And those folks aren’t on here because they already do their socializing in person. A frightful thought.
FriendOfDeSoto
Joined the Mayqueeze.
- 2 Posts
- 242 Comments
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoShowerthoughts@lemmy.world•I just realized some people LIKE talking to each other.English17·20 hours ago
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoMildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•Florida Attorney General warns "weather modification" experiments and "geoengineering" could have played a role in Texas floodsEnglish4·2 days ago
Florida Man strikes again.
What’s wrong with these people? The rabbi had time to sink to the floor, the priest is clearly passed out on the floor, why is the pastor still walking into the bar? Are they all blind and deaf?
The deeper message must be that just out of shot an imam and a Buddhist monk are looking at each other puzzled exchanging remarks like “They really cannot learn from each other, can they.”
(I do get the bar joke, internet. No need to well actually me. This was very much tongue in cheek.)
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoFuck AI@lemmy.world•Google’s Gemini refuses to play Chess against the Atari 2600English23·5 days ago
I feel like the Atari 2600 is quickly becoming for so-called AI what the “how much is a gallon of milk?” gotcha question had become for politicians who run for office. A rather pointless bit of news.
As Scotty said: the right tool for the right job. An LLM is maybe not a chess engine and that’s fine too. Why would we expect these models to be Magnus effing Carlson if they cannot reliably summarize an email or recommend eating pebbles?
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoNo Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Is there a font/typeface designing program that is available for Windows or Linux that supports creation of variable fonts and OpenType features?English4·6 days ago
Maybe 10 years ago I tried designing a font in Inkscape. It was possible but more of a gimmick. I then installed Fontforge and very quickly decided I wasn’t going to learn how to use it, didn’t have the bandwidth. But the tools are there. Both methods have a learning curve but I think have enough instruction resources online.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoFuck AI@lemmy.world•AI coding tools make developers slower, study findsEnglish6·7 days ago
It’s one study. It’s pretty sturdy in terms of methodology but it hasn’t been peer reviewed as far as I can tell. They also only looked at established software projects, not anything new. So this is a narrow scope and it doesn’t prove that so-called AI cannot enhance productivity at all. It just indicates that pro devs can be fooled into thinking they are better off with it when they are not. But I feel like that’s hardly news in these mad times.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoShowerthoughts@lemmy.world•Star Wars is an ode to the stupidest use of battle lasersEnglish10·7 days ago
Are you beginning to feel a narrowing of your throat?
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoFuck AI@lemmy.world•OpenAI May Be in Major Trouble FinanciallyEnglish15·9 days ago
I think this has been true since the start. They have never not been in hot water financially.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoNo Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•In languages which use complex written characters (such as Chinese's logographs), is there an equivalent to English's "text speak" shorthand?English10·11 days ago
It’s difficult 2 transpose what u can do in English just 2 other languages written in the Latin alphabet for centuries. English has a remarkable and quite confusing amount of homophones that is absent from other indoeuropean languages. The apostrophe as a letter skipped marker is fairly universal. But beyond that it’s already a different ball game in other more similar languages. 2 to too, 4 for, r u - that’s very English only.
Simplified Chinese characters are a hint at what they did on the Chinese mainland to cut down on writing time. Beyond that (and I don’t speak the language so 🧂) there are single character abbreviations for countries. 美国 is America and 美 suffices as shorthand, which means beauty otherwise. Your example phrase is “R u coming 2nite?” In English we use the present progressive tense here, which doesn’t exist like that in Mandarin. It would be phrased as “Come tonight?” The question mark could be replaced with the character that functions as a question marker by itself. And I think you can do this in 3-4 characters and I think they might just beat you to it in a bilingual texting competition in terms of speed.
The mainland population may also be more adept to obfuscate their speech especially online. So similarly pronounced character combinations take over the meaning of a term the censors are actively looking for.
The Japanese like shortening stuff, mostly loanwords, to unrecognizable words. The word for part time work is アルバイト (arubaito) taken from the German for work (Arbeit). Cool kids have whittled it down to baito. A remote control has become a リモコン (rimokon) in normal parlance. Overly long Chinese character combos like 自動販売機 for a vending machine get shortened to 自販機 dropping characters that can be inferred (if you speak it).
I also want to add that text speak is heavily influenced by restrictions on text length and charges for each text. Non Latin script characters take up more than one Latin character per Chinese character for instance. It’s probably 5+ in decoding per character. So you reach 160 letters quite quickly and that’s why SMS in China was very cheap and quickly adopted a system where message threads would be sent and put back together on the recipient’s phone. In Japan they used email from the start, even in dumb phone T9 texting days. They had no Twitter-like restrictions on text length so they didn’t need to be shorter than what their thumbs could successfully fumble together.
Let’s not call it psy op then. We need a new term. BS op maybe?
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoShowerthoughts@lemmy.world•I think better when I'm calm. So it follows that getting calmer will make me smarter.English1·12 days ago
I think you’re looking at correlation more than causation. That’s what the enlarged gas tank metaphor in another comment here is trying to hint at.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoShowerthoughts@lemmy.world•I think better when I'm calm. So it follows that getting calmer will make me smarter.English1·12 days ago
I don’t mind your fiddling with that razor at all. I see what you mean.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoShowerthoughts@lemmy.world•I think better when I'm calm. So it follows that getting calmer will make me smarter.English7·12 days ago
Your intelligence isn’t improved by calmness. Calmness may simply be the state when it is the most unimpeded.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoNo Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Did a fir tree grow inside a Russian man's lung after he inhaled a fir tree seed, or was it a hoax?English6·12 days ago
I think what you’re not picking up on is the whole Ms. Moos vibe on CNN. She is basically satire. She always jumps on the most outrageous stories and narrates them in that annoying pseudo journalistic voice and has done for decades. The stories may be actually true but you should never assume that they are. They are a knock knock joke for people who watch 24h news channels.
I don’t know anything about this case more than having watched the CNN video. Mr. Fir-lung and his doctor needn’t be actors. He could’ve really had it in his lung but played up the “haha, maybe I breathed in a seed” line because it got him attention on TV and paid interviews. And he doesn’t mention how he was in a landslide being chased by a bear 5 years ago and that’s when he accidentally inhaled the debris. The doctor may just have mentioned in a subordinate clause that it looked as if the sprig was growing in the lung but never actually claimed it did. Or he also believes in homeopathy. Or he also got paid for the interview. There are a thousand explanations why we get presented the story like that. But the biggest red flag remains that Jeanne Moos was reporting on it.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoShowerthoughts@lemmy.world•Q anon was a psyop.English17·12 days ago
Psy op implies an amount of planning and the involvement of the military or the intelligence community. I think it is better attributed to chance that the cryptic pretentious musings of one person snowballed into a cultish internet movement. Because it garnered strength online, the musing person at the heart of it probably changed due to tiny power struggles.
People like to know there is a plan for everything. People always suspect a secret cabal behind everything. People are also dumb and impressionable. It doesn’t take a general or CIA buffin to try to target the Venn diagram of those three groups. I think it had the results you describe, it contributed to what we see in the US today: a weakening of the rule of law and a slide into fascism.
Calling QAnon psy op is giving what basically started as a 4chan meme too much credit. If no one took a gun to find a nonexistent basement in a DC pizza restaurant, society at large may have never discovered this snowballed cult, and jumped on it like a cat does catnip, enlarging its reach. The secret “cabal” behind it is maybe a handful of people. Bored and slightly Machiavellian internet users with odd political views and/or the love of endorphin-inducing likes and reach. Never attribute to conspiracy what you can more likely attribute to stupidity. QAnon is stupid. Stupidity with disastrous cobsequences. But not a planned psy op campaign.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoNo Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Where does the idea that JFK was anti Israel come from ?English9·14 days ago
Are you getting inundated with JFK was anti Israel posits and hot takes? Because I sure aren’t.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoNo Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why doesn't the US government just tax illegal immigrants a little bit more than the Average american? Then use those funds to fix infastructure or a new WPA of the 21st century?English1·14 days ago
If illegal immigrants were possible to be identified easily by the IRS, ICE would have taken them over already.
The problem is two-fold. A lot of the immigrants who fall into this “illegal” category are not on the books, they get a brown envelope, and pay little to no taxes at all. And the more “sophisticated” ones look just like your average American. So if you taxed them more, you’d be affecting a lot of the “legal” population as well.
Also, the American economy is full of jobs that no “non-deportable” would like to do. Agricultural jobs come to mind. The current regime’s idea of eradicating all illegal immigrants runs contrary to a lot of economic interests (and I read that they’ve done a lot less deporting on the farms recently. Curious …) Even if you could just tax them more, you’d still mess with those interests as well.
And while I’m not a tax lawyer, I’m gonna go out in a limb here and say it’s not going to be easy to make a tax law like that that isn’t going to be heavily scrutinized in the courts because it is unabashedly discriminatory.
- FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.websitetoMildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•US Congressmen praying inside the House of RepresentativesEnglish18·15 days ago
I think it’s because these are people with the power to do more than thoughts and prayers. But they just stick with that while also taking health care off veterans and giving tax breaks to the rich.
This is shitty behavior by the company (and a reminder not to rely on online services for anything, not even storing your shopping list). But it isn’t Doctorowian enshitification. It isn’t a focus shift from consumers to suppliers to then be able to hold both captive, squeeze them dry, and making the service worse in the process. This is just new management pissing off nerds.