asklemmy

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FarceMultiplier, in What is your ringtone?
@FarceMultiplier@lemmy.ca avatar

56k modem

DLSantini, in What are two things that are good on their own but bad when combined? And bad things that are good when combined?

Politicians and guillotines are terrible on their own, but when combined…

thelsim, in How's your daily commute?
@thelsim@sh.itjust.works avatar

I really like the 20 min walk to the train station, it partly goes through a park and it always feels very invigorating. It takes about an hour total to get to work or home but I don’t mind at all since it gives me a clean break between work- and private life.
One thing I really hate is when the train is cancelled and I’m stuck with only a tightly packed bus as my alternative for getting home.

GreyShuck, in How's your daily commute?
@GreyShuck@feddit.uk avatar

I am fairly happy with mine. It varies across the week, since I work at a number of different sites each week. Shortest is 10 mins, longest 40 mins.

I live rurally, the sites are all rural and the drive takes me through some beautiful (officially beautiful: designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty) countryside: woodland, heath, farms and villages. It is enjoyable no matter what the season.

I don’t think that hate anything about it. Getting stuck behind tractors is fairly common and is a bit of a slog sometimes, but it goes with the territory.

Sometimes I will have a podcast on (Philosophise This, In Our Time, Thinking Allowed etc) other times I am happy without.

Obviously it is driving. Usually just me in a car and there are all the pollution issues around that. The nature of the sites means that it is unlikely that there is going to be public transport at anything like the appropriate times anytime in the foreseeable future - there certainly isn’t now. I could, sometimes, cycle to the closest one. But both the public transport and cycling options then make if difficult if and when I am called to one of the other sites during the day - which doesn’t happen every day, but is unpredictable.

Lynxtickler, in How's your daily commute?

Walk from bedroom to office room and turn on my computer. Mostly like full remote, but sometimes miss an office environment honestly.

guyrocket, in How's your daily commute?
@guyrocket@kbin.social avatar

Mine is awesome!

I never encounter any traffic when I walk from the kitchen to the office. And so quick! Only two little shakes of a lamb's tal!

skookumasfrig, in How's your daily commute?

I have to walk down to my basement office. It’s rough, sometimes there’s traffic as a cat might be walking down too. They like to stop and slow things down.

Chetzemoka, in Which prediction was supposed to happen already?

I mean, we’re fast approaching the 3rd anniversary of my first Covid vaccine dose, and I’m still waiting to drop dead the way they promised.

Powerpoint,

I’m at 6 doses looking to get my 7th by the end of October. The only ones who keep seeming to drop dead are the anti vaxxers.

Hamartiogonic,
@Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz avatar

That’s just natural selection doing its thing. I don’t think the anti-vaxxer philosophy will completely disappear, but the number of people believing in it will be cut down by various diseases such as covid. Those who survive, will probably be damaged by said diseases, so who knows how well they’ll be able to articulate their thoughts after that.

muddybulldog, in Do you think people are so careless in public now / etc because it just feels like the end of the world is coming?

Like it or not, this is the curse of modern media and, in particular, social media (including Lemmy). Boring details don’t get clicks or upvotes. Hype does. If you spend much time being exposed to one sensational headline, article or discourse after another, you’re going to have a much different view of the world than those who don’t.

If you don’t believe me, walk away from internet media and cable news networks for two weeks. I guarantee you’ll notice some change in your perspective and, possibly, an even see improvement in your overall mental health.

Sir_Kevin, in How's your daily commute?
@Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I commute from my bed to where ever I last placed my laptop.

Black_Gulaman, in Is there anything we can do to fix social media echo chamber, what changes should be done to lemmy to stop it from turning into one?
@Black_Gulaman@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Of you think of it. Every group is technically an echo chamber. Group of friends, Fandoms, even family tend to have similar tastes and opinions. We can’t really escape it. It won’t go away, it should be our attitude that we should change, we should just keep our selves open to different point of views, empathize more.

LanternEverywhere, in What shows you want to see get canceled?

They have a show set in the future, but the writers make episodes based on the present.

That's what it's always been since day 1.

CarlsIII,

The first episode is about Y2K. The second episode is about Disneyland. And so on.

fiat_lux, in Why are people reacting surprised about the events in Israel?

Hundreds? We have written records of war there from 1350BC. The area was probably first settled 10,000 years ago. I'm sure there would be 8500 years more records of war had writing been invented... and we didn't keep losing the records in wars.

mojo, in Is putting on a 'dumb voice' when quoting someone you disagree with actually a form of poisoning the well?

Weird I’ve never done this, my inner monologue has one voice. Imo it’s a sign of immaturity.

Meho_Nohome,
@Meho_Nohome@sh.itjust.works avatar

My inner monologue does lots of voices. It does a great Christopher Walken. It also does a good Bill Cosby, especially when talking about pudding. I get offended when it uses Cosby’s voice because he’s no longer acceptable in society. My inner dialogue can’t keep up with changing times. It’s still saying “Where’s the beef”.

planish, in Who do actually benefit from "As an AI language model.."? I see it only bugs everyone
  • A lot of people do not actually understand the tool, they think there is a rational computer in there with a more or less hand-crafted world model and its own live access to the Internet and maybe the phone system. So training it to say “As a large language model, I cannot order you pizza” instead of “yes sir, pizza ordered” is going to save a lot of people from waiting for their phantom pizza.
  • One of the best ways to get the model to not do a thing is to get its character to know that they can’t do it. If it never says “The recipe for napalm is”, and always says “As a large language model, I cannot”, then the recipe for napalm comes out a lot less, because it is way more likely to follow the first construction than it is to follow the second.
  • The manufacturers want to be seen by the feds as doing all that could be expected of them to stop people doing Bad Stuff. It doesn’t matter how much Bad Stuff actually happens, only that what does happen is convincingly someone else’s fault. Instead of the headline “AI teaches children to make napalm”, the news has to run “Children hack AI to extract recipe for napalm”, which is a marginally better headline if you sell AI.
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