Comment Re: Happiness (Score 1) 155
Happiness chart is bullshit
Happiness chart is bullshit
To me Bitcoin long term is still kind of iffy, but if you want something ELSE to help you escape the traditional monetary system, there is gold and silver which are also up quite a but for the year, even the past year, and moving higher.
You can also get crypto backed by gold or silver as well if you want an electronic form. Just make sure you get a form actually backed by real metals in vaults.
And have the presence of mind, and the giving-a-fuck (you have something to lose!), to actually bother using them.
AFAIK I've never slipped one past the goalie, but the times I risked it, is when I was poorer and life was generally worse and I was overall (not just sexually) less risk-averse. The more comfortable my life, the more I've maintained safe practices.
Could this be due to stress and cortisol reduction caused by the drugs effects? Not unlikely, right?
Let me get this straight: A little desktop sized cutesy robot that looks like a crippled Wall-E, doesn't have arms and can't even move besided nodding it's head in 4 directions is going to "disrupt the AI robot industry"? Nonsense.
LOL! I know Fisher-Technik robot arms from the freakin' 1980ies that were driven by a C64 homecomputer that are more useful than this thing.
I figured the "tastes like chicken" comments were inevitable and then you throw in Peter Jackson, and obviously everyone is thinking about Bad Taste. But then I couldn't think of any really good ones, so I'll just punish the world with the Jackson jokes that I did come up with.
The moas died because they were feeble. As the Feebles, get it?
Um, what did the moa say to the kung-fu catholic priest? "Oh yeah? Well I kick ass for The Lord of the Rings!"
How many moas does it take to prepare ear-pus-custard? Moa than you would believe!
Done with the gain-of-function research, Chang is assigned to clean out the cages. But why throw out the live animals when he can get a few yuan for them down at the market?
Hijinx ensue!
This could be a good comedy movie. Chang should have some amusing [mis]adventures along the way!
I would at least pirate this movie, and then eventually watch it too.
I don't want to unsubscribe to this or that.
I want to give natural language filters like "I never want to see a political email again, from anyone"
Or maybe "If they make it sound urgent but it's not urgent at all, don't show it to me and remind me a week before the actual deadline if it's at all important".
As others have said, unsubscribe links often do not work and it's probably all the Gmail feature will use.
It can be used for local messaging when people don't want to connect to the internet or be traced - protests or events of that nature.
I can imagine the routing considerations would get very complex with large numbers of people. My intuition is that discovery of routes to a particular user would be hard with non-persistent "server" nodes and could result in a lot of broadcast traffic. I presume he's thought about that, but I have to guess that the real world behavior will be hard to predict.
Another interesting thing to think about is very low energy devices that are only for this kind of use. The low energy requirements could enable building some hardware that is distinct from a phone - basically like a pager for when you don't want to be on the internet or traceable on the internet.
LLM crawlers are understandable these days, but who on earth is actively trying to take the FSF down?
A bunch of heathen VIM users trying to stop people from accessing EMACS? What the heck?
Let's say you actually managed to take down the FSF website. Who would even notice or care? How would that help your hacker rep in any way? You'd be a laughingstock for making the attempt.
You're still here after all these years?
Notably though if we actually run out of work to do we have a post-scarcity utopia, and that happens when people are so rich that there's basically not a single person who, given even more money, would even be able to think of something to spend it on. That's not going to happen any time soon, so we're basically dealing with a distribution problem, which requires distribution (e.g. minimum wage, set it to 1/3 national hourly GDP, the reason for this takes a while to explain) and redistribution (negative income tax, do it as a universal dividend) policies along with monetary policy to properly increase the money supply to not fall behind productivity growth.
In late 2023, I began noticing changes in the media landscape. Publications were laying off most of their writers, and friends in the industry lost out on great gigs and started competing with AI-generated writing.
As for the book industry, I realized AI will not spend years crafting a thrilling romance novel; it will instead churn out a thousand ebooks a month. For the commercial side of the industry, that will always be enough.
The link used for an example of AI-generated writing consuming the industry discusses cover letters and resumés, and in a great fallacy of equivocation the author decides this means creative writers like Brandon Sanderson, David Webber, and herself will be replaced by ChatGPT.
Instead of AI taking her job, the AI narrative took her job, or at least convinced her to give up on her career as a writer.
Yes AI may be generating a lot of code now. But you need someone to find where what was generated was weak, or inefficient.
Over time the quality of generated stuff will improve, but since so many companies are generating a lot of code today that is a LOT of technical debt that is building up rapidly.
I especially agree that now is the time to round out your skills - as stated, study design, study platforms you connect to but do not develop on. Study AI tools, find out when they work for things you work on and know well - and when they do not.
Good luck out there everyone!
... are having a hard time justifying their favorable ratings. With one the US has moved from AAA to AA a few years back and even that was seen as being nice and kind. I hope the US doesn't squander trust beyond the Trump era, lest you guys be sitting on a pile of money that the world has finally noticed not being worth the paper it's printed on.
It is my opinion that you could have a true revolution, a bottom-up redo of the US constitution and fixes for the most glaring broken parts of the US system up and running within months without even a single bullet fired. AFAICT from across the pond basically _everyone_ agrees that the current state of things has become untenable. You don't need to be a bunch of Trumpists storming the Capitol to see this.
"Gotcha, you snot-necked weenies!" -- Post Bros. Comics