"Never in its 50-plus years in existence has the regulator issued new rules for automakers requiring them to change their vehicle designs to better prevent pedestrian fatalities."
https://www.theverge.com/2024/9/10/24241047/nhtsa-rule-pedestrian-safety-fmvss-suv-truck-design
@freyablekman Ausgezeichnet!
Taylor Swift endorses Kamala Harris. https://www.instagram.com/p/C_wtAOKOW1z/
Updating my astro 101 lecture on satellites and holy crap... there are 1738 more active satellites in orbit today than 1 year ago, and 1690 of those are Starlinks.
62% of all active satellites are now Starlinks, up from 55% 1 year ago.
As long as Starlink doesn't make a single mistake in orbit, it's all fine, I guess. Which is cool, because SpaceX never makes engineering mistakes, like dumping hundreds of pounds of "fully demisable" space debris on other countries... whoopsie.
Ten-part lecture series, “Exposing Hoaxes, Busting Myths, & Solving Mysteries” by Dr. Ken Feder, Professor Emeritus at Central Connecticut State University.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcQFNL2av9c&list=PLl68fplNJM8BsG6uJLeHUfMYtNHeza5l_&index=1
apparently you can just download a public google spreadsheet as a CSV with curl (just tried it and it works!): https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24255472/download-export-public-google-spreadsheet-as-tsv-from-command-line
Oof, this is pretty brutal review of the Apple Intelligence™ betas: “In the preview I’m using, Apple Intelligence does an uncomfortable amount of making things up. This usually happens on low-stakes information such as summaries of alerts from apps — but it feels weird nonetheless to see fabrications and misinterpretations of your life appear on your lock screen, inbox and other core parts of your iPhone.”
[gift link] https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/09/09/iphone-16-apple-intelligence-ai-event-2024/
Luckily, most Black men haven't been shot by police. But this being dragged out of a car, or put in cuffs, or threatened with death or violence or trumped up jail charges? That stuff happens to millions of Black drivers.
"Tyreek should have just been polite! I'm always polite! As a Black man we always have to be polite!" That's how I think. And it is a broken way of thinking.
And it's not really being polite, when there is the explicit threat of violence if you don't perform said politeness.
@rpardee as far as I've got and I've heard, less! It is really clear he cared deeply about being accessible. You *could* get into tons of math I'm sure but I think one would be able to soak up loads of interesting things without ever being interested in that. Also a YouTube series and course materials! https://github.com/rmcelreath/stat_rethinking_2024
@Tarah While I see plenty of infosec people here like yourself who seem extremely knowledgeable, in my own work I've generally found that people assigned as "IT security" I've interacted with seemed to have pretty limited actual knowledge of system administration, cryptography, etc. Some can talk a good game until you get to specifics. Others can't even do that much. it is vexing and confusing.
Where I've seen this, my perception is that this is because the role is treated more as a paperwork exercise, writing security plans, documenting audits, and deviations from controls, etc., so it tends to select for people with a high tolerance for wrote paperwork rather than technical knowledge. Of course, that's conjecture based on very limited evidence.
Granted, these people were not being billed as "cyber experts," so it might be a different kettle of fish.
@mcc Anyway, it would seem like, at the very least, these are features that would entail a bunch of extra code (mostly the local model more than the interface to the cloud services) and therefore open a larger attack surface. If for no other reason that that, it does seem like people who have no interest should be able disable it in the interest of security.
And, to come at it from a slightly different perspective, it seems like for most new Firefox functionality the burden of proof should be on the side arguing why this couldn't/shouldn't be an extension. Perhaps there's some technical reason why not, but this *seems* like something that could be an extension.
@mcc Sorry, I'm very interested in this but I'm having trouble following this conversation (possibly due to weirdness with my instance): Is this post of yours the response to your bug report?
I should probably say what it is I do. I'm a mathematician with a PhD from St Andrews and a background in numerical computing.
That said, I'll turn my hand to whatever needs to be done to solve a real-world problem.
For example, a previous client had a derivatives trading setup in Python that was taking *minutes* to execute trades. I reimplemented it in Golang so that the main bottleneck was the fact there's an ocean between me and New York.
I'm also enthusiastic about communicating mathematics -- I wrote and presented the Advanced Maths Support Programme's online videos for teachers wanting to support their students with the Cambridge University entrance tests (STEP), I've written several books and countless articles, and generally love explaining how things work.
If you, or anyone you know, needs a mathematical consultant, do connect! I'm colin@colinbeveridge.co.uk .
Introducing MNT Reform Next https://mntre.com/media/reform_md/2024-09-09-introducing-mnt-reform-next.html
@mekkaokereke Definitely the first time I ran across a description of civil asset forfiture (many years ago) it was so bonkers I thought the description had to be wrong...but it wasn't.
How to navigate conversation with advisor regarding sexual assault/trauma? Trauma/SA mention, advice ask, please help or boost, thanks. 1/2
POST CW: trauma, abuse, sexual assault, near-death experiences. do not read if easily triggered!
Hi. I'm a 2nd year Math/CS P.h.D. student at a top east-coast US university. I started my PhD last fall, the first 4 months went wonderfully and I made great progress. I then have been sexually assaulted by a collegue 3 times in the past 6 months. Throughout this, my ability to focus on my work has dwindled and my advisor has begun giving me negative performance reviews. I have attempted to push past and through the trauma and resulting PTSD, paranoia, and psychosis, but have not been doing a very good job. The last time this occured a few weeks ago, I sustained a fall and the resulting TBI continues to upset my cognitive function. The trauma has required me to get on atypical antipsychotics to stay even partially grounded. I do not want to stop my PhD, and I still believe I am able to complete this without taking a break. However, I believe the time has come to potentially reveal some details to my advisor, to hopefully alleviate some pressure.
Question: how do I have this conversation? I want to maximize the probability I get to complete my PhD. I feel very scared that, if I say the wrong words in this conversation, bad things could happen. I am also very autistic and bad at social interaction.
I primarily want help navigating this situation, and less legal or similar advice. I am working with people already on those problems. It is against my wishes to repost, speculate, gossip, or screenshot. More details in next post.
Theoretical physicist by training (PhD in quantum open systems/quantum information), University lecturer for a bit, and currently paying the bills as an engineer working in optical communication (implementation) and quantum communication (concepts), though still pursuing a little science on the side. I'm interested in physics and math, of course, but I enjoy learning about really any area of science, philosophy, and many other academic areas as well. My biggest other interest is hiking and generally being out in nature.