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Comment This should be good (Score 1) 24

You can't even get some people to take a regular shot/vaccine or they think it causes autism or any number of other negative effects. Good luck telling them you're going to put a bunch of tiny robots in their or their child's body. Just sell them an expensive but otherwise benign crystal and give someone else the technology for cheaper.

Comment Re:Seems crazy (Score 1) 47

Courts move at a snail's pace. Ten years is a bit on the long side of that, but it's not unheard of. People forget that the SCO vs IBM lawsuit started I. 2003 and was still going over a decade after that. After that point a lot of it was mostly just dealing with appeals, but the case was still ongoing in some form until 2021 when it was settled out of court.

Comment Re: 100% not lost (Score 1) 49

Get your lawyer to argue it was intentional destruction of evidence. That would allow the jury to make whatever inferences they want about what may have been in it (they'll probably do this anyway, but getting the judge to tell them that always helps) and then let your lawyer insinuate that it's worse than it probably is.

Comment Re:Would Pablo Escobar pass these tests? (Score 1) 256

The "correct answer" from a trumpistanian AI is the one its owner likes at that particular moment in time, ...

Clue: That is pretty much every AI.

... as your former "government waste" lord and savior ....

Your TDS is showing, you are the only one mentioning the orange dude here.

... showed you by retraining their model every time it contradicted them publicly.

Clue: That is pretty much every AI.

Based on this observation, it seems quite likely that the trumpistani kids will get a correct answer, by this most appropriate definition of correct.

Clue: Correct in the LLM sense does not match factually correct, it means a pattern match of words of a sufficient probability. Words that may be the "garbage in" of the phrase "garbage in, garbage out".

Comment Re:Some will "not pass" ? (Score 1) 256

No, it's not that those who don't pass will be stuck there, it's that they won't qualify for the elite Green Berets. And that's just being used to illustrate how some people just can't wrap their minds around math.

My argument/joke still applies. They will never get past the concept of "won't qualify". Its too alien from their "lived experience". :-)

Comment The who put us on moon with slide rules ... (Score 1) 256

Escobar hired accountants that knew math, and threatened them with a painful death if they stole money from him. That's the sort of people skills that students will need in the United States of Gilead.

You might want to consider that the folks who put us on the moon using slide rules were the products of local school boards, minimal state interaction, and near zero federal interaction. Their schools pretty much focused on how to read and write, how to do math, and how to build or make things with your hands. And you had to do some PT every day.

Somethings experimentation with a system leads to a bad state, backing up to an early state is part of the process of exploring a different direction.

Comment Some will "not pass" ? (Score 1) 256

Here's another real world example: most adults know that if 100 soldiers try out for the Green Berets, only three will pass, but if you ask them what percentage passes, they'll draw a blank.

It's not the math, it's the concept that some will "not pass". They are stuck there, never getting to the math.

Comment Apple knows how to stop the cruft ... (Score 1) 62

This is why things tend to work better on Mac. Revisit 3-year-old software, and it probably won't compile. Apple's Xcode IDE will inform you of about three deprecated frameworks and their "modern" replacements, which you must now rewrite your code for.

Annoying as it is, it sure cuts down on the cruft. :-)

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