I took German in high school, and while I understand maybe 60% of the words, 90% of the (what I assume to be critical) context is lost on me
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Also non-Americans trying to browse Lemmy during work…
I really wish I could understand German humour
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•How Do You Go About Buying Stuff Online While Avoiding Amazon?33·2 months agoReminds me of a thread I saw here a while ago on “What if advertising were illegal?”
I’ve found the best method for reducing my need on Amazon is to just buy less crap. Online shopping is simple because you can get stuff immediately, but I don’t think anybody “needs” 3-4 new products per week.
Aside from that, I try and support local: find local shops that sell items similar to my style, or trust word of mouth for online retailers that are good. At the end of the day, as long as you’re buying good-quality stuff (which oddly seems to spend less on advertisements) it doesn’t really matter where exactly you buy from, as it’s all pretty similar in price / quality.
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•How Do You Go About Buying Stuff Online While Avoiding Amazon?1·2 months agoIs it delivered via Amazon or just in Amazonian packaging? I guess I don’t mind either as much, since I can’t expect a small seller to keep two separate streamlined processes…
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•How Do You Go About Buying Stuff Online While Avoiding Amazon?5·2 months agoThis has also saved me on more than one occasion as I’ve tried to find the same “brand” of something I was going to buy on another site, only to find it was actually an Amazon product they were trying to push. Dodged that bullet for sure
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Attorney General Bonta Urgently Issues Consumer Alert for 23andMe CustomersEnglish3·3 months agoBut like… deleting the data would lessen the sale price. Much easier to just delete your account and keep the data in an “anonymous” form. How are you (as the consumer) going to ever know if it’s actually deleted?
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Why does it feel like Elon is artificially boosting his companies?1·3 months agoI agree with @Num10ck@lemmy.world – Tesla did some amazing things, and really paved the way for electric vehicles (especially vehicle charging infrastructure). But they went too fast and quality went down and they’re trying to make up for it by Magats buying to support Trump.
the media will be all over it
Tesla is already the most deadly car brand, but why aren’t the media already “all over it”? What makes you think it will be any different with autopilot? https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/tesla-highest-rate-deadly-accidents-study-1235176092/
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Reddit@lemmy.world•Day 3 of only upvoting non-violent Luigi content.4·3 months agoCan someone create a guide with this? Best tools, what to do if the comment thread isn’t also on Lemmy, how to change your Reddit comments to gibberish, etc
Or does this guide already exist? (Should be included on the welcome letter to Lemmy if so)
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Fediverse@lemmy.world•There's a clear up tick on daily users growing and we've crossed the 50k line as of yesterday! LETSSS GOOO!English101·3 months agoWhat’s an “active user”? Can I just up vote things I like, do I need to leave comments like this, or must I get involved in senseless flame-wars?
next up: “Great thanks we’re gonna sell all your photos unless you pay for a subscription. Gotta keep in business somehow!”
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•“Model collapse” threatens to kill progress on generative AIsEnglish4·9 months agoAnother great example (from DeepMind) is AlphaFold. Because there’s relatively little amounts of data on protein structures (only 175k in the PDB), you can’t really build a model that requires millions or billions of structures. Coupled with the fact that getting the structure of a new protein in the lab is really hard, and that most proteins are highly synonymous (you share about 60% of your genes with a banana).
So the researchers generated a bunch of “plausible yet never seen in nature” protein structures (that their model thought were high quality) and used them for training.
Granted, even though AlphaFold has made incredible progress, it still hasn’t been able to show any biological breakthroughs (e.g. 80% accuracy is much better than the 60% accuracy we were at 10 years ago, but still not nearly where we really need to be).
Image models, on the other hand, are quite sophisticated, and many of them can “beat” humans or look “more natural” than an actual photograph. Trying to eek the final 0.01% out of a 99.9% accurate model is when the model collapse happens–the model starts to learn from the “nearly accurate to the human eye but containing unseen flaws” images.
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What family sayings did you think was universal?3·1 year ago“If you sing at the table you’ll cry before you go to bed.” I thought it was super common until I said it to my kid and my partner thought I was crazy.
bignate31@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•Trump supporters call for riots and violent retribution after verdict34·1 year agoFavourite part of the whole article:
A spokesperson for Truth Social said, “It’s hard to believe that Reuters, once a respected news service, has fallen so low as to publish such a manipulative, false, defamatory and transparently stupid article as this one purely out of political spite.”
“You never saw what you thought you saw. And even if you did, it was entirely justified and your interpretation was extreme.”
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•CEO of Google Says It Has No Solution for Its AI Providing Wildly Incorrect InformationEnglish1·1 year agoYeah, the problem is how to sanitise effectively. You’ve gotta be able to find a way to automatically strip out “bad” things from your training data (via an “oracle”). But if you already had that oracle, you could just slap it on your final product (e.g. Search) and make all the “bad” things disappear before they hit the user (via some sort of filter).
it’s just reliable. especially with remote work, everything is “over ssh”, and you can create a very consistent environment with only a few config files
the amount of AI you can get into these IDEs is impressive, though. probably the only reason I’d ever make the switch
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•‘It went nuts’: Thousands join UK parents calling for smartphone-free childhoodEnglish41·1 year agoI was with you until the “construction site and under the bridge” bit. It definitely takes a bit of imagination, but I’m not sure not wanting your kids to play on a site which requires the use of hard hats classifies as being “anxious”
bignate31@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•Pro-Palestinian protesters block traffic on Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco2·1 year agosomeone needs to spend some time on !fuck_cars@lemmy.ml
bignate31@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Protesters Gather Outside OpenAI Headquarters after Policy Against Military Use is Quietly RemovedEnglish4·1 year agoJust commenting to also get a name in that history book.
“Oh yeah. We knew it was coming. We were just waiting to see which one would finally cause it.”
it’s only real programming if you also use CSS
I don’t understand why you’re getting down-voted. Living abroad and have stopped listening to news since the Trump election. Every 6 months I tune in, and while it seems a lot has happened, no progress has actually been made
this seems cool, but… so what? cute photo op and a tale for the grandkids…