AbouBenAdhem
@AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
- Comment on Evolutionarily speaking, wouldn't premature ejaculation be considered the desired trait? 1 day ago:
A trait that’s selected for doesn’t always mean it’s desirable to the individuals who have it.
- Comment on YSK about 15 bean soup. 1 day ago:
With an average-sized spoon, every spoonful could be a different type of 6 bean soup!
- Comment on If spiderman shoots webs from his wrists would not the tension of shooting and swingiing up a skyscraper pretty much break his wrist? Also why SpiderMAN shouuldn''t it be SpiderTEEN? 3 days ago:
If any element of the Marvel universe respected the laws of physics, it would break the rest of the franchise.
- Comment on How popular/important do you have to be for your death by homicide to be labeled as an "assassination"? What if the homicide is for a private matter that's separate from their importance? 4 days ago:
if the death is actually only a means to an end and not the end itself
I would restrict the intended end to institutional change—it’s not an assassination if you kill someone for their parking space, but it is if you kill them for their school board vote.
- Comment on There is no good reason why there is still homelessness and poverty 1 week ago:
Depends on whether you see the primary function of houses as housing people, or as providing their owners with a competitive return on investment.
We can’t do both at once.
- Comment on [deleted] 1 week ago:
It’s a good name for a baby born with horns protruding from its head.
- Comment on What is a federated alternative to Wikipedia? 1 week ago:
I don’t know if it’s what you had in mind, but MediaWiki (the software WP runs on) has “interwiki” features that let MW instances easily reference each other’s articles; and other MW plugins (like Wikibase and Sematic MediaWiki) have features that let MW instances share their underlying data.
- Comment on If you argue for a cause like affordable housing for everyone, is it necessarily hypocritical if you also own investment properties? 1 week ago:
If you’re arguing for a particular public policy, then generally no. If you’re arguing for social change driven by private behavior, then perhaps.
- Comment on Where Roman coins have been found 1 week ago:
It looks like coins have been found on the sea routes that avoided the Parthian/Sassanian empires, but not on the overland routes. I’m guessing merchants exchanged their coins on the Roman/Persian frontier, beyond which the Iranian coinage was the local standard anyway; but in places like southern India (south of the Kushans and Guptas) which was politically fractured, Roman coinage became the de facto currency of exchange.
- Comment on Where Roman coins have been found 1 week ago:
Wish I could see a map like this with the finds colored by mint date.
- Comment on Where Roman coins have been found 1 week ago:
Much of the coinage went as pay to soldiers stationed along the Danube and the Rhine, who then traded with people on both sides of the border.
- Comment on Anyone automate anything with smart thermostats and outdoor temp? 1 week ago:
I don’t have a thermostat, but I have indoor and outdoor temp and humidity sensors, and a window position sensor. It notifies me (via lighting color) if I should open the window because the outdoor conditions are better than indoors, or vice versa.
- Comment on If what they taught us about checks and balances was a lie maybe what they taught us about civil disobedience was a lie too. 2 weeks ago:
Civil disobedience can overlap with both direct action and protest. But that’s my point: we were only ever taught about the latter.
- Comment on If what they taught us about checks and balances was a lie maybe what they taught us about civil disobedience was a lie too. 2 weeks ago:
One misconception I had about civil disobedience from what I’d learned in school is that it’s a reliable means of drawing attention to your cause: your willingness to subject yourself to legal punishment will communicate to the public how critical you consider the issue.
What I learned from witnessing it first-hand is that the media will invent its own narratives about your actions out of whole cloth, and your ability to communicate anything to the public is subject to arbitrary media distortion.
- Comment on If conditions on earth are perfect for life to form shouldn't have happened more than once? 2 weeks ago:
For over three billion years, all we know of the evolution of life is from the chemical signatures it left behind, and from the genetic information of the surviving descendants. From that we can conclude that all current life arose from a common origin roughly coinciding with the first chemical signatures of living activity, and the most parsimonious explanation is that life arose on earth only once. But it’s also plausible that some of that early chemical activity was produced by forms of life that arose independently, but were displaced by ours before the emergence of multicellular organisms.
- Comment on Is there a word for the happiness in finding the exact right word? 2 weeks ago:
Felicity.
- Comment on How do I "sabotage" my own online content to throw a wrench in AI training machines? 2 weeks ago:
Ironically, the thing that most effectively poisons AI content is other AI content. (Basically, it amplifies the little idiosyncrasies that are indistinguishable from human content at low levels but become obvious when iterated.)
- Comment on If there's a sort of "apocalyptic" event but there are still surviving communities, will people be able to make eyeglasses again, or are people with vision issues gonna be fucked? 2 weeks ago:
Just saw a YouTube documentary that reminded me of this comment—it describes how Galileo made his lenses by hand from window glass using an artillery ball as a grinder.
- Comment on Why are eugenics bad seen? 3 weeks ago:
For one thing, the idea that there are “bad” genes stems from the outdated idea that there’s a one-to-one correspondence between genes and physical traits—but the reality is that most genes govern hundreds or thousands of traits, and most traits depend on similar numbers of genes. So bad traits usually result from the wrong combination of genes that are not bad in themselves—take sickle-cell anemia, which results from the wrong combination of genes that by themselves offer malaria resistance. (Most cases are far more convoluted than that.) If you remove the genes that cause the “bad” traits, you’re also removing the good traits they cause in other contexts.
- Comment on Why are eugenics bad seen? 3 weeks ago:
Without even looking at the human issues, the underlying idea that you can improve a species by removing its biological diversity in favor of the “best” variant is catastrophically wrong.
- Comment on Our kids are in a mental health crisis, and it has to do with their phones. Author @jonathanhaidt lays out the facts in his new book #TheAnxiousGeneration 3 weeks ago:
All of Haidt’s writings read to me like what I’d expect if you pulled a random person off the street and forced them at gunpoint to imitate an academic.
- Comment on Imagine there was a society in which blue eyed people are referred to with blee/bler pronouns, and green eyed people are referred to with glee/gler pronouns... 3 weeks ago:
There are plenty of examples of languages with two, three, or no grammatical genders (which don’t always correlate with biological genders—e.g., some languages see ”animate” and “inanimate” as genders.)
If it isn’t arbitrary, why is there so much variation?
- Comment on In the star wars holiday special, there's a segment where Princess Leia sings. This act retroactively makes her a legitimate Disney princess. 4 weeks ago:
Does diegetic singing count?
- Comment on If there's a sort of "apocalyptic" event but there are still surviving communities, will people be able to make eyeglasses again, or are people with vision issues gonna be fucked? 4 weeks ago:
You can make a rough magnifying lens by trial and error using glass and a hand grinder—not the same as prescription lenses, but for many it would be better than nothing.
- Comment on There is likely a government agency that can identify people by their cat. 4 weeks ago:
I can’t think of a scenario where that would be useful.
Someone’s walking around in a disguise, but their cat follows them?
- Comment on Thanks I'd rather my beer stay analogue 4 weeks ago:
there is no “AI” in “IPA”
…because they’re still in the process of putting it there.
- Comment on If suffering is good because it gives life meaning, wouldn't it follow that hurting people is good? 4 weeks ago:
The original (and still valid) meaning of “to suffer” is “to tolerate”.
Is it possible that whoever told you that “suffering is good” had that definition in mind?
- Comment on True or false 4 weeks ago:
A neural network can learn to closely imitate someone making logical inferences, but that’s different from making logical inferences itself. It doesn’t have a sense of whether it’s correct or incorrect—just a sense of how similar it is to its training examples.
- Comment on YSK about Changing your Profile Picture to Clippy 5 weeks ago:
Were these people too young in the early 2000s to recognize Clippy for what it was? It was never benign—ChatGPT is exactly what Microsoft always wanted to make, but Clippy was as close as it could get at the time.
This is like protesting Trump with pictures of George W. Bush.
- Comment on OpenAI beats Elon Musk's Grok in AI chess tournament 5 weeks ago:
“Up until the semi finals, it seemed like nothing would be able to stop Grok 4 on its way to winning the event,” Pedro Pinhata, a writer for Chess.com, said in its coverage. “Despite a few moments of weakness, X’s AI seemed to be by far the strongest chess player… But the illusion fell through on the last day of the tournament.” He said Grok’s “unrecognizable” and “blundering” play enabled o3 to claim a succession of “convincing wins”.
I think the main takeaway is that these models are fundamentally inconsistent, and you can never assume they’re going to be reliable based on past performance.