@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org This is so crazy to me. When I think āforestā, I assume āuntouched natureā, but that couldnāt be further from the truth. š«¤
Since this study was published this month, Iāve been wrapping my head around entanglement https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08404-x
Short summary of Project2025 and Trumpās plans for the US:
Abolish the Federal Reserve
Why? To end what is seen as an unelected, centralized body that exerts too much influence over the economy and monetary policy, replacing it with a more transparent, market-driven approach.Implement a national consumption tax
Why? To replace the current federal income tax system, simplify taxation, and increase government revenue through a broader base that includes all consumers.Lower corporate tax rates
Why? To promote business growth, increase investment, and stimulate job creation by reducing the financial burden on companies.Deregulate environmental policies
Why? To reduce government intervention in the economy, particularly in energy and natural resources sectors, and to foster a more business-friendly environment.Restrict abortion access
Why? To align with conservative pro-life values and overturn or limit abortion rights, seeking to restrict the practice at a federal level.Dismantle LGBTQ+ protections
Why? To roll back protections viewed as promoting LGBTQ+ rights in areas like employment and education, in line with traditional family values.Eliminate diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs
Why? To end policies that are seen as divisive and to promote a merit-based system that prioritizes individual achievements over group identity.Enforce stricter immigration policies, including mass deportations and detentions
Why? To prioritize border security, reduce illegal immigration, and enforce existing laws more aggressively, as part of a broader strategy to safeguard U.S. sovereignty.Eliminate the Department of Education
Why? To reduce federal control over education and shift responsibilities back to local governments and private sectors, arguing that education decisions should be made closer to the community level.Restructure the Department of Justice
Why? To ensure the department aligns more closely with the administrationās priorities, potentially reducing its scope or focus on areas like civil rights in favor of law-and-order policies.Appoint political loyalists to key federal positions
Why? To ensure that government agencies are headed by individuals who are committed to advancing the administrationās policies, and to reduce the influence of career bureaucrats.Develop training programs for appointees to execute reforms effectively
Why? To ensure that political appointees are equipped with the knowledge and skills necessary to implement the proposed changes quickly and effectively.Provide a 180-day transition plan with immediate executive orders
Why? To ensure that the incoming administration can swiftly implement its agenda and make major changes early in its term without delay.
Do yāall agree with any/all/some of these poliices? Hmmm š¤
@eapl.me@eapl.me Read flags are so simple, yet powerful in my opinion. I really donāt understand why this is not a thing in most twtxt clients. Itās completely natural in e-mail programs and feed readers, but it hasnāt made the jump over to this domain.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Itās not any better on the āgroundā with trees and buildings around. They donāt dampen at all, in fact the houses just cause reverb and amplify the bangs. Rest assured, I did not hear any people laughing or anything in that nature. Just grenades going off. Talking to my mates, it appears that I live in an especially bad shithole, they reported a noticable reduction of explosions around 00:20. Over here, there was constant fire till around 02:00.
Yep, thatās exactly how I imagine a war zone, too.
No person is inherently evil by nature, and yet most white people still choose to uphold racist violence across the globe.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de been getting so sloppy my feed is slowly turning into a fox nursery, I might end up renaming it into nature-reserve.txt
due to the gemini-centric nature of my setup, I donāt get webmentions. I just scrape the network and grep. maybe my aggregator will produce notifications at some point lol
Iām still more in favor of (replyto:ā¦). Itās easier to implement and the whole edits-breaking-threads thing resolves itself in a ānaturalā way without the need to add stuff to the protocol.
Iād love to try this out in practice to see how well it performs. š¤ Itās all very theoretical at the moment.
@prologic@twtxt.net The headline is interesting and sent me down a rabbit hole understanding what the paper (https://aclanthology.org/2024.acl-long.279/) actually says.
The result is interesting, but the Neuroscience News headline greatly overstates it. If Iāve understood right, they are arguing (with strong evidence) that the simple technique of making neural nets bigger and bigger isnāt quite as magically effective as people say ā if you use it on its own. In particular, they evaluate LLMs without two common enhancements, in-context learning and instruction tuning. Both of those involve using a small number of examples of the particular task to improve the modelās performance, and they turn them off because they are not part of what is called āemergenceā: āan ability to solve a task which is absent in smaller models, but present in LLMsā.
They show that these restricted LLMs only outperform smaller models (i.e demonstrate emergence) on certain tasks, and then (end of Section 4.1) discuss the nature of those few tasks that showed emergence.
Iād love to hear more from someone more familiar with this stuff. (Iāve done research that touches on ML, but neural nets and especially LLMs arenāt my area at all.) In particular, how compelling is this finding that zero-shot learning (i.e. without in-context learning or instruction tuning) remains hard as model size grows.
Floodgap has a list of new Gopher holes. The thing about Gopher is you explore and find things more ānaturally.ā
receieveFile())? š¤
@stigatle@yarn.stigatle.no @xuu@txt.sour.is @lyse@lyse.isobeef.org āNot coolā? I was receiving many broken (HTTP 400 error) requests per second from an IP address I didnāt recognize, right after having my VPS crash because the hard drive filled up with bogus data. None of this had happened on this VPS before, so it was a new problem that I didnāt understand and I took immediate action to get it under control. Of course I reported the IP address to its abuse email. Thatās a 100% normal, natural, and ācoolā thing to do in such a situation. At the time I had no idea it was @xuu@txt.sour.is .
The moment I realized it was @xuu@txt.sour.is and definitely a false alarm, I emailed the ISP and told them this was a false positive and to not ban or block the IP in question because it was not abusive traffic. They havenāt yet responded but I do hope theyāve stopped taking action, and if thereās anything else I can do to certify to them that this is not abuse then I will do that.
I run numerous services on that VPS that I rely on, and I spent most of my day today cleaning up the mess all this has caused. I get that this caused @xuu@txt.sour.is a lot of stress and Iām sincerely sorry about that and am doing what I can to rectify the situation. But calling me ānot coolā isnāt necessary. This was an unfortunate situation that weāre trying to make right and thereās no need for criticizing anyone.
Watch the subcreatures meddle with the primeval forces of nature: gopher://gopher.viste.fr/1/ogup/down
Iāve been out a few hours again. I came across a dozen or so forest mice. I heard tons of squeaking and saw a lighting fast moving seething mass under leaves and groves. It was impossible to capture anything but I could watch it for two, three minutes. They even seemed to come as close as 20Ā centimeters judging by the rustle and moving plant leaves. Pretty cool.
But heaps of people had to fire up their noise machines today. That clouded my overall joy in nature. Once a commercial airliner was about to fade away in the distance, the next one already adumbrated itself. Lots of prop planes and even a helicopter. Obnoxious loud super cars and motorcycles with broken off mufflers or I donāt know what. My felt hat amplifies the sound I noted.
Luckily, the sun hid behind the clouds most of the time, so I survived the 25°C. Even hotter tomorrow, yikes!
https://lyse.isobeef.org/waldspaziergang-2024-04-07/

Yet another study strongly calling into question the concept of āecho chambersā. Iāve argued it here before and people pushed back, but there is growing evidence that āecho chambersā are a moral panic and not a real phenomenon that we need to worry about. Itās time to throw it out and re-think, in my opinion.
Je suis Ć la recherche dāun script (#javascript) qui change la couleur du texte selon la nature grammaticale des mots. Cāest censĆ© faciliter la lecture. Ća vous dit quelque chose?
Types of Solar Eclipse
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@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org @movq@www.uninformativ.de Iāve always liked the sound of crows, and I really really hate the sound of motorized vehicles, so I also find it absurd. Iāve come to think that some people are at some level afraid of nature, and nature sounds remind them of it.
Taking Jordan Peterson asn an example, the only thing he āpreachesā (if you want to call it that) is to be honest with yourself and to take responsibility.
This is simply untrue. Read the articles I posted, seriously.
In a tweet in one of the articles I posted, Peterson states there is no white supremacy in Canada. This is blatantly false. It is disinformation. Peterson has made statements that rape is OK (he uses āfancyā language like āwomen should be naturally converted into mothersā but unpack that a bitāwhat he means is legalized rape followed by forced conception). He is openly anti-LGBTQ and refuses to use peoplesā preferred pronouns. He seems to believe that women who wear makeup at work are asking to be sexually harassed.
Heās using his platform in academia to pretend that straight, white men are somehow the most aggrieved group in the world and everyone else is just whining and can get fucked. The patron saint of Menās Rights Activists and incels. I find him odious.
being immersed in gorgeous #nature makes me want to write elegant programs, Iām amazed by the underlying systems #coding #phylosophy
being immersed in gorgeous #nature makes me want to write elegant programs, Iām amazed by the underlying systems #coding #phylosophy
Estuve revisando una entrada del blog (Sembrando Juegos) y un caso de rol para un conocido (100 pĆ”ginas), y aunque encontrĆ© decenas de errores de ortografĆa y gramĆ”tica, muchos pasaban desapercibidos, aĆŗn con muchas leĆdas.
Es impresionante cómo las herramientas automatizadas facilitan la revisión de ortografĆa y gramĆ”tica. Como se ha mencionado, es la creatividad asistida por tecnologĆa que se estĆ” haciendo mĆ”s ānaturalā, o simplemente la normalizamos con el tiempo.
@prologic@twtxt.net Error handling especially in Go is very tricky I think. Even though the idea is simple, itās fairly hard to actually implement and use in a meaningful way in my opinion. All this error wrapping or the lack of it and checking whether some specific error occurred is a mess. errors.As(ā¦) just doesnāt feel natural. errors.Is(ā¦) only just. I mainly avoided it. Yesterday evening I actually researched a bit about that and found this article on errors with Go 1.13. It shed a little bit of light, but I still have a long way to go, I reckon.
We tried several things but havenāt found the holy grail. Currently, we have a mix of different styles, but nothing feels really right. And having plenty of different approaches also doesnāt help, thatās right. I agree, error messages often end up getting wrapped way too much with useless information. We havenāt found a solution yet. We just noticed that it kind of depends on the exact circumstances, sometimes the caller should add more information, sometimes itās better if the callee already includes what it was supposed to do.
To experiment and get a feel for yesterdayās research results I tried myself on the combined log parser and how to signal three different errors. Iām not happy with it. Any feedback is highly appreciated. The idea is to let the caller check (not implemented yet) whether a specific error occurred. That means I have to define some dedicated errors upfront (ErrInvalidFormat, ErrInvalidStatusCode, ErrInvalidSentBytes) that can be used in the err == ErrInvalidFormat or probably more correct errors.Is(err, ErrInvalidFormat) check at the caller.
All three errors define separate error categories and are created using errors.New(ā¦). But for the invalid status code and invalid sent bytes cases I want to include more detail, the actual invalid number that is. Since these errors are already predefined, I cannot add this dynamic information to them. So I would need to wrap them Ć la fmt.Errorf("invalid sent bytes '%s': %w", sentBytes, ErrInvalidSentBytes"). Yet, the ErrInvalidSentBytes is wrapped and can be asserted later on using errors.Is(err, ErrInvalidSentBytes), but the big problem is that the message is repeated. I donāt want that!
Having a Python and Java background, exception hierarchies are a well understood concept Iām trying to use here. While typing this long message it occurs to me that this is probably the issue here. Anyways, I thought, I just create a ParseError type, that can hold a custom message and some causing error (one of the three ErrInvalid* above). The custom message is then returned at Error() and the wrapped cause will be matched in Is(ā¦). I then just return a ParseError{fmt.Sprintf("invalid sent bytes '%s'", sentBytes), ErrInvalidSentBytes}, but that looks super weird.
I probably need to scrap the āparent errorā ParseError and make all three āsuberrorsā three dedicated error types implementing Error() string methods where I create a useful error messages. Then the caller probably could just errors.Is(err, InvalidSentBytesError{}). But creating an instance of the InvalidSentBytesError type only to check for such an error category just does feel wrong to me. However, it might be the way to do this. I donāt know. To be tried. Opinions, anyone? Implementing a whole new type is some effort, that I want to avoid.
Alternatively just one ParseError containing an error kind enumeration for InvalidFormat and friends could be used. Also seen that pattern before. But that would then require the much more verbose var parseError ParseError; if errors.As(err, &parseError) && parseError.Kind == InvalidSentBytes { ⦠} or something like that. Far from elegant in my eyes.
Motion Blur
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The young man, who does not know the future, sees life as a kind of epic adventure, an Odyssey through strange seas and unknown islands, where he will test and prove his powers, and thereby discover his immortality. The man of middle years, who has lived the future that he once dreamed, sees life as a tragedy; for he has learned that his power, however great, will not prevail against those forces of accident and nature to which he gives the names of gods, and has learned that he is mortal. But the man of age, if he plays his assigned role properly, must see life as a comedy. For his triumphs and his failures merge, and one is no more the occasion for pride or shame than the other; and he is neither the hero who proves himself against those forces, nor the protagonist who is destroyed by them. ā John Williams in Augustus I thought Iād have accomplished a lot more today and also before I was 35 (2020) | Hacker News
D~d>1m and then fetched by !jenny -f. This brings back all deleted twts. Isn't lastmods used to skip older twts?
@movq@www.uninformativ.de
Yes, I did ask whether or not it was possible to move twts to an āarchiveā folder, but it will be the same at @stackeffect@twtxt.stackeffect.de experienced (which I have, too), that is, twts will ācome backā.
There is no clear solution, I am afraid, right? It is the nature of the beast.
āThe target of the Jihad was a machine-attitude as much as the machines,ā Leto said. āHumans had set those machines to usurp our sense of beauty, our necessary selfdom out of which we make living judgments. Naturally, the machines were destroyed.ā
Imagine a computer harnessing the natural behavior of natural systems and utilizing their behaviors to solve equations. via @devine@wiki.xxiivv.com https://wiki.xxiivv.com/site/computation.html
If [you take] a look at how APLers communicate when they have ideas, you see code all the time, all day long. The APL community is the only one Iāve seen that regularly can write complete code and talk about it fluently on a whiteboard between humans without hand waving. Even my beloved Scheme programming language cannot boast this. When working with humans on a programming task, almost no one uses their programming languages that primary communication method between themselves and other humans outside of the presence of a computer. That signals to me that they are not, in fact, natural, expedient tools for communicating ideas to other humans. The best practices utilized in most programming languages are, instead, attempts to ameliorate the situation to make the code as tractable and as manageable as possible, but they do not, primarily, represent a demonstration of the naturalness of those languages to human communication. ā aaron hsu
Natural magical patterns of percussion Is the discussion, so listen up close
When in challenging or sad situations itās only reasonable to be grumpy, or pessimistic or what have you. Negative emotions or feelings are part of our natural range and appropriate depending on the cirumstances. Forced positivy to me always has something ghoulish, Truman-show like. It pays to be grumpy and bad-tempered (2016) | Hacker News
Why is programming fun? What delights may its practitioner expect as his reward? First is the sheer joy of making things. As the child delights in his mud pie, so the adult enjoys building things, especially things of his own design. I think this delight must be an image of Godās delight in making things, a delight shown in the distinctness and newness of each leaf and each snowflake. Second is the pleasure of making things that are useful to other people. Deep within, we want others to use our work and to find it helpful. In this respect the programming system is not essentially different from the childās first clay pencil holder āfor Daddyās office.ā Third is the fascination of fashioning complex puzzle-like objects of interlocking moving parts and watching them work in subtle cycles, playing out the consequences of principles built in from the beginning. The programmed computer has all the fascination of the pinball machine or the jukebox mechanism, carried to the ultimate. Fourth is the joy of always learning, which springs from the nonrepeating nature of the task. In one way or another the problem is ever new, and its solver learns something: sometimes practical, sometimes theoretical, and sometimes both. Finally, there is the delight of working in such a tractable medium. The programmer, like the poet, works only slightly re- moved from pure thought-stuff. He builds his castles in the air, from air, creating by exertion of the imagination. Few media of creation are so flexible, so easy to polish and rework, so readily capable of realizing grand conceptual structures. (As we shall see later, this very tractability has its own problems.) Ask HN: How to rediscover the joy of programming? | Hacker News
creating an off-grid culture that can live in harmony with nature, as a bit
š Finished reading On Human Nature by Edward O. Wilson
š Finished reading On Human Nature by Edward O. Wilson