak. He suggested the company combines computer algorithms and dirty tricks to help candidates win regardless of the cost. The 28-year-old Canadian with a swath of pink hair says he helped set up Cambridge Analytica in 2013. He left the next year. Wylie has previously alleged that Cambridge Analytica used personal data improperly collected from Facebook users to help Trump's 2016 presidential campaign. Cambridge Analytica says none of the Facebook data was used in its work on the Trump campaign. It denies any wrongdoing. Cambridge Analytica's acting CEO, Alexander Tayler, said in a statement that Wylie was a part-time contractor who "has no direct knowledge of our work or practices" since he left the company. Wylie said he "absolutely" believes AggregateIQ drew on Cambridge Analytica's databases for its work on the Brexit campaign. In the closely fought referendum in 2016, 51.9 percent of voters backed Britain's departure from the EU. "I think it is incredibly reasonable to say that AIQ played a very significant role in Leave winning," Wylie said. He testified that AggregateIQ was formed when Cambridge Analytica sought to expand but Canadians he wanted to bring into the business didn't want to relocate to Britain. The two firms shared underlying technology and worked so closely together that Cambridge Analytica staff often referred to the Canadian firm as a "department," he said. Because of the links between the two companies, Vote Leave got the "the next best thing" to Cambridge Analytica when it hired AggregateIQ, "a company that can do virtually everything that (Cambridge Analytica) can do but with a different billing name," Wylie said. AggregateIQ, based in Victoria, British Columbia, issued a statement saying it has never been part of Cambridge Analytica or SCL. "AggregateIQ works in full compliance within all legal and regulatory requirements in all jurisdictions where it operates," the company said. "All work AggregateIQ does for each client is kept separate from every other client." Wylie's testimony came a day after Wylie and two other former insiders presented 50 pages of documents that they said proved Vote Leave violated election finance rules during the referendum campaign. They allege that Vote Leave circumvented spending limits by donating 625,000 pounds (888,000) to the pro-Brexit student group BeLeave, which then sent the money directly to AggregateIQ. Vote Leave denies breaking any campaign finance regulations. Dominic Cummings, the Vote Leave strategist, called Wylie a "fantasist-charlatan." |||||

answer:A man named Christopher Wylie said information from Facebook users may have been used in an improper way to help Donald Trump win the election and the Brexit movement in Britain. Wylie testified in front of a group of people and told them that more than 50 million Facebook users' information might have been involved. He also said that a company called Cambridge Analytica, which he helped set up, used the information to try to convince people to vote a certain way. Cambridge Analytica says it did not do anything wrong, but many people are concerned about how their private information is being used.

question:You are an AI assistant. User will you give you a task. Your goal is to complete the task as faithfully as you can. While performing the task think step-by-step and justify your steps. Alpharetta, Georgia, areaTotal, 55.4 (square kilometres); Alpharetta, Georgia, areaOfWater, 1.0 (square kilometres); Alpharetta, Georgia, elevationAboveTheSeaLevel, 346.0; Alpharetta, Georgia, areaCode, 770, 404, 678; Alpharetta, Georgia, populationDensity, 992.6 (inhabitants per square kilometre) What is sentence that verbalizes this data?

answer:The city of Alpharetta, Georgia, covers a total area of 55.4 square kilometers, of which 1.0 square kilometer is water, and has an elevation of 346 meters above sea level. Its area codes are 770, 404, and 678, and it has a population density of 992.6 inhabitants per square kilometer.

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