If you go home with somebody, and they don’t have books, don’t sleep with them
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    "looks at bookshelf of completely unread books." Oh... Yeah I love books!

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  • South Korea bans dog meat after years of falling consumption
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 95%

    Isn't this whole thing a bit performative? I mean, dogs aren't inherently more worthy of liberation from the meat market than any other farm animal.

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  • The "10,000-hour rule" was debunked again. That’s a relief.
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    Not really, it's just that the sheer quantity of hours has been find to be less important than the original study presented. Essentially, with good aptitude and quality practice, you don't actually need 10,000 hours to reach the top percentile.

    The author of this article seems to have taken this in some weird directions. They have had personal experiences of being pressured to practice long hours at something they struggled in. They find relief in the new study, which they allegedly believe validates the idea that it was a hopeless endeavor. I'd argue that the fault didn't lie with the 10,000 hour number, but rather with thier family who pushed the author too hard to succeed in a sport they probably weren't improving at, Rather than reevaluating motivating factors or approach.

    Of course 10,000 hours is arbitrary. I'm just saying, the study doesn't assert that inherit talent even exist, let alone is the primary factor. It only contradicts the number of hours.

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  • Nearly 11 million SSH servers vulnerable to new Terrapin attacks
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    Unrelated rant: I am far less inclined to read articles with clearly ai generated images purely on the basis that every spammer with a braincell is leveraging it to shine up their turds. I wonder if this is just a me problem.

    PS, not saying this article is bad or something, just that I feel like ai generated images like this only add value if your audience doesn't realize it's ai generated. These ai ignorant people are probably not the target audience for this article.

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  • [Discussion] What are you're thoughts on a Steamdeck with a PSP Go form factor?
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    I agree, but maybe it's time for a Linux based Nintendo DS / PSP sized device? I mean, Nintendo has abandoned these truly pocketable consoles. Maybe with a die shrink they could fit something 70% as performant as a deck into that form Factor?

    I personally know a lot of people who miss the DS and don't game anymore now that the platform was dropped. Casual gamer types.

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  • No context
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    I just dump a liter of bleach in the upper deck and remove the seat. Nothing cleans you up better than a good swirl.

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  • MSI Claw gaming handheld: 16-core Intel CPU, 8-core 2.2GHz Xe GPU, up to 32GB RAM [MSI's SteamDeck is Intel GPU based]
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    I might be mistaken, but these Intel based machines might be better for switch emulation, as they share dedicated hw for the particular form of texture decompression they use. One cool potential upside

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearHA
    Jump
    FAA grounds 171 Boeing planes after mid-air blowout
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    I used to work for GE Aviation. I avoided working on the 737 Max FMS product whenever possible. The whole thing stunk. Too few engineers forced to rebuild an excellent legacy product from scratch under tight time constraints.

    I quit the whole industry. Working for pennies in the woods now ✌️

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  • AI grammar rule
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    I've seen this with gpt4. If I ask it to proofread text with errors it consistently does a great job, but if I prompt it to proofread a text without errors, it hallucinates them. It's funny to see Microsoft having the same issue.

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  • How a script doctor found his own voice
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    Fun fact, be careful around exposed roots from fallen trees, especially if people are messing around nearby. There can be a lot of tension stored in the roots trying to stand even a long dead stump back up / gravity, and if something gives, you can become trapped under the tree.

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  • 'Suicide pod' is completely legal and approved for use in Switzerland
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    I had a friend who's niece, an American, was able to travel to use these. It was a difficult path to research and get these services, as well as expensive, but it definitely helped them a lot.

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  • Many hostages released by Hamas still being treated for trauma
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 50%

    It's really concerning how many comments are snidly dismissive or in some cases outright hostile to this particular peice of reporting.

    Does Hamas deny that the hostages were kidnapped or mistreated? Are the circumstances of these particular people's capture suspect? Are thier experiences disputed?

    I see no comments even attempting to say so. It reads as wantonly jingoistic.

    0
  • In your own words and explanation, why are you a Garfield fan?
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    As a child, I was attracted to his slovenly misanthropic attitude.

    Similarly, I always liked Winnie the Pooh, who while more amiable, is also selfish, lazy, and prone to self pity.

    When you grow up with Saturday morning comics, you have to find elements of real life in it. I feel like Garfield represents these baser, unpleasant impulses.

    5
  • Any Interesting (**Not** Disturbing) Podcasts?
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    "our fake history" is a pretty good match to what you're describing. It's a relatively light hearted, rigorously researched, history podcast with a focus on misunderstood historical figures and events.

    "The plastic plesiosaur podcast" is a really fun podcast more focused on cryptids and pop science.

    One of the host to plastic plesiosaur has a YouTube channel called "trey the explainer" which is worth a watch.

    And if you like low key, entertaining deep dives into machining or tech, check out "technology connections," "this old Tony," and "tech moan."

    1
  • Scientists have 20-minute "conversation" with a humpback whale named Twain
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    Man, reading the hacker news comments is grim. A deeply cynical and shallow series of takes on an interesting subject.

    4
  • The Airlander 10 - A Modern and promising blimp design that emits 13x less emissions compared to passenger jet aircraft... It also looks like a giant butt 🍑
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    This thing has been in development since I was a teen. I wonder if it will ever actually be a viable vehicle. My heart wants to say yes, but I don't know... These might not have much of a future.

    3
  • Most readers want publishers to label AI-generated articles — but trust outlets less when they do
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    Imo, the true fallacy of using AI for journalism or general text, lies not so much in generative AI's fundamental unreliability, but rather it's existence as an affordable service.

    Why would I want to parse through AI generated text on times.com, when for free, I could speak to some of the most advanced AI on bing.com or openai's chat GPT or Google bard or a meta product. These, after all, are the back ends that most journalistic or general written content websites are using to generate text.

    To be clear, I ask why not cut out the middleman if they're just serving me AI content.

    I use AI products frequently, and I think they have quite a bit of value. However, when I want new accurate information on current developments, or really anything more reliable or deeper than a Wikipedia article, I turn exclusively to human sources.

    The only justification a service has for serving me generated AI text, is perhaps the promise that they have a custom trained model with highly specific training data. I can imagine, for example, weather.com developing highly specific specialized AI models which tie into an in-house llm and provide me with up-to-date and accurate weather information. The question I would have in that case would be why am I reading an article rather than just being given access to the llm for a nominal fee? At some point, they are not no longer a regular website, they are a vendor for a in-house AI.

    19
  • Young tyrannosaur found with baby dinosaurs in its stomach
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 57%

    Pregnant dinosaurs 🙏😊🌸

    1
  • Amazon's humanoid warehouse robots will eventually cost only $3 per hour to operate. That won't calm workers' fears of being replaced. - Digit is a humanoid bipedal robot from Agility Robotics.
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    True! I personally feel that UBI would be the easiest pill for the West to swallow. It is totally compatible with capitalism, and addresses the most urgent needs of individuals.

    I feel like a slightly more radical solution which is also compatible with capitalism would be laws requiring substantial stake in ownership in companies for workers. Proportional to the quality of employees and time worked. Meaning, that if you work 15 years at Amazon and get replaced by a robot, you see some passive income over time for the value you contributed. Likewise, the sale or liquidation of a company would see past workers getting some sort of payout.

    2
  • Amazon's humanoid warehouse robots will eventually cost only $3 per hour to operate. That won't calm workers' fears of being replaced. - Digit is a humanoid bipedal robot from Agility Robotics.
  • peanuts4life peanuts4life Now 100%

    People do lament poverty and the consolidation of wealth into owners through the displacement of the worker.

    Just because we run swiftly in front of the whip of capitalism does not mean we should dismiss those who trip and fall. We should be angry that there is a whip at all.

    1
  • Yes, I know that it still exist, and yes, decentralized currency which utilizes distributed, cryptographic validation is not actually a strictly bad idea, but... Is the speculative investment scam, which crypto substantially represented, finally dead? Can we go back to buying gold bars and Pokemon cards? I feel like it is, but I'm having a hard time putting my finger on why it lost its sheen. Maybe crypto scammers moved on to selling LLM "prompts?" Maybe the rug just got pulled enough times that everyone lost trust.

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    I request more rabbits. Jerboa rotated my picture, but it feels appropriate.

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    F 27 I've had this issue for more than a month. Sharp pain in my left hip and knee. The hip part feels close to my lower back, almost like it's in the socket. It seemed to be getting better, but today it just got worse again. I've got an appointment with my primary care doctor in a month ( the earliest I can be seen ), but I don't want to wait that long. I thought about seeing a chiropractor, since years ago one helped me with back and neck pain after an accident, but I'm afraid if being injured. I've never been good with doctors and don't have much money. I'm on Obama care in FL. Any advice or kind words? Thanks for reading 😔😌❤️

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    Oh boy, the ones in my backyard are unaffected. I have one of the "camper" models which screws onto an isobutane canister. Has anyone tried thier big liquid cartridge units? Any advice on fighting these girls other than removing water sources and wearing bug spray (already doing it).

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