

Its weird that this isnt being noted as a huge fuckin deal.
Congressional members being actively muted and then the public being told it was unanimous is some gestapo bullshit.
We’ve gone past talking over speakers and now are outright muting them…


Its weird that this isnt being noted as a huge fuckin deal.
Congressional members being actively muted and then the public being told it was unanimous is some gestapo bullshit.
We’ve gone past talking over speakers and now are outright muting them…
Dawg literally forgot about the roman empire lol
Some guy who worked as an artis for Hasbro then started his own game company a year ago and has made one game since isn’t a source of much credibility here.
Companies are actively using AI in their workflows now whether you like it or not, and you can sit and pretend theres some secret cabal of artists (scoff) who somehow are the ones with a say on other artists getting hired (scoff), but thats… not how it is.
The people making the calls are, tbh, incredibly ravenous for anything remotely related to AI. I don’t think its a smart idea, but it doesnt change the fact there is appetite for it in the market, jobs to be had, etc etc.
However, I don’t think a portfolio of AI art is useful… at all
Hiring practices are way more interested in peoples ability to train and refine models, not use them.
I mean using them is sorta useful too, but thats quickly becoming a literal baseline skill that they just expect you are able to do. Prompt engineering is quickly becoming just sort of an expected “you should know how to do this, its not a selling point, its the bar” thing, akin to “you know how to use a mouse and keyboard and write emails” kind of thing.
Not like its hard, prompt engineering is pretty easy to take a 30 min lesson on and be “good enough” so thats why its such a baseline whatever skill.
If you cant do it though (and yes, I have met people who cant figure out how the hell you prompt an AI, they just literally dont get it), you probably will lose your job security very fast. Get used to it lol…
NOTE Im not saying any of the above is a good thing, but it is reality, whether you like it or not.


Naw.
For context at this time the Jewish people were under strict roman rule and oppression, treated as second class citizens. And a lot of Jewish folks had stopped giving a fuck about respecting their own culture/religion.
Jesus shows up to this huge, extremely sanctious, temple. It’s not just any temple, its one of THE temples for Jewish worship.
Inside he finds that the romans+Jewish merchants have pretty much turned it into an animal pen + marketplace. It’s filthy, there’s animals shitting all over, there’s people doing business, people are being extremely disrespectful.
So yeah Jesus goes apeshit and starts flipping tables, chasing ppl out of the temple, whipping people and animals, basically being like “all you assholes gtfo how dare you”
It’s less about the money stuff and more about the donkeys actively shitting on the floor and ppl spitting on the temple.
Contextually its likely people were doing stuff like pissing on the wall (no bathroom in a makeshit marketplace, what do you think would happen), graffiti’ing, spitting, throwing garbage on the floor, so on and so on.
Now, originally, this business made sense. Specifically, pilgrims traveling a long distance needed to stop for some key stuff on arrival.
Pilgrims needed animals and approved currency for sacrifices, which they’d do at the temple, so setting up to do that stuff right at the temple made sense.
But what happened is a simple lil currency exchange + buy a sacrifice stall exploded to be a whole marketplace as seedier and more sus ppl moved in, and soon the original point was lost.
It probably originally just started as one guy just exchanging coins and selling goats/chickens outside the temple as a legit business.
As further insult/context, consider the fact that once they moved this process to be in the temple, it meant they were controlling people’s access to worship.
Effectively it became a state of “you have to pay to pray” at the temple, and not a tithe, but more like literally having to pay a bunch of money to even get the right coins, the approved animals, etc.
You couldn’t bring your own stuff now.
You know how movie theaters wouldn’t let you bring in your own food, and would charge you an arm and a leg for anything? Yeah, think of it like that.
Inb4 the same bug also exists on the original


The thing about QA is the work is truly endless.
If they can do their work more efficiently, they don’t get laid off.
It just means a better % of edge cases can get covered, even if you made QAs operate at 100x efficiency, they’d still have edge cases not getting covered.


“Hey internet I was thinking of cutting some of my babies dick off”
“Bro wtf what”
“Just a lil bit, just the tip!”
“Aw okay that’s fine mate!”
Did you think this would be how it goes?
Don’t… cut parts of your baby’s dick off dude, it’s a weird thing to do.


What makes that the more likely scenario?
Because it’s their facility
this facility has never had this issue until the FBI showed up to commandeer their incinerator.
Says who?
For all we know they’ve had issues everytime they incinerate but they ignored it cuz a lil bit of smoke from 1 cat is way easier to shrug off compared to a huge amount of meth
It’s very possible they just have been ignoring the problem because normal smoke from incineration a very small cadaver isn’t a big deal, whereas meth fumes are extremely toxic and not something you can just shrug off
Lord knows I’ve worked with workers who have the “I’ve been doing it this way for 10 years and never had an issue, don’t be a pussy” type of attitude too
So hard to say, without more info it’s basically just us speculating.


rather than the FBI for their clear incompetence?
The article has not stated who was responsible for operation of the facility.
It’s more likely the responsibility was on the staff to ensure the equipment at their own facility was functioning right
This sort of error should have been covered by prior operation licensing checks, a facility with an incinerator on premises shouldn’t have negative pressure issues
So something somehow caused a negative pressure issue.
Usually the culprit is some kind of exhaust fan being run, or a door being left open too long
Based on time of year and how hot out it is, I wonder if a staff member left a door propped open or something.
Incinerator systems need positive pressure overall.
Anyone who lives in the north and has a gas based furnace heating system knows how deadly negative air pressure can be…


Read the article:
The incinerator is usually used by animal control officers to dispose of euthanised animals, but local authorities said it can also be used by law enforcement to burn seized narcotics.


The incident was caused when smoke was pushed in the wrong direction because of negative pressure, according to Assistant City Administrator Kevin Iffland.
That sounds like it wasn’t a method specific issue, and if anything had been burnt in that incinerator it would’ve caused the same issue.
Sounds like the facility wasn’t setup right, any facility with an incinerator should definitely have positive pressure, not negative.


Getting a later special meeting request with the ceo, at one company, because he wanted feedback on their interview process itself. He then offered me a different job and I had to decline cuz I already accepted another (this was a few weeks after the initial decline I gave)
In another case they just fast tracked me and I ended up declining the job anyways (didn’t like the job)
I’m full time employed but I still do occasiobal interviews to keep feelers out for how the market is. But I typically decline most offers cuz they’re not good enough to get me to actively quit my current job.


Same, I’ve started just stating I have a maximum of 3 interviews I do before I auto-reject the offer.
This has had interesting results.
In the “right” use case, story points should just represent relative effort.
The hours dont matter, its more about ranking how challenging a task is, in order to help the manager rank the priority of tasks.
You should have typically 2~3 metrics:
Points, which represent relative effort of the task to the other tasks you are also ranking.
Value, how much value does doing this task provide, how important is it
Risk, how risky is it that this might break shit though if you make these changes (IE new features typically are low risk since they just add stuff, but if you have to modify old stuff now your risk goes up)
If you have a good integration testing system automated, Risk can be mostly removed since you can just rely on your testing framework to catch if something is gonna explode.
Then your manager can use a formula with these values to basically rank a priority order for every ticket you now scored, in order to assess what the next thing is that is best to focus on.


Lol, are you actually getting downvoted for all this?
Everything this person wrote is correct. Free Speech protects you from the government, not other individuals.


pseudo-intellectual bullshit
They are 100% correct mate, everything they wrote is right. Just because you lack the capacity to understand something, doesn’t make it bullshit…


This isn’t just cruelty
You don’t want trans people actively in your military when the insurrection starts.
The expediency here should make it clear how fast paced the plans are.
I hope you dont use any of the other standard quality of life features day to day that consume substantially more power per day then.
There’s plenty of stuff you likely take for granted every day that you use, that burn way more fossil fuels than training GPT took.
GPT did cost a lot of power, but if you put it beside other fairly standard day-to-day things people tend to take for granted, it’s a drop in the bucket.
The list goes on and on. ESPECIALLY your clothes dryer, that thing uses a massive amount of power
People seriously underestimate how much power the internet uses overall. GPT’s training provides a concrete, discrete, measured amount of power one specific thing used.
Whereas the internet, as a whole, over one day, uses way more power than all of GPT’s training took total. The issue is “the internet” has its power consumption broadly distributed across the entire globe, in a manner that makes it basically impossible to actually measure how much “total” power you are burning just browsing the web.
But it’s non trivial. Every switch between you and your destination is burning in the range of 150 watts, easily, every router is burning easily 80 watts, etc etc.
And theres dozens of those between you and 1 given destination. The process of routing your packets from your machine all the way across countries at the speed of light, and then a response back, takes a non trivial amount of power. Theres often around 8 to 15 hops between you and the destination, and every single hop tends to have multiple machines involved in that one single packet.
Its easy to handwave that enormous power consumption away because, well, you can’t see it. You aren’t privvy to how much power your ISP burns every day, how much power the nameservers use, etc etc.
GPT is a non trivial chunk of power… but its not THAT much compared to all the other shit going on in the web, its genuinely just a tiny drop in the bucket.
You are extremely naive if you think using GPT makes any kind of notable shift in your total carbon footprint, it doesnt even move the dial at all.
If you actually wanna pick something as a real target for reducing your carbon footprint, the two biggest contenders are:
Thats irrelevant to the discussion at hand.
That’s like arguing needles were a bad invention because many people use them for heroin.
People using the tool wrong to hurt themselves doesn’t mean the tool is bad, it just means better regulations and education needs to be put in place.
This actually isnt that weird, happens all the time
However, its less common that it impacts a common consumer product of the same type.
But a thing to be used in making a huge project causing prices to shoot up ahead of time is very normal.
Its just usually stuff like concrete, steel, lumber, etc that is impacted the most, but turns out RAM as a global industry wasnt ready to scale up to a sudden huge spike in demand.
Give it a couple yesrs and it’ll level out as producers scale up to meet the new demand.