Comments

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

Ultraviolet, to news in Biden administration to urge Americans get new COVID-19 boosters

Failing implies an attempt. The government deliberately chose to lift restrictions prematurely, knowing it would result in the deaths of millions of people, just to make billionaires richer.

Ultraviolet, to android in ‘You’re Telling Me in 2023, You Still Have a ’Droid?’ Why Teens Hate Android Phones

They’ll also say they’re too smart to be affected by advertising.

Ultraviolet, to lemmyshitpost in Already planning for how to survive in jail

They factor it into their decision to use self checkout. If the increase in shoplifting is less than they save on staff reduction (it is, significantly so), they consider it a tradeoff, so it’s hard to call it unethical.

Ultraviolet, to technology in Google search is over

We were supposed to have learned that from Cuil.

Ultraviolet, to asklemmy in Anyone else feel that Lemmy just *isn't* addictive?

Social media addiction comes from algorithms designed to psychologically manipulate you into scrolling endlessly to maximize ad impressions. It’s not a good thing.

Ultraviolet, to asklemmy in What are your thoughts on restricting children’s access to pornography online?

It’s not well intentioned. Those egregious privacy violating measures are the intention, “protecting kids” is a smokescreen.

Ultraviolet, to memes in I don't see anything wrong with how we used to be

Why are we continuing that pattern? Generation X gets named that, fine. Then we call the next one Generation Y, a few years later we realize that’s stupid because we’ll run out of letters and rename it to Millennial. Then we learn literally nothing from that, repeat the same mistake with Z and then loop over to the Greek alphabet? If we were going with the alphabet, why not start at A?

Ultraviolet, to microblogmemes in Port and starboard

Port was also initially Larboard, but it turns out when shouting a direction from the other side of a boat, having two similar sounding terms for opposite directions often results in crashing said boat, so it was changed in the mid 1800s.

Ultraviolet, to mildlyinfuriating in A new trend in tipping emerges

The funny part is that they supposedly believe in the Antichrist but don’t realize Trump is closer to that description than the Second Coming.

Ultraviolet, to games in [ExileCon 2023] Path of Exile 2 Trailer 3

I wouldn’t even mind that if the end result of engaging with all those systems was something more satisfying than just completely nullifying the combat, the part that’s supposed to be the core of the game. Why even have different types of enemies if as soon as your build gets up and running they’re going to die before they’re even on screen, let alone being able to attack?

Ultraviolet, to technology in OpenAI discontinues its AI writing detector due to “low rate of accuracy”

Also disproportionately inflicting false positives on neurodivergent students.

Ultraviolet, to boardgames in AI-Driven Game Mechanics in Board Games Will Soon Be A Reality With Hasbro and Xplored

An LLM is a specific type of AI, and honestly one that’s a useless novelty at best and the death of information on the internet at worst. Machine learning has been used in chess for literal decades before LLMs, is Stockfish “a few if statements”?

Ultraviolet, to 196 in rule

That’s just efficiency, inflicting and curing heartburn at the same time.

Ultraviolet, to asklemmy in Where do you realistically expect the world to be in terms of meeting the 2050 climate goals?

4 degrees is the apocalyptic scenario. The vast majority of oxygen in the atmosphere is provided not by trees or any plants, but by the algae and cyanobacteria in the ocean. At the 4 degree threshold, they can’t do aerobic respiration anymore, so they switch to anaerobic respiration. This means they stop producing oxygen, drastically reducing the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere and drastically increasing the carbon dioxide. This does two things: kills any large fauna, humans included, and the additional carbon dioxide continues to act as a greenhouse gas, accelerating the effect even further. Eventually, after almost all oxygen breathing life is dead, we reach equilibrium, assuming your definition of 'we" includes insects, because that’s basically all that would be left. If there’s a risk of reaching the 4 degree threshold, we would be forced into taking our chances with the literal nuclear option of deliberately inducing a nuclear winter.

Ultraviolet, to 196 in Singular they rule

Like many things, the damage was done by the British. Specifically one Bishop Robert Lowth. In 1762, he wrote a book of prescriptivist grammar rules starting with the premise that Latin is a perfect language, and any construction in English that doesn’t match Latin is a flaw. This is where those nonsense rules like “never end a sentence with a preposition” and “never split infinitives” come from, as well as the claim that the singular they (in common use at the time) should be phased out in favor of the generic he, because that’s what Latin does. The damage this one book did to the English language still has not been fully repaired.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • uselessserver093
  • Food
  • aaaaaaacccccccce
  • test
  • CafeMeta
  • testmag
  • MUD
  • RhythmGameZone
  • RSS
  • dabs
  • KamenRider
  • Ask_kbincafe
  • TheResearchGuardian
  • KbinCafe
  • Socialism
  • oklahoma
  • SuperSentai
  • feritale
  • All magazines