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i think where people’s brains break regarding LLMs is understanding that they generate the most likely result. not the one most likely to be correct, but simply the most likely. if it shows up in the training data more often, it’ll probably get picked. that doesn’t necessarily have any correlation to how correct it is. that there is any overlap between correct and likely is a function of the quality of the training data, which requires intensive and constant curation, moderation, and filtering.

So apparently the European Honeybee has recently been named Virginia's official state pollinator. This steams me so bad. Honeybees are NOT native to Virginia, and the fact that so many people import them to grow colonies and have their own honey actually crowds out native bees that mostly feed on native plants. I'm still not sure how this happened, as the European Honeybee is widely considered an invasive species.

@cwebber@octodon.social Same. Sitting in an aisle seat while people board and keep hitting my shoulder with backpacks. Looking forward to the good parts.

We need a word for real-life enshittification caused by online culture. Like being unable to find an organisation’s info because they’ve Instagram but no website. Or panicked people being sent a videolink to download to their phone when they ring for an ambulance. Or being excluded from residents' association news if you're not on Facebook. Or having cash payment refused. Or staff in the business you’re physically standing in telling you to find the answer to your question on their website.

You can't solve problems you don't understand with software you don't understand.

It feels weird needing to repeat that.

"We can make a digital AI clone of you that will do your video conferences for you and respond like you."

This mentality shows a fundamental lack of understanding of the purpose of nearly every type of meeting. Let me put it a different way:

"We can make a digital clone of you to go to class for you and take your courses. It will respond just like you in class."

1/

@futurebird I've been thinking about your question all morning.

I have three kids, aged 32 - 42. Raising them was, by far, the hardest thing I have ever done. Each was their own unique person, who needed very different things from their parents.

For a long time, kids were the primary focus, which slowed down other things. I got fired from a tech startup because I wouldn't work into the night. Grad school took a long time, in between volunteering at school and cub scout meetings.

Having kids was the right thing for me and for my wife. We (mostly) enjoyed the time when they were little, and love having grown kids and grandkids.

I don't know how to give advice about kids, other than to look and other people's experiences, and then to make your own decision.

"Some hope that Nike will open-source the app so that customers can maintain their shoes' original and full functionality."

What an amazing sentence.

arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/0

So, the #InternetArchive is down. With it, the Wayback Machine. And Open Library.

I am here chasing an obscure Philippine epic with a female protagonist published as an MA thesis in the 1970s and referenced in a book from the 1980s not available anywhere.

I know this is a very niche problem to have.

But it hurts.

#storytelling #research #folklore

Friends, it is important to know that millions of rank and file Democrats are concerned about Biden’s health and/or his ability to beat Trump. Accusing them of wanting a Trump victory is neither accurate nor honest. We have to be the party where people can freely express concerns about Biden — otherwise, we risk degenerating into the current Republican situation, where all dissent has been quashed. 1/

@sadele2 @mastodonmigration @GottaLaff In “The Fifth Risk”, Michael Lewis describes the attempts by the first Trump administration to dismantle NOAA. Profit was the primary motive. Profit for donors/cronies.

If NOAA stop providing weather forecasts for free directly to the public, there’s more opportunity for private companies to profit from selling the information.

If NOAA stops providing tornado warnings for free, people die.

@TheBreadmonkey It’s a much more comfortable position for typing. I switched when I was having carpal tunnel problems. Now that my wrists are fine, I still prefer using it.

I have no problem switching back and forth with my laptop keyboard. A few keys are in different places, but it didn’t take long to get used to it.

Timothy Snyder: We have been trained by digital media to believe that only what happens right now matters. But the people who intend to destroy the American constitutional republic have learned from the past. One of the basic elements of Project 2025, for example, is what the Nazis called Gleichschaltung: transforming the civil service into a fascist nest.
#fascism
snyder.substack.com/p/how-to-s

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‘Weird interaction with a student. They keep coming up with weird “facts” (“Greek is a combination of four other languages”) that left me baffled. I said let’s look this stuff up together, and they said OK, I open a search bar, and they opened … Ch*tGPT. And I was like “this is not a search bar” and they were like “yes it is, you can search for anything in here”.

Each individual kid is now hooked into a Nonsense Machine.’
- mastodon.social/@Miniver/11274

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@TheBreadmonkey I started using a Kinesis keyboard about 30 years ago. Then Men in Black came out, with black Kinesis keyboards, and suddenly they were cool.

Nowadays, when people walk by my desk and comment on my keyboard, if I mention Men in Black I frequently just get a blank stare. “Was that a movie?”

Despite what some politicians say, crime rates are decreasing

Violent crime in the United States dropped significantly in the first quarter of 2024 compared with the same period last year, according to the FBI’s Quarterly Uniform Crime Report released earlier this month.

The FBI’s data, collected from nearly 12,000 law enforcement agencies representing about 77% of the country’s population, suggests violent crime dropped by 15% compared with the first quarter of 2023.

The data, which covers reported crimes from January to March, shows a 26.4% decrease in murders, a 25.7% decrease in rapes, a 17.8% decrease in robberies, and a 12.5% decrease in aggravated assaults. Reported property crime also fell by 15.1%.

Nevertheless, the widespread public perception that crime is rising — a perception reinforced by presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and many other GOP candidates — could figure prominently in November’s election. And state legislative and gubernatorial candidates from both parties likely also will cite crime statistics on the stump.

In a Gallup poll conducted late last year, 63% of respondents described the crime problem in the U.S. as either extremely or very serious. This is the highest percentage since Gallup began asking the question in 2000.

#USPol #Politics #News #Crime #CrimeRate #FBI

michiganadvance.com/2024/07/05

@tusk81 This is what people don't get, government work isn't supposed to be flashy, when it's working well, you should barely notice it. It should just be making your life easier and better.

Spider babies.

When I took the dog out this morning, the were dozens of little spider webs on the grass. Each one is about 2 inches across, and has a tiny red spider on the underside.

AI deepfakes are here. I've filed legislation to ban deceptive deepfakes and require disclaimers on AI-generated campaign content.

Voters deserve to know what's real and what's fake.

thehill.com/policy/technology/

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