@thedansimonson@lingo.lol
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thedansimonson

@thedansimonson@lingo.lol

#nlproc phd. computational linguiost. disaster artist. computer wizard. bike commuter. opinion haver. under construction. he/him 🌹

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thedansimonson, to random
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

I’ve been using @xubuntu for like ten years now and it’s awesome.

If you’re disturbed by the changes they’re making to Windows—as you rightfully should be—consider trying either Ubuntu or Xubuntu.

Most things most people do on the computer have free alternatives. And the things that don’t, the infrastructure is a lot better than it used to be.

If the primary things you do are Word and Internet, you probably won’t notice anything but a performance boost.

thedansimonson, to random
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

I know a lot of things are bad right now but we finally figured out how to make Brussels sprouts good and I think that keeps things in perspective

fay, to random
@fay@lingo.lol avatar

i need to keep a count of the times where i see people studying chatgpt mistakes asking chatgpt to explain its reasoning or to reflect on the mistakes

IT CAN'T

IT HAS NO INTERNAL WORLD MODEL OR CONSCIOUSNESS OR REASONING PROCESS

so it's not explaining its mistakes to you, its generating something that looks like an explanation but there is no reason to believe that it's connected to the actual process that generated the mistake

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@fay I honestly feel like this whole period of GPT voodoo is going to be a hole in the history of the field

thedansimonson, to random
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

The Cybertruck:

  • purports to be invincible
  • is harmful to the people who actually use it or are near it
  • is far too expensive
  • irreversibly corrodes at the slightest exposure to the elements

This also describes toxic masculinity.

javi, to random

Look, USians, I don't want to step into your internal politics, but you see, 45 years ago, we spaniards had the occurrence to write in our constitution that the head of state (the king) has immunity from prosecution for anything they do while they are in the job, and now we have an ex-king with a Wikipedia page that includes a "alleged corruption" section 55 paragraphs long.

And it's only "alleged" because he can't be taken to court even with the piles of evidence that exist.

Just saying.

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@javi I think we’re mostly right there with you—but the Supreme Court can and does just make up stuff, and we have zero control over these fucking clowns.

thedansimonson, to random
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

The hype will subside, but the spam will endure.

thedansimonson, to random
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

[ɨɡzækli] is surprisingly an English word

arstechnica, to random
@arstechnica@mastodon.social avatar

So much for free speech on X; Musk confirms new users must soon pay to post

The fee, likely $1, is aimed at stopping “relentless” bots, Musk said.

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2024/04/so-much-for-free-speech-on-x-musk-confirms-new-users-must-soon-pay-to-post/?utm_brand=arstechnica&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@arstechnica the spam bots are already paying $8 — this is cheaper

RickiTarr, to random
@RickiTarr@beige.party avatar

Yes, very few people make a living doing art, and even fewer make a living doing the art they want. Maybe this is just me, but it seems like there's something about art that is anti-fascist and anti-capitalist. Authoritarians fear self expression, arts always seem the first to go when things get more conservative, and yet it has never stopped us. If they take everything away, we will draw on cave walls with charcoal from a fire, make dolls of corn husks, carve bones into beads, make bowls of mud, write stories in blood, make musical instruments out of anything, we will remember our history through song. We will pass these things down as evidence that we could never completely be silenced, we were here, we matter.

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@RickiTarr Rudolf Rocker explores this in depth in Nationalism and Culture. He shows in depth how during periods of political unity and strong state domination, cultural production wanes and diminishes, while when the state is weaker, culture flourishes.

trochee, to random
@trochee@dair-community.social avatar

I can't believe I didn't do this earlier

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@trochee new banner image

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@trochee though Wrath of Khan is good too; that’s a tough one

panos, to mastodon
@panos@catodon.social avatar

Small rant about small character limits in fedi, like 's 500 limit, just because I had this discussion recently.

I think it makes no sense for the . This is a criticism towards as well, which defines notes as short posts, around a paragraph.

How did "microblogging" came to be? In the early internet we had no limitations like this. If you wanted to post something (say in a forum), you could usually just write what you wanted, as long as it needed to be (there might be technical limitations, but not a conscious limit of "you should express yourself in under xxx characters". How did this become a thing?

started as a platform where you could post via SMS, hence the initial character limit was 140. But nowadays we don't have technical limitations like that. So why do software designers still feel the need to restrict users in such a way? I believe it is a failed concept, one that has been surpassed in practice. If people want to write 1000 or 5000 characters, they will. And they do. That's how "threads" are born. OK, sometimes a person consciously wants to split a post in parts, but most of the times it is just to go around the platform's character limit. So if the goal is to have a platform where people express themselves in 500 characters or less, then this design fails hard, because you can't force people to do that if they don't want to. If I want my posts to be short, I will make them short, no need to restrict me. If I want to make a longer post once in a while, I will also post it, I will just have to hit reply as many times as needed for all of my text to reach my followers.

The problem with this, besides that it's impractical and gets in the users' way, is that it actually does the opposite of what might be expected: Instead of not serving long texts to users, you serve them in multiple posts, creating clutter in the timeline. And this way they can't avoid getting the whole text in their timelines, even if it's something they are not interested in!

The simplest and most obvious way to handle this is letting users write their posts, however long they want to make them, and only show the first xxx characters in the timeline, with a "Show more" button. This way users can express themselves in the way they prefer (it's their wall/social feed after all!), and their followers are not served several consequential posts about something they might not care about. It's one opinion, one post, it should come to my timeline once, and then I can decide if I want to click on it and read all of it.

It's funny, but my early fediverse experience was vastly improved when @atomicpoet moved from mastodon.social to calckey.social. I loved reading his posts, but they tended to be long, so I would be online and a new post by Chris would come, and I'd be like "oh here we go again". Because it would fill up my timeline, and it wasn't practical either, because I would read the first paragraph, then wait until Chris typed the next paragraph, and in the meantime I might have seen other things and I had to go back to what I was reading 5 minutes ago and then wait 5 more minutes for the rest of his train of thought. This is not how any of this should work! A person should take their time and write down their thoughts, and then post them on their account. And I should be able to see the start of that post, and click on it and read it at its entirety if it seems interesting to me.

Why are we keeping up with an unnecessary limit, when there is no technical reason for it any more? Plain text takes practically zero disk space (and will take up the same space -basically more- if split in different posts). We post photos that take up kilobytes or megabytes.

When users are forced to go around your design in order to communicate their thoughts, this means there's something wrong with your design. There are people who prefer writing shorter posts. There are people who sometimes want to post something longer for their followers to read. It's still a post, it serves the exact same purpose, it's not like "posts MUST be short, anything over a paragraph is a blog post". I regularly write longer posts, because I want to expand on my thoughts. It doesn't mean I care about keeping a personal blog, or that I think anything longer I write is blog-worthy. I might be talking about whatever, and it can be as significant (or insignificant) as my one paragraph posts. It's even more futile to try to enforce a limit like that in an open network as the Fediverse. People will just build tools to overcome it, as has happened, and many platforms offer much longer character limits. Many Mastodon servers have also manually changed that limit, kolektiva.social for example is a Mastodon server with a 10K character limit. It comes from an actual need, people might also want to post an announcement or whatever longer text.

Basically, the only real reason I can think of for limits like that to exist in today's platforms, it's because short content is more easily "consumable". So I get it as a choice for #X or , they want addictive, fast-to-read content, witty responses etc to keep their users in their platforms for longer, to show them more ads and keep tracking their interactions for longer. And this is probably how they found out that this restriction is good for them and makes their platform more addictive. It's easier for them to "sell" easily digestable content. It makes sense as a design choice, for their corporate targets.

But why on fedi? If you don't care about longer posts, you can ignore them and not open them. If you prefer following people who only write short posts, then do that. If you don't like that I write longer posts, feel free to unfollow me, and customize your fedi experience to your needs. But why have made-up restrictions like that forced upon users? Are we building something for easily digestible content, trying to make it as addictive as possible, or are we here for communication, according to the users' needs?

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@panos @atomicpoet by restricting the size of posts, it leaves room for more voices generally. This was something I realized when I first used Twitter:

https://blog.thedansimonson.com/twitter-takes-characters-gives-access-in-return/

Also, when the infrastructure isn’t in place for longer posts—e.g. Read More buttons—it can be really irritating when an entire blog post is pushed into my feed.

thomasfuchs, to random
@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io avatar

What. The.

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@thomasfuchs the more I’ve learned about Reagan over the years, it’s become unambiguous that he dropped all of his skill points on charisma and literally nothing else

thedansimonson, to random
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

I really liked Dune 2. I am now a Denis Villeneuve Stan.

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@trochee holy shit, I hadn’t put that together.

We all fell for Barbenheimer when it should have been Barbie Runner.

pluralistic, to random
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Here's a fun AI story: a security researcher noticed that large companies' AI-authored source-code repeatedly referenced a nonexistent library (an AI "hallucination"), so he created a (defanged) malicious library with that name and uploaded it, and thousands of developers automatically downloaded and incorporated it as they compiled the code:

https://www.theregister.com/2024/03/28/ai_bots_hallucinate_software_packages/

1/

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@stooovie you would think—but think about that for a second. Most bystander NPCs sort of grunt, act confused, or maybe say a comment to you that you’ve heard before. These are all signals that NPC doesn’t have much to add to the progression of the story—it’s an indicator that they’re a leaf on the game tree, not a branch.

Putting all of ChatGPT, its weird sycophancy, its infinite desire to blab—does that add anything to the game? Maybe the first time, but not the fifth.

trochee, to random
@trochee@dair-community.social avatar

> Though much of what I've written here is deeply depressing, I do want to leave you with some good news:
> Elon Musk is absolutely miserable, and there's little good news in his future.

Ed Zitron, on the colossally pathetic and insecure billionaire

https://www.wheresyoured.at/the/?ref=ed-zitrons-wheres-your-ed-at-newsletter

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@trochee that was a wonderful read. One of the things that fueled Tesla’s growth was liberal-ish car nerds—a real category of human that exists. He’s managed to completely alienate that set entirely, and I suspect there’s not really an EV market for racists. Their identity is attached to burning fossil fuels.

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@trochee One of the further constraints on EVs is charging. The kind of person who is more interested in an EV probably doesn’t live in a single-family detached house with a garage that they can install a charging station in.

They probably have a landlord, and the landlord isn’t going to install an EV charger on the property. They’re lucky if the landlord fixes the toilet.

futurebird, to random
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

Ants move soil in a variety of ways. Larger ants use structures on their front legs, and hairs (Seta) under their mandibles called a psammophore. A basket like structure.

But, sometimes very small ants literally move a single grain of sand at a time. This seems like a disadvantage until you consider the extreme level of control this gives them over the ultimate structure of the nest.

Just as a stone field wall is packed rocks, their nest walls are carefully arraigned grains of sand.

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@futurebird never thought of construction at that scale before. have the ants been observed to have some sort of knowledge of arches and capstones, especially when constructing those underground chambers? what kind of patterns do they use?

thedansimonson,
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

@hattifattener @futurebird indeed. When I was in undergrad, one of the professors in my department studied granular materials. We used to always make jokes about him playing with sand—but his work was really cool nevertheless.

One of the things he did was use a bunch of these special tiles rotating in a big drum to actually see the force lines between grains. It was cool to be able to see “force” in any form, something usually so abstract.

thedansimonson, to random
@thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

I will respect the first CEO to go “we are NOT adding AI to our product—that would be pointless and annoying.”

ElleGray, to random
@ElleGray@mstdn.social avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • thedansimonson,
    @thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

    @ElleGray I gotta admit, the mortal combat-grade fighting is one of the reasons living with cats rules.

    mcc, to random
    @mcc@mastodon.social avatar

    I guess there's a partial lunar eclipse tonight but it's after midnight and partial lunar eclipses to me always look suspiciously like the moon with a cloud in front of it https://www.cbsnews.com/news/how-to-see-penumbral-lunar-eclipse-march-full-worm-moon/

    thedansimonson,
    @thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

    @mcc astute—the Earth is the cloud

    floe, to coffee
    @floe@hci.social avatar

    Pulled a ~ 600 € DeLonghi coffee maker out of the dumpster and invested about 50 € in spare parts (water tank, grounds container, and a new magnet valve). Seems like I have a new coffee machine now 😁☕

    (It would have gone even faster and without a puddle on the kitchen counter if I had put in the gaskets from the start. 🤦 Ah well.)

    /cc @coffee

    thedansimonson,
    @thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

    @floe @coffee that’s totally fucking awesome

    arstechnica, to random
    @arstechnica@mastodon.social avatar

    Formula 1 chief appalled to find team using Excel to manage 20,000 car parts

    Williams team leader may only be shocked because he hasn't worked IT.

    https://arstechnica.com/cars/2024/03/formula-1-chief-appalled-to-find-team-using-excel-to-manage-20000-car-parts/?utm_brand=arstechnica&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social

    thedansimonson,
    @thedansimonson@lingo.lol avatar

    @arstechnica I fail to see what the problem is here

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