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Posts
3
Comments
195
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • I wouldn't know anything about that, but with respect to the overwatch team, they don't seem to be implicated in that controversy.

    Example

    I can't imagine the fight for equality in game dev is over, but at the same time I haven't heard anything particularly controversial. If you have other evidence of wrong doing do let me know.

  • I took a long break from overwatch after the release of overwatch 2, but they have been made some big changes that have brought me back.

    No more heros locked behind battle passes, free loot boxes, 6v6, great performance, sound design and the new perk system is nice. The game is more balanced than it ever was as overwatch 1, even it it's still not perfect.

    I don't agree with everything, paid skins are absurdly expensive, and heros do seem designed to sell skins, but that's really not new either.

  • Instead of trying to stop sweating, work at making it more effective, and dry faster.

    A powerful highspeed fan will do the most, and if your house is humid, maybe a dehumidifier to help your sweat evaporate.

    Counterintuitively, lowering your excerise temperature may make your sweat accumulation worse. You'll sweat less, but it won't evaporate as quickly leaving you more drenched.

    Similarly, drinking cold water doesn't cool you as much as you think it would.

  • If 0/0 < 0 would error?

    If 0 < 0 evaluates false

    That makes it even worse???

  • Every user (remote or local) has an "attitude" which is calculated as follows: `(upvotes cast - downvotes cast) / (upvotes + downvotes)`. If your "attitude" is < 0.0 you can't downvote.

    This pains me because it is functionally equivalent to

     
        
    If downvotes cast < upvotes cast
    
      
  • An astonishingly easy fix would be to just add a tax like a property tax based on vehicle weight. Make it scale enough to be prohibitive, but anyone who needs it will be willing to pay.

  • Soap changes the surface tension of water and will be able to penetrate the phone when otherwise it wouldn't be able to.

  • No, don't use soap! It changes the surface tension of water and can allow to enter your phone when it otherwise wouldn't be able to.

  • Honestly if I value your own life and survival, which most people do, your best bet is to be docile and comply.

    Actual resistance is better done planned in advance, the US even helpfully write its own guide during WW2

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    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Don't forget the fundamental scaling properties of llms, that openai even used as the basis for strategy to make chat gpt 3.5.

    But basically llm performance is logarithmic. It's easier to get rapid improvements early on. But at later points like we are now require exponentially more compute, training data, and model sizes to get now small level of improvements.

    Even if we get a 10x in compute, model size, and training data (which is fundamentally finite), the improvements aren't going to be groundbreaking or solve any of the inherent limitations of the technology.

  • Even accounting for inflation arcades should be cheaper.

    The compute hardware costs much less and is much more power efficient.

    Other power hungry features like lights and displays are both cheaper and more power efficient.

    The argument that they still need to be expensive makes so little sense, other than the physical space they occupy.

  • As someone who learned way more about pans than I really want to know, let me say that a good cook can make good food in any pan, however some pans are more suited to tasks than others.

    First off, searing meat in a non-stick pan (traditionally Teflon) is a bad idea, the pan can reach temperatures that produce toxic gases, and are known to kill birds that are more sensitive to them than we are. The coating that makes them nonstick isn't very durable and will at most last a few years before being useless. While other kinds of pans are likely to outlive you.

    Other common pans include cast iron, stainless steel, carbon steel, and ceramic non-stick (non-toxic, but are delicate)

    Specifically for searing meets, my favorite is stainless steel. It holds heat similar to cast iron, but is slightly more conductive and can transfer a lot of heat to sear meat. Meat also literally bonds to pan and can be used to make great flavorful sauces with deglazing. Cleanup is easy, if anything is really stuck just boil water in it to loosen. Alternatively stainless steel holds up decent in a dishwasher. Cleanup can't be easier than automatic. However, stainless steel is still quite heavy.

    For general purpose cooking my personal favorite is carbon steel. It's seasoned like cast iron and can be quite nonstick, but is much lighter making it feel very similar to nonstick pans, which are made with aluminum.I won't lie, seasoning has a learning curve. Seasoning is very tough under some circumstances, and very delicate under others. Notably acid will eat the seasoning away.

    Cast iron is great, but it is so heavy that it is inconvenient to use.

    All will work with induction, except for cheap aluminum nonstick pans

  • They're human like everyone else, and try to use language that is specific and descriptive. In this case the word direct observation has become to mean something very specific In the field of astrophysics. It's not out of malice or anything, just results from the difficulty of scientific writing, so you use words that already have established meaning.

  • In the field this is actually refered to as direct observation. It's confusing for someone not familiar with the jargon as it is very similar to direct detection.

  • Direct observation ≠ direct detection

  • I would argue that dark matter is much more based on indirect observation, things like rotation curves and baryonic acoustic oscillations.

  • Confusingly, direct observation does not mean the same thing as direct detection.

    This study "directly observes" a hypothetical dark matter signal. However this is distinct from direct detection experiments, where a dark matter particle is found in a collider.

  • I am a physicist, studying dark matter.

    Firstly, It would be nearly impossible to prove that dark matter definitely does not exist.

    And secondly, there are no alternatives to dark matter that come even close to explain our universe as successfully as dark matter.

    That doesn't mean it's right, but any explanation without dark matter is not favored IMO.

  • Alternatively, if you can't remove the modem, find and remove the antenna. And if you can't remove the antenna try and surround it with a metal, like aluminum foil.