A piece of paper dropped on the ground can ‘shape human beliefs’. That’s literally a tool used in warfare.
The news here is that conspiratorial thinking can be relieved at all.
A piece of paper dropped on the ground can ‘shape human beliefs’. That’s literally a tool used in warfare.
The news here is that conspiratorial thinking can be relieved at all.
Anything can be used to make people believe them. That’s not new or a challenge.
I’m genuinely surprised that removing such beliefs is feasible at all though.
Primaries are still subject to spoiler effects and such.
In my very blue state this year where the top two in the primary go on to the general, there was a local position which had a whole bunch of well qualified Democrats vs just a couple of Republicans. (Incumbent not running)
The dem vote was split enough that we very nearly had just the two Republicans in the general. Like less than 60 votes away.
Like so many people answering this, my height.
In my case it contrasts with my wife’s height - I’m half a yard (nearly half a meter) taller than she is.
I have the opposite issue with background apps - I have 12 GB of RAM (16 on the tablet) and it still closes utilities sometimes and forces me to relaunch them (in some cases going back into settings and re-enabling accessibility services for example. That should never happen, in case it’s Really for accessibility)
I don’t follow music much, but I have a guess anyway. It seems like the number and diversity of genres just absolutely exploded since trading .mp3 files became a thing. And with digital stores and YouTube, distribution isn’t a hurdle anymore, publishers don’t have to pick and choose which albums to release, they can just do ‘all’ of them.
So there’s just no longer one single sound that can define a decade the way it used to be, now people hear hundreds of wildly different bands in a year instead of a few dozen that were hand picked by studios because they had trendy sounds.
Here, probably this one. The only good explanation I’ve seen.
This isn’t made in Vermont though. It’s Japanese.
That’s not the point. Vermont Curry is from Japan.
Recently did the intro segment to a Weird Al polka
Yeah, but the point of the post is to highlight bias - and if there’s one thing an LLM has, it’s bias. I mean that literally: considering their probabilistic nature, it could be said that the only thing an LLM consists of is bias to certain words given other words. (The weights, to oversimplify)
Undead Deity is in fact a great answer to the question.
I was about to reply with https://pcpartpicker.com/
But actually they mean on the chip level - and interview a guy who made whole clone machines himself including his own motherboards
That won’t tell you if the alarm app is being affected by something like doze which would only happen after the phone sits idle for hours
@MargotRobbie@lemmy.world obviously
I’ve only done a cold approach a couple times in my life, and it did indeed always end in disaster. So I gave up on that fully. Eventually met my wife on a dating site, but I understand that that’s becoming much more difficult now with the enshitification, and it was never easy.
Kinda sad that the scammer only got 6 years for that. (And only by picking the wrong victim)
If they had just done the obvious thing and made ad-free 3rd party API access depend on a subscription fee, then I would have just paid it and wouldn’t be here. But no, they have to do everything the worst way possible.
No.
“A stopped clock is right twice a day. But a clock that loses just 1 second a year is right only once every 43,200 years.”
Source: https://x.com/tweetsauce/status/791837302771200003
And the math checks out.
Agreed - but acting surprised that it can change opinions (for the worse) doesn’t make sense to me, that’s obvious, since anything can. That AI can potentially do so even more effectively than other things is indeed worth talking about as a society (and is again pretty obvious)