> 1726: Jonathan Swift published Gulliver's Travels, which includes this description of the Engine, a machine on the island of Laputa: "a Project for improving speculative Knowledge by practical and mechanical Operations " by using this "Contrivance", "the most ignorant Person at a reasonable Charge, and with a little bodily Labour, may write Books in Philosophy, Poetry, Politicks, Law, Mathematicks, and Theology, with the least Assistance from Genius or study."
@machine_1 AI isn't revolutionary yet. Despite the fact that the technology is only a seed in the ground currently, even if it would be advanced - the people aren't at all caught up yet. AI will require a massive jump in mental maturity before it can be applied effectively by the average human being. But hey - we can always use more funny videos of Arnold Schwarzenegger put where he doesn't belong until that state is reached. — GimbyJul 25 at 11:41
@Cowp all this stuff you post on AI and yet you have failed to link to funny videos of Arnold Schwarzenegger put where he doesn't belong
Nothing’s wrong—spell-check should be happy, and ideas take a long time to come to fruition because the required engineering takes time and resources, whether its machining metal for reciprocating gasoline engines or improving the efficiency of chips in capacity and speed, AFAIK.
> our study participant, who can no longer speak intelligibly due amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), achieved a 9.1% word error rate on a 50 word vocabulary (2.7 times fewer errors than the prior state of the art speech BCI2) and a 23.8% word error rate on a 125,000 word vocabulary (the first successful demonstration of large-vocabulary decoding) pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36711591
Decoding of intended speech using an array of electrodes installed in the cortex.
The broad public learns to use tools quickly without having to understand the operation or the science & engineering that makes them possible. The social consequences are not so quickly absorbed or incorporated into customs of morality and decency.
> Borrowed from German Putsch, from Alemannic German Putsch (“knock, thrust, blow”), of imitative origin
CNN: "scientists from two global climate authorities are reporting before July has even ended that this month will be the planet’s hottest on record by far" edition.cnn.com/2023/07/27/world/…
Karlsson-on-the-Roof (Swedish: Karlsson på taket) is a character who figures in a series of children's books by the Swedish author Astrid Lindgren. Translated books and cartoon adaptation of the series became popular in the Soviet Union when it was released in the 1970s. Lindgren may have borrowed the idea for the series from a similar story about Mr. O'Malley in the comic strip "Barnaby" (1942) by Crockett Johnson.
== Plot ==
Karlsson is a very short, plump and overconfident man who lives in a small house hidden behind a chimney on the roof of "a very ordinary apartment building on a very ordinary...
> Compared to the general population, patients with keratoconus were significantly more likely to be diagnosed with genu varum/valgus (OR = 2.75, CI 1.48-5.13, p = 0.0015), pes planus (OR = 1.97, 95% CI: 1.62-2.38, p < 0.0001), scoliosis (OR = 1.88, 95% CI: 1.45-2.43, p < 0.0001) and umbilical/inguinal hernias (OR = 2.18, 95% CI: 1.47-3.24, p = 0.0001).
New study. I had a surgery for inguinal hernia in my childhood. But this kind of hernia is extremely widespread.
I have external speakers hooked up to my piano so that it can sound like a Steinway D when I want it to. But I was getting an annoying buzz on certain notes, and I thought I might have damaged the cones. Last night I discovered there were some mounting fixtures on the back, with set screws that were loose. I tightened them and voilá! All is well! It's amazing how good a little thing like that can make me feel.
Like having a toothache just go away. Ahhh.
2
Weekly Quordle Challenge 5 9️⃣7️⃣ 8️⃣5️⃣ m-w.com/games/quordle/ A bit tougher than the dailies, but not by much.
> .. the research team asked a group of healthy young adults to participate in 10-min very light exercise followed by an executive function task. The findings revealed that pupils dilated during the exercise, and the extent of the dilation was an indicator of a subsequent improvement in executive function. tsukuba.ac.jp/en/research-news/20230712140000.html
If we were playing Scrabble, 'timecode' would be entirely unremarkable (is ni one would even think of challenging it) but I can sorta see how it might not be in the NYT Spelling Bee dictionary.
Hey
Do you know if
The dictionary gets downloaded with the JavaScript for the game?
MetaEd said that wordle downloads it (do you can see what 5 letter words are allowed)
If someone wanted to pore through tons of obfuscated code I suppose it would be possible. But what would be the point? That you worked harder to solve the puzzle in one guess, which would be a tipoff to everyone that you did cheat?
@user858770 everything William James ever wrote was motivated at some point by quarrels with the James siblings who all had borderline-histrionic personality disorder
Aspiring saints are called Blessed, I think. You can imagine them looking on with envy when one ascends to sainthood, but trying to look happy and supportive like actors at the Academy Awards.
Could you please tell me if the following sentence sounds alright to your native speaker's ear?
FXCM allows people to speculate on the foreign exchange market and provides trading in contract for difference (CFDs) on major indices and commodities such as gold and crude oil. It is based in London.