quaddo

@quaddo@reddthat.com
0 Post – 20 Comments
Joined 12 months ago

Fwiw, it can be helpful to call out the date for such changes. Preferably in YYYY-MM-DD (ISO 8601).

While it's helpful to link to an off-site timezone converter tool (thanks for that, btw), "today" can be a different date, depending on where in the world you are. For example, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand.

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It might depends on the AI.

I can't speak for Bard, but ChatGPT's data isn't any more recent than 2021. As it often reminds me.

TBH for many years it's felt like most accounts (or at least the ones that bubbled up into my feed) were angry people venting about whatever. Like, the angrier they were, the more engagement they were hoping for. That was a surefire way for me to at least move on to someone else, or to just close the app. Don't need anyone harshing my mellow. The shouty people can go find a wall to yell at.

I barely get on these days. And I don't doubt that it's gotten worse.

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Random thought that's totally pointless here:

If he took all of his weapons and all of his ammo to a shooting range, and if he prepped to the best of his ability before beginning, how long would it take for him to shoot off all 26,000 rounds, if he tried as hard as he could to fire them off as quickly as possible? By himself, with nobody else helping, just to be clear.

Feel free to throw out best case scenarios.

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Just waiting for a mate

Reminds me of the X-windows logo

Coworker/friend/loved one: "So why is XYZ happening?"

Brain: Aww yiss. I will anticipate all possible questions and forks in the conversation, say it all, thus saving everyone time.

Brain: Wait. Remember how you've been trying to keep it brief? Try that now.

Me: "Well, it was 8:30am after all."

Coworker/friend/loved one: "Er ... I'm sorry what now?"

Brain: They took the bait. THIS IS YOUR TIME TO SHINE

Me, 5 mins later: "... yeah so anyway, what was the question again?"

You just reminded me. My dad used to say "Don't take any wooden nickels!" Had to get him to explain this, the first time he said it to me.

What's up with the disembodied hand tucked up high on the right of that tall heap of grass?

I'm able to fall asleep during an MRI scan.

It absolutely is.

If you recall from 9/11, many people made the decision to jump from those buildings, rather that get burned to death. And by "decision", I mean something fundamentally primal, and not a rational human being weighing the odds.

The drive to survive is strong in us. Fire is I believe at the top of the hierarchy of motivators deeply woven into our brain to avoid.

As another poster said regarding this particular thread, those people very likely succumbed to smoke inhalation before being burned. Not a great comfort, but it sounds preferable to being conscious and aware when the fire closes in.

... I think it's time to go look at videos of kittens and puppies now.

Let's not be hasty.

Surely free-range, organic, gluten-free sand would be the bestest source material ever.

You piqued my curiosity. Has to go check into these.

Shortest one is 22"?

Whoops, should have noticed your endorsement of syncthing before posting a comment mentioning this.

While Obsidian does save to individual files, the Markdown they use seems to be a superset of everyday Markdown. Eg, being able to use callouts (eg, Note, Warning, Info, etc) and embedded linking of notes.

The automatic backlinks are fantastic. And I've discovered that if I rename a note, all links to that note get updated as well. So no need to worry about orphaning pages.

I've added a handful of plugins as well. Off the top of my head, one is a dynamic table of contents (for that page), another helps to compose/edit Markdown tables.

You just described a friend of mine. He's a retired epidemiologist. Used to do tabletop modeling with his team, used to go to universities to give talks about what to do when an epidemic hits.

For context, he'd said back when Ebola was making headlines that "we're overdue for an epidemic, but this isn't likely going to be it". And then in February 2020 he warned me "it's coming, I hope you have a plan".

He had also shared the following. It was so striking, I had to write it down:

Rules for Understanding and Surviving an Epidemic:

  1. Nothing is under control
  2. They don't know what they are doing
  3. You are on your own.

I recently shared with him an article describing a confluence of data in the UK re COVID and the changing of the seasons, etc.

His response:

There will always be another wave of covid. None of which will be as bad as any of the preceding. I've pretty much reduced (mentally) the risks of covid to the risks of influenza and plan on treating each the same. And I don't plan on making the wearing of masks a regular thing any more. However, getting on public transport, going to a concert, i.e., close quarters, I will probably treat those kinds of things as too high risk in the middle of a wave and take precautions.

This is someone who needed to travel (by plane) later on in 2020, and was adamant he would be wearing a mask, adding that most people don't know how to wear a mask correctly.

Conversations with him over the years have been really informative. And yet it's made me realize just how hopelessly lacking I am in the training and experience to be able to grok the things he does. General medicine being one area. But also the likes of statistics, and things such as how/why it's not important to have 100% immunization, and how our brains aren't wired to easily understand what exponential growth means in practice. He's only too happy to reference studies; not just a specific one that supports his opinion, but looking up all the studies on the subject and working out whether they strongly support one position or a other, adding that if it's roughly 50/50, then the conclusion is there's no compelling evidence either way. This man loves poring over studies.

And to your point, he has made general comments indicating a lack of faith in humanity, not to mention some others in his profession.

Not for nothing, my wife and I got our annual flu shots last weekend.

As someone who has had to grind through heaps of logs over the years, from systems in various timezones, from products that disagreed on the 'best' datetime format, I've become a fan of adopting ISO 8601 as much as possible. For personal systems such as a laptop, that's a different story. But if I'm spinning up an EC2 instance in us-west-2 or a VM in Central Europe, I avoid the whole "err, what TZ is this in, or should even be in?" decision-making process and just run with WHO CARES IT'S SET TO UTC NOW LET'S MOVE ON ALREADY 😀

And not that anyone here is likely to care, but here's a quick shout out to lnav - The Logfile Navigator for grinding on system logs (for systems where something like Prometheus or whatever hasn't been proactively set up).

Also a big fan of Obsidian!

For syncing, one option is to use syncthing.

I know someone (whose geek creds are admittedly well beyond mine) who is also a fan. He uses GitHub to sync his notes.

Downloaded for future reference, thanks

OT, but I die a little inside when I see some writing in a book. I'm sure in this case it was probably a student wanting to highlight, but still.

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