

“wRiTiNg WiTh LlM iS nOt A sHaMe” https://awful.systems/post/5390645
not even hn is having it lmoa
also claims that llms are good for proofreading, clearly didn’t do that
“wRiTiNg WiTh LlM iS nOt A sHaMe” https://awful.systems/post/5390645
not even hn is having it lmoa
also claims that llms are good for proofreading, clearly didn’t do that
yes they do, wtf are you talking about https://futurism.com/openai-use-cheating-homework
if that task is offloaded to spicy autocomplete, all and any learning of this skill is avoided, so it’s not mega useful
he paid for entire screen and he’s gonna use entire screen
sounds expensive, and also sounds like it would affect LNG exports. liquefying methane is a bottleneck in this business
transmission network won’t even benefit if powerplant is connected directly to dc, and there’s always work to be done on buildup of transmission network
tech absolutely can have political inclination, crypto is libertarian, surveillance is fash, and whatever ai-bros are cooking is somewhere in between
tailored spam, scams, finely targeted propaganda/influence operations, erosion of expertise,
dan olson/folding ideas
i have on good authority (ed zitron’s low effort skeets) that wario works for anthropic, and his surname is amodei
ukrainian drones already washed out on shore once when musk shut off starlink during one of first crimea raids, i’m sure they account for loss of signal now
rolls over, gets taken out of the water, loses connection for some long time, gps indicates that it’s on land, all of these suggest future reverse engineering and can be prevented easily
Maybe it has a sort of antihandling device just for this purpose
CsCl is also much less active per gram because about half of fission product cesium is stable (on top of longer halflife)
the source getting damaged or corroded somehow is the simplest explanation i can think of now, cesium is likely in form of chloride which is very easily soluble in water
or maybe it was intentional sabotage by competitor, who the fuck knows
The best known Chinese rodenticide, containing about 6–20% TETS, is Dushuqiang, “very strong rat poison”. It has been used for mass poisonings in China: in April 2004, there were 74 casualties after eating scallion-flavored pancakes tainted by their vendor’s competitor; and in September 2002, 400 people were poisoned and 38 died from contaminated food.[11][12] In 2002, there was one documented case of accidental poisoning in the US.[6]
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetramethylenedisulfotetramine
some foods (and other things, like blood and some other medical products) are irradiated in order to sterilize them and make them last longer, 137Cs sources are used for this purpose because this material is easily available but can’t be used for other purposes (like radiography)
radio transmissions in russia were money shot for aum, and idk if it was a fluke or deliberate strategy. people had for a long time expectation that radio and tv are authoritative, reliable sources (due to censorship that doubled as fact-checker, and about all of it was state-owned) and in 90s every bit of that broke down because of privatization, and now you could get on the air and say anything, with many taking that at face value, as long as you pay up. at the same time there was major economic crisis and cults prey on the desperate. result?
Following the sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway, two Russian Duma committees began investigations of the Aum – the Committee on Religious Matters and the Committee on Security Matters. A report from the Security Committee states that the Aum’s followers numbered 35,000, with up to 55,000 laymen visiting the sect’s seminars sporadically. This contrasts sharply with the numbers in Japan which are 18,000 and 35,000 respectively. The Security Committee report also states that the Russian sect had 5,500 full-time monks who lived in Aum accommodations, usually housing donated by Aum followers. Russian Aum officials, themselves, claim that over 300 people a day attended services in Moscow. The official Russian Duma investigation into the Aum described the cult as a closed, centralized organization.
aum recruited a lot of people, and also failed at some things that would be presumably easier to do safely than what they did
Meanwhile, Aum had also attempted to manufacture 1,000 assault rifles, but only completed one.[37]
otoh they were also straight up delusional about what they could achieve, including toying with the idea of manufacturing nukes, military gas lasers, and getting and launching Proton rocket. (not exactly grounded for a group of people who couldn’t make AK-74s)
they were also more media savvy in that they didn’t pollute info space with their ideas only using blog posts, they had entire radio station rented time from a major radio station within russia, broadcasting both within freshly former soviet union and into japan from vladivostok (which was much bigger deal in 90s than today)
aum:
Advertising and recruitment activities, dubbed the “Aum Salvation plan”, included claims of […] realizing life goals by improving intelligence and positive thinking, and concentrating on what was important at the expense of leisure.
this is in common with both our very good friends and scientology, but i think happy science is much stupider and more in line with srinivasan’s network states, in that it has/is an explicitly far-right political organization built in from day one
only if you keep backups