DoYouNot

@DoYouNot@lemmy.world
0 Post – 19 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

That sounds an awful lot like restaurants and jobs...

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The Brits have undoubtedly the best outlets from a safety perspective, despite their size. North American outlets are garbage by basically all measures. European plugs are weirdly round, but very functional.

My two (€/100)s

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Shireen Abu Akleh. There's a video showing what happened leading up to her death.

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The absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence.

I know nothing about you or your situation, but food allergies can really mess up your life, and they're often overlooked (speaking from experience).

Missing a 'w' or a comma.

It was Celiac for me... It's such a relief to be able to make a change and do something about it instead of "just getting on with it."

Jupyter is looking great next to the moon there! Nice shot.

I seem to be collecting vintage lenses. I stared by getting an adapter for my mirrorless camera and I just fell in love with the lovely character their 'flaws' give them.

I mean, the graph doesn't fo a good job of showing it, but it looks like there are around 50% more users now compared to June.

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I think this is actually one of the most in-touch posts I've ever seen by a business. It was posted here, wasn't it? They knew.

Chicken? Or was it egg?

What are you basing that on? And is it a meaningful distinction? Bombs sure as hell don't discriminate based on politics...

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I mean, you're not wrong - but it's a technique used every day for super-resolution microscopy.

There's some surprisingly sci-fi stuff that's possible with image deconvolution. Not exactly practical, but it is possible to recover some information from a blurry photo.

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Yeah, and as someone lse mentioned: they often have a Libby service that gets you tonnes of free audiobooks and other digital materials.

Yes, I think if we can get an LLM to work while providing high quality, real world sources it will be a game changing technology across domains. As it stands though, it's like believing a magician really does magic. The tricks they employ are incredibly useful in a magic show, but if you expect them to really cast a fireball in your defense, you'll be sorely mistaken.

It's like searching for a picture of Prague, seeing a drawing of Delhi, and then concluding you've been there. It's not about laziness. It's about accuracy.

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The text OP provided explains that. It's a percentage of total linux users, not a percentage of computer users in that country.

Did you read mine? If you wanted a depiction of a city, it's more than good enough. In fact it's amazing what it can do in that respect. My point is: it gets major details wrong in a way that feels right. That's where the danger lies.

If your GPS consistently brought you to the wrong place, but you thought it was the right place, do you not think that might be a problem? No matter how many people found it useful, it could be dangerously wrong in some cases.

My worry is precisely because people find it so useful to "look things up", paired with the fact that it has a tendency to wildly construct 'information' that feels true. It's a real, serious problem that people need to understand when using it like that.