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Comment AI slop = 10+yrs/4+yrs Diamond league and I'm out (Score 5, Interesting) 24

10 years using Duolingo, 4 years in Diamond League, and earlier this month I just had enough of the low-quality AI bullshit.

Out. Done. Gone. Waste of my time, every damn day.

The decline in quality and accuracy was just too much. As an English speaker learning a handful of other languages and concentrating on two, it was interesting to me that the first real noticeable patterns of errors and general slop were actually on the English side. Increasingly obtuse questions or statements, ok fine, I will spit those back in French or Spanish with good accuracy. I don't have any issue whatever with the occasionally-dark humor or the gender related topics that might push others' hot buttons, and I appreciate the occasional foray into curious stories and situations. But... over the past year there has been an increasing level of nonsensical AI-generated questions, erroneous answers accepted, multiple correct answers, etc etc... and it's obvious that no actual native speaker looked at a lot of the new content -- either from the native or foreign perspective. A couple years ago there was an increasing level of having to hit the button for "You should have accepted my answer." But for the past year, it's become a daily occurrence to have to hit the button for "You shouldn't have accepted my answer." The latter is a clear indication of AI slop and drift in the language models, and lack of QA. Real human QA is not optional, and Duo has apparently dispensed with it entirely. The result is gameified garbled nonsense. Playing the game was fun for a while (seriously, still in Diamond league for more than four years straight), but the goal is language learning not to compete with other stupid little games on my device. Feh. Done. Cancelled my subscription, et je vais dépenser cet hundred bucks de mon argent pour un spritz et une charcuterie chaque après-midi pour le reste de l'été.

Comment Re:I am surprised... (Score 1) 84

I think the answer is broadly that China being ahead doesn’t push the UK further back. The most obvious potential bottleneck would be supply chain, but China is still exporting a lot of solar panels, and capacity ramp-up is likely to mean that certainly for the UK, it could meet its demand even if it massively spiked its demand. Pakistan alone has put in tens of GW of solar in the last year or two, using Chinese panels.

Comment Not quite the terrible picture being painted (Score 1) 78

I have a huge amount of respect for engineers of every stripe. I know they’re super-important to driving progress for humanity. But they’re far from the *only* career that counts. Other paths are also valuable, and so I’m less worried about 5% vs 36% than this article is

Comment Dave’s bluster was just that, turns out (Score 1) 84

He came in, all piss and vinegar, with this vibe of the Serious Retail Exec who was going to professionalise and secure the funding. But he should have invested in advice from someone like David Yelland and built a more successful lobbying operation. I’d have much preferred to see this go ahead than sodding Sizewell C, which is clearly going to be just as pricey as Hinkley Point C, for all the guff about economies of learning. But these kinds of things require being politically adroit to get them off the ground. With the government spending lots of time shitting itself about Farage and his “net zero is the new Brexit” lines, the stakes were high.

Personally, I think the right populist response to Farage on all this would have been to offer massively subsidised solar installs to everyone. But then, I’m not a politician and no doubt there’s very good reasons why they didn’t.

Comment Re:Sums up the housing crisis (Score -1) 102

This is such cry-baby nonsense.

NONSENSE.

Since 2008, I have personally mentored dozens of young dudes (at no cost whatsoever, just because that's what successful people do).

I have helped poor dudes in bad neighborhoods buck up, get some side hustles, stack cash, and buy property.

You fucked yourself because you refuse to actually do someone to buy property. I don't know ANYONE, starting with even zero money, who couldn't find a nice home in just 2-3 years of saving money properly -- except the lepers in California, and fuck them anyway.

Comment Re:You know what... (Score 1) 369

That rewrite wasn't important. My point would have been the same if I'd written "vaccinations are an essential *component* of mak[ing] Americans healthy". It's the component vs entirety point that I was trying to focus your attention on.

Anyway, we will just need to agree to disagree on all of this. I think it's completely reasonable to point out the ridiculous hypocrisy of RFK Jr's position, supposedly interested in making Americans healthy while promoting anti-vaccination policies that risk the health of millions. It doesn't matter what else he talks about -- the vaccination policy alone is so overwhelmingly bad that nothing else he will ever do can matter by comparison.

Comment Re:You know what... (Score 1) 369

You missed the bit about *healthy* life years. In the jargon, that means reducing morbidity. Lower pain score = less morbidity. That's why it's a *quality-adjusted* life year, and not merely a life year. Not all years of life are equal in value.

Re NSAIDs -- the choice of whether to use a particular med can be very complex. For example, NSAIDs are now contra-indicated during recovery from an ankle break, whereas they used to be recommended, because while they relieve pain and reduce inflammation, they slow the fracture healing process. So the net result is higher morbidity.

As I said before, this really is my specialist subject.

Comment Re:Tabs or bookmarks? (Score 2) 29

At this point it seems people are using tabs as if they were bookmarks. What is an "unloaded tab" if not a glorified bookmark, in the end?

I'm certainly guilty of this, though I also use bookmarks. For me, an unloaded tab is much more "in your face" than a bookmark hidden away in a menu. I tend to use my list of tabs (about 30) as a todo list and bookmarks as "this might be useful again in the future".

This may sound weird, but I think the biggest problem with bookmarks is finding them again. Whether you try to organize them into 1000 folders (IMO a lost cause) or use the Gmail approach of just search everything (also a lost cause, because not enough metadata is associated with the bookmark), even if you know you bookmarked something in the past, unless you remember the title of the page you probably aren't going to find it again.

I'd really like to see a better system for keeping track of pages. Personally, I set Firefox to never, ever, forget my browser history, so I can search it going back years. That's helped me dig up a lot of old stuff that I couldn't quite remember where I found something.

Comment Re:You know what... (Score 3, Informative) 369

I don’t think the OP was claiming that vaccines *alone* make America healthy. I think that’s a massive over-read. The OP was clearly employing rhetoric to point out that vaccinations are an essential *component* of how modern populations get and stay healthy, and that RFK is notorious for repudiating them.

You claim that the OP is being reductive, but that’s a claim that only makes sense if you yourself treat what they said reductively, insisting on a plain reading of the text, and ignoring the obvious fact that it’s a rhetorical reversal using echoic mention (the repeat of the phrase “make America healthy”) and ironic reframing (pointing out the contradiction between RFK’s stated goal of a healthy America and his opposition to vaccination, which will lead to lots of ill health in America). Human communication is too subtle to insist on only plain interpretations of text.

Comment Re:You know what... (Score 2) 369

I don’t know what you think you are getting at with this, but it doesn’t mean anything. There are many forms of exercise that are highly targeted and there are many drugs that have multiple systemic effects (Mounjaro being an excellent example). But in any event, the clinical purpose of both exercise and medications and indeed all health interventions is to extend healthy life years.

If you talk to a medic about “life to years and years to life”, they’ll recognise the phrase straight away.It’s just a nice easy lay person rendering of QALY. And QALYs are well understood as a means of comparing the impact of health interventions, and increasing QALYs is a goal of health organisations around the globe, which is what you’ll immediately notice if you google the phrase.

This is my specialist professional field, by the way.

You also made out that I was making some weird point that technical terms don’t matter in medicine! They absolutely do, prevention matters, exercise matters, healthy living is vital, but clinical interventions are not entirely separate from them. I am in awe of the technical brilliance and sophistication of medicine.

I will give you just a single example of how these things interconnect: I broke my ankle climbing last year (well, landing badly from a fall). I needed an operation and my ankle was pinned. The intervention was exceptionally technical, I had a bunch of drugs and all sorts of other stuff and my recovery involved not only physio (ie exercise) but also tapping the inflamed area and mobilising it as soon as possible — massively different from standard practice of just a few years earlier. The surgeon explained that tapping the area helped push water molecules that were accumulating in the affected part of my ankle through the inflexible lattice formed by tendons and ligaments, and thus reduced swelling and enabled quicker recovery. It worked, too. I was able to walk after six weeks and was fully mobile after 12. Some of the intervention was thus super-specific, some was broad, some was “clinical”, some was “health”, all of it was useful and all of it added life to years for me (ie little impact on my mortality, but lower morbidity during the recovery period). What was medicine and what was exercise? Utterly unimportant to me - all I cared about was that the interventions were backed by an evidence base, feasible for me, and worked for me. It was, they were, and I’m grateful every day, especially because I’m actually stronger and more flexible than I was before.

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