+5 points if you realize it mid way through by the look on your audience’s faces.
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FancyPantsFIRE@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•At your current rate of spending, for how long could you survive without income?English5·5 days agoMany years technically, but I doubt the stability of… well, everything, too much to say that with much conviction.
FancyPantsFIRE@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•Major reversal in ocean circulation detected in the Southern Ocean, with key climate implications | Institut de Ciències del MarEnglish1111·6 days ago“Early reports indicate that a vortex has emerged as a result of the reversal which is drawing in carbon dioxide, microplastics, PFAS, and, inexplicably, members of the Trump administration.”
FancyPantsFIRE@lemmy.worldto cats@lemmy.world•[Question] Is it normal to just have cat hair all over you? Like inside your nose and everywhere.English24·10 days agoIf you have a hairless cat in your house: No.
FancyPantsFIRE@lemmy.worldto Voyager@lemmy.world•Experimental Piefed support is now available for VoyagerEnglish2·17 days ago@rimu@piefed.social do you have any insight? Apologies if this is poor etiquette 😅
FancyPantsFIRE@lemmy.worldto Voyager@lemmy.world•Experimental Piefed support is now available for VoyagerEnglish2·17 days agoI’ve noticed link images are very pixelated when browsing piefed (piefed.social specifically) but then same links look fine when browsing lemmy. I’m guessing this is a piefed side problem (or maybe an instance configuration choice?).
FancyPantsFIRE@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•LLMs factor in unrelated information when recommending medical treatmentsEnglish171·19 days agoTheir analysis also revealed that these nonclinical variations in text, which mimic how people really communicate, are more likely to change a model’s treatment recommendations for female patients, resulting in a higher percentage of women who were erroneously advised not to seek medical care, according to human doctors.
This is not an argument for LLMs (which people are deferring to an alarming rate) but I’d call out that this seems to be a bias in humans giving medical care as well.
FancyPantsFIRE@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What are some "toy programs" you've created?English11·20 days agoI built a script that runs on a raspberry pi with an nfc reader and speakers. It’s setup with nfc cards to play music for my kids. they don’t use it as much as they used to but it’s still going strong after four years!
FancyPantsFIRE@lemmy.worldto Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•Rich people know their cosmetic surgery is obvious and uncanny, but that's the point; it's a way of signalling that you belong in a certain income bracket and that you're part of the 1%English10·22 days agoAgreed. I’m not advocating for it, but subtle surgery with a reasonably skilled practitioner often flies under the radar if you didn’t know the person. The most common things like nose jobs and face lifts are almost routine at this point.
It’s not for me, but there is a confirmation bias around plastic surgery where bad results are highly visible and good results are almost invisible.
I do, but not much these days. I’ve got kids and a career with meh work life balance. Sleep, exercise, and hobbies all compete for the remainder.
On a good weekend I can get a couple of hours in though.
I’ve used cursor quite a bit recently in large part because it’s an organization wide push at my employer, so I’ve taken the opportunity to experiment.
My best analogy is that it’s like micro managing a hyper productive junior developer that somehow already “knows” how to do stuff in most languages and frameworks, but also completely lacks common sense, a concept of good practices, or a big picture view of what’s being accomplished. Which means a ton of course correction. I even had it spit out code attempting to hardcode credentials.
I can accomplish some things “faster” with it, but mostly in comparison to my professional reality: I rarely have the contiguous chunks of time I’d need to dedicate to properly ingest and do something entirely new to me. I save a significant amount of the onboarding, but lose a bunch of time navigating to a reasonable solution. Critically that navigation is more “interrupt” tolerant, and I get a lot of interrupts.
That said, this year’s crop of interns at work seem to be thin wrappers on top of LLMs and I worry about the future of critical thinking for society at large.