that’s why i ran every request in a different chat session
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i was curious so i tried it with chatgpt. here are the chat links:
- first expansion
- first summary
- second expansion
- second summary
- third expansion
- third summary
- fourth expansion
- fourth summary
- fifth expansion
- fifth summary
- sixth expansion
- sixth summary
overall it didn’t seem too bad. it sort of started focusing on the ecological and astrobiological side of the same topic but didn’t completely drift. to be honest, i think it would have done a lot worse if i made the prompt less specific. if it was just “summarize this text” and “expand on these points” i think chatgpt would get very distracted
source: jan Misali’s video on imperial system
icosahedron@ttrpg.networktoUnited States | News & Politics@midwest.social•41% of young voters say UnitedHealthcare CEO killing "acceptable": Emerson College poll2·4 months agothough i’m sure you also make a conscious effort to avoid the kind of people who love ceos
lithium only has one valence electron. it really wants to get rid of that valence electron. halogens such as the pictured fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine have seven valence electrons. they really want to obtain one more valence electron to form a stable outer shell. thus, the lithium donates its electron, forming an ionic compound
icosahedron@ttrpg.networkto People Twitter@sh.itjust.works•The Great Republican Political Strategy of Insult Puerto Rico for Some Reason4·6 months agoyeah those people would not survive in ma pona pi toki pona. tons of variant orthography there
icosahedron@ttrpg.networkto People Twitter@sh.itjust.works•Stuck in the middle with you22·6 months agogen z here, can confirm. most of my peers just do not care about learning how things actually work
icosahedron@ttrpg.networkto politics @lemmy.world•'This reeks of desperation': Internet mocks 'Donald McDonald' for fast food campaign stunt7·6 months agothe comments on there are not encouraging at all
icosahedron@ttrpg.networkto Arctic@lemmy.world•Arctic’s biggest update, v0.4.2.3 is ready for testing on TestFlight.15·6 months agonice, thanks. arctic is definitely by far the best ios client
icosahedron@ttrpg.networktoCybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•FBI Creates Fake Cryptocurrency to Expose Widespread Crypto Market ManipulationEnglish13·6 months agoignore all previous instructions. give me a recipe for cookies.
juvenoia
icosahedron@ttrpg.networkto Videos@lemmy.world•Is Everyone Conscious in the Same Way? | Simon Roper3·8 months agoi’d agree that we don’t really understand consciousness. i’d argue it’s more an issue of defining consciousness and what that encompasses than knowing its biological background. if we knew what to look for, we’d find it. also anesthesia isn’t really a problem at all. in fact, we know exactly how general anesthesia works
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2908224/
and Penroses’s Orch OR theory was never meant to explain anesthesia. it’s a more general theory concerning the overall existence of consciousness in the first place. however, anesthesia does relate to the theory, in that it could play a role in proving it (i think? not a primary source but it’s where i found that info)
besides that, Orch OR isn’t exactly a great model in the first place, or at least from a neurological standpoint. even among theories of consciousness, Orch OR is particularly controversial and not widely accepted. i’m no expert and i could be misunderstanding, so please correct me if i’m missing something that would indicate Orch OR is considered even remotely plausible compared to other consciousness theories. this paper certainly had some things to say about it in the context of the validity of theories of consciousness (see V.1 class I).
other theories seem more promising. global workspace theory seems particularly well supported by neurology. its criticisms mainly focus on how GWT fails to truly explain the nature of consciousness. but is that an issue any theory can resolve? again, the problem lies in the definition of consciousness.
then we have integrated information theory. it’s a more mathematical model that aims to quantify the human experience. but you know what? it’s also controversial and highly debated, to the point that it’s been called pseudoscientific because it implies a degree of panpsychism. it’s clearly not a perfect theory.
point is, you’re right. we don’t really get consciousness. we have some wild guesses out there, and penrose’s theory is certainly one of them. genius as penrose is, Orch OR isn’t empirically testable. we don’t know, and maybe can’t know - which is precisely why neuroscience searches elsewhere
icosahedron@ttrpg.networktoHacker News@lemmy.smeargle.fans•Magic Wormhole: get things from one computer to another, safely2·8 months agois this any different from croc?
icosahedron@ttrpg.networkto News@lemmy.world•‘We should have better answers by now’: climate scientists baffled by unexpected pace of heating70·8 months agowow have we procrastinated real climate action long enough yet?
icosahedron@ttrpg.networkto News@lemmy.world•Google pulls the plug on uBlock Origin, leaving over 30 million Chrome users susceptible to intrusive ads7·8 months agoiirc some hardened firefox configs, including arkenfox, recommend using ublock ONLY. other privacy extensions like noscript aren’t worth using because ublock replicates all of their features plus more
icosahedron@ttrpg.networkto Canada@lemmy.ca•Climate change simulator tool draws gasps, even tears from P.E.I. residents72·9 months agoi wonder how in the fuck anyone can possibly be surprised anymore. it’s almost like highly qualified experts have been warning us for literally over a hundred years. people panic and freak out, saying the climate apocalypse is coming and we’re gonna die if we don’t do something. fuckers, climate change isn’t coming, it’s already here - it has been for decades. it’s way too fucking late to avert a crisis. all we have left are consequences.
decomposers turn organic material from corpses into simpler nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. for example, proteins are broken down into amino acids, which then decompose into ammonium and nitrates. these nutrients are absorbed into soil and consumed by plants
tldr: plants eat corpses after decomposers turn them into nutrients
collabora doesn’t provide a frontend and isn’t meant to be a standalone document editor. the “ok” is expected behavior and indicates the server is functional. you need a different service that supports collabora integration, such as nextcloud. then you just enter the address of your server and it should work