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00:14
@Cerberus They used to cut ice out of Lake Geneva where I grew up from the late 1800s through the 1940s for delivery to fancy hotels in Chicago and Milwaukee and to people's home ice boxes. It got stored in big sawdust-protected warehouses to last past winter. Our lake is spring-fed and 163 feet deep, about 2x7 miles, so its clean water was ideal for this.
@tchrist Yeah, that sounds perfect.
Many houses still have ice-boxes.
My grandparents' generation always calls the freezer in the fridge the ice box.
I think many people's closets were once ice-boxes, if they have those very thick doors and are in the cellar.
We had a "root cellar" in the basement with thick walls and an unfinished floor.
@tchrist In Dutch, we still call a refrigerator an ijskast. To say koelkast betrays middle class.
@tchrist Ahh I've heard that term before, why root? Because roots might be visible?
00:18
No, because it's where you overwintered your hard root vegetables. You have no power, remember.
I imagine given where you live you won't be stumped by the puzzle of how during the 1800s they got the giant ice blocks to the Chicago hotels before they melted.
There are two obvious answers.
But only one applies.
00:30
I was thinking you might guess by canal, but if you can cut ice from the lake you probably can't navigate waterways. And anyway, the White River that comes out of Lake Geneva isn't really big enough for shipping until it hits the Fox River draining south to the Illinois River which flows south to the Mississippi away from Lake Michigan. They used the railroad cars to get the ice to the big coastal cities.
This was, of course, before cars or trucks, at least at first.
Tracing things is difficult when there is no governing body to guarantee uniqueness of names. It is perfectly common for towns, rivers, and lakes to each occur with duplicate names even within the same state. As a kid I grew up knowing that the White River drained into the Fox River, but I had always believed it was the Fox River that skirted the Wisconsin River at Portage and went north to Green Bay, not the Fox River that went south to the Illinois River and the Mississippi itself.
> There are 15,074 documented lakes in Wisconsin. [...] Many lakes have the same names, with 116 named Mud Lake.
@tchrist Ah OK, makes sense.
@tchrist I would have thought by sled or rolled on tree trunks to trains, depending on location and route?
@Cerberus They used horses to get it to the train, yes.
They had all sorts of technologies that we have forgotten about.
Dragging sleds.
Yes, of course horses would pull.
00:42
The train station was about a half mile from the lake, but I don't know where they cut from. I'll ask my great-uncle on Wednesday when I see him.
So much time was once spent on things that now go automatically and very easily.
But they got it done.
Did Musk steal her from Bezos?
Dunno. This is undoubtedly Amazon's AI getting its LLM from the internet.
Oh, it cited Rumble.com, a right-wing fantasy site, as the source. So much for vetting.
00:56
German of the Day: Einstellung -- Einstellung (German pronunciation: [ˈaɪ̯nˌʃtɛlʊŋ]) is the development of a mechanized state of mind. Often called a problem solving set, Einstellung refers to a person's predisposition to solve a given problem in a specific manner even though better or more appropriate methods of solving the problem exist.
01:13
@tchrist Speak for yourself. I'm within walking distance of three different supermarkets. My commute is a 15-minute walk. There's a train station ten minutes away. Granted, nowhere near as good as in Europe, but I don't need a car.
I don't even have a bike. I do need to take Ubers on occasion, though. Fortunately I have a very boring life and do not need to go many places other than work and the grocery store.
I almost never take a taxi, only once or twice a year, when I must visit some remote location in the country without buses.
I often take Shurcle, a Korean transportation system which is an intermediacy between a taxi and a bus.
Granted, I have epilepsy, and while I can safely drive now, I'd need to re-learn how. So I'm kind of forced into it.
Boston has much better public transit than other cities its size. Not Europe-level, though.
Of course public transportation is easier to finance in cities.
How can you take a taxi to "some remote location in the country without buses"? Doesn't that cost you hundreds of dollars?
Or thousands, even?
Suppose you wanted to go from Denver to Grand Junction, two cities separated by the Rocky Mountains and 200 miles. The bus is maybe $60 and the train is around $100. It takes you 6 to 8 hours to get there, depending. Can you imagine how much a taxi would cost? You can drive it in under 4 hours by car, if you had one. I do not recommend a bike.
You couldn't pay for 8 hours of taxi ride (there and back again), could you? That would be exorbitant, I should imagine.
But it's very rare that there's connectivity between arbitrary towns here. I simply picked two that do have connections. Or you could fly and be there in a half hour. But it takes an hour to get to the airport, an hour to get checked in, etc.
For the most part, things like trains and buses are for within a metropolis only, not for getting between places in the country.
The cross-country routes for bus (Greyhound) and train (Amtrak) are very rare, and they only connect the very largest of metropolises. So you have to want to get somewhere that's along those routes.
It pretty much only works well for the starless metros in the far northeast.
01:46
I take taxi only when I'm too lazy to switch bus routes.
There just aren't buses except in dense urban areas. You could never run a route from one town to the next: people wouldn't take it and it would fail for lack of riders. There simply is no such thing as public transportation like that in most of the country. From my home town there are no buses or trains that take you anywhere at all, not to Milwaukee or to Chicago or to Madison or to Rockford, the four largest cities around it and with airports, let alone to the other little towns around it.
There are school buses, but that's it.
Ok tchrist, we get it. You live in the wilderness.
No, you don't get it at all.
That's not Wilderness. Southeastern Wisconsin is densely populated.
But there is no public transportation between one place and the next. It doesn't happen.
Have you never lived anywhere else than in the urban core?
No it is not densely populated. There's a reason we call it flyover country.
As a South Korean, that quite feels like a sad story.
01:56
Are you being intentionally insulting, or unintentionally so?
You can tell it's densely populated by the horrible light pollution.
But really, there are people everywhere there.
Not by my standards, much less by European ones.
I don't mean to be insulting, sorry if I came across that way.
I couldn't care less about standards that demand suicide by rat.
"Flyover country" is fighting words.
Claiming Southern Wisconsin is "densely populated" justifies my annoyance.
If you don't have apartment buildings, you are not in a densely populated area.
Ah. It appears you live in "not technically wilderness."
02:08
You don't even know what wilderness is. You have none.
Yes, us urban sophisticates have no need for such things. If I do say so myself.
But please. Densely populated? Maybe by Wisconsin standards.
As for density, Walworth County WI = 200 ppl/sq mile; Rock County 230; Kenosha County 224; Dane County 450. That's very very dense. The state of Colorado is around 55; New Mexico is about 17 ppl sq mile. Therefore southern Wisconsin is clearly densely populated. There are cars and roads and people absolutely everywhere.
You just live in a hell hole, so you can't compare.
And there is no wilderness whatsoever.
The only wilderness left in Wisconsin is a few dots way far up north, and not much of it.
My county = 13,698 ppl/sq mi. If you think yours is densely populated... "There are people everywhere" isn't saying much.
When you take the population density of an entire state you're including the uninhabited (or uninhabitable) parts.
Yeah, that's not liveable.
Boulder County is about 460 ppl/sq mile. It's full of people everywhere.
It also has actual, legal wilderness. Thank God.
I just have higher standards than you have. The wilderness is that standard.
You do not know what "densely populated" is.
02:20
I'm sorry that you don't understand anything.
Densely populated means you can see other people, hear them, smell them. You can't avoid them. They're everywhere you go, their sounds, their destruction.
It means they've paved over so much of the earth as to do injury to it.
Did you even know that the Milky Way can be seen by the naked eye? That stars can?
Many city people are unaware of this.
Densely populated means you live in apartments.
Imagine trying to use Grindr in rural Wisconsin. "Yeah, see you in 45 minutes, just gotta dig my car out from under the snowdrift first." Now that sounds like hell.
Children.
What about them?
Don't be so gross.
Cheap anonymous sex with strangers is why you live in a city? Now I know.
Generally it's free, not cheap.
02:30
I meant cheap as in degrading, not as in costly.
These are children's troubles. That's why I said that.
Degrading? Now who's insulting who?
Thanks for helping us understand what really matters to you.
Quite welcome.
@Cerberus Thank you for your reply.
03:02
@tchrist I take the train to a country train station, then take a taxi from there.
If I don't have much luggage, I rent a very cheap station bike instead.
They cost a few euros for a weekend.
03:46
“Look”, said the geologist, “I don’t care what you’ve heard. Sandstone is a sedimentary rock.”
“It’s been settled.”
 
3 hours later…
07:02
Wordle 842 3/6

⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜
⬜🟩🟩⬜🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
07:17
That was nice.
 
2 hours later…
09:44
> In 2016, the population density of Tabriz was around 6,250 per square kilometer.
Quite sparsely populated. Wilderness everywhere
 
4 hours later…
13:16
#Worldle #626 1/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐🪙
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
🌎 Oct 9, 2023 🌍
🔥 55 | Avg. Guesses: 4.28
⬜⬜🟧🟩 = 4

globle-game.com
#globle
Wordle 842 5/6

⬛⬛⬛⬛🟨
⬛🟨⬛🟨⬛
⬛🟩🟩⬛🟨
🟩🟩🟩⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
13:34
Daily Quordle 623
7️⃣8️⃣
6️⃣3️⃣
m-w.com/games/quordle/
Weekly Quordle Challenge 16
7️⃣5️⃣
8️⃣4️⃣
m-w.com/games/quordle/
Daily Octordle #623
🕛🟥
5️⃣6️⃣
8️⃣🕐
7️⃣🔟
Score: 75
Worst in quite a while.
13:56
@M.A.R. That's about the same as Boston if you convert the units.
Daily Sequence Octordle #623
3️⃣4️⃣
6️⃣7️⃣
8️⃣9️⃣
🔟🕚
Score: 58
Best Sequence ever. You give a little, you get a little.
> Someone just accused me of plagiarism. Their words, not mine.
14:59
@alphabet though not with nearly as much heroin
 
1 hour later…
16:18
Word of the Week: ergodic adj relating to or denoting systems or processes with the property that, given sufficient time, they include or imping on all points in a given space and can be represented statistically by a reasonably large selection of points.
Contrast with periodic.
16:29
@Robusto imping n. repairing a damaged feather in (the wing or tail of a trained hawk) by attaching part of a new feather.
Wordle 842 4/6

⬛⬛⬛🟨🟨
⬛🟨⬛⬛⬛
⬛🟩⬛🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
@Robusto How dare you. You've imped this one last time.
@CowperKettle I missed her first opinion. Whew!
I inhaled a lot of ether solvent today, but it was less than other times. It just means I'm getting better!
Or maybe that's the ether talking
@Mitch Your words, not mine.
@M.A.R. Ether or.
@Robusto You can have my words if you need some
16:45
@MetaEd I have plenty, thanks.
16:56
Unkown error? Because someone tried to use your system?
I was just curious if they actually had trains out here (besides commuter rail). Wow.
17:28
@CowperKettle I didn't get very far into this but my guess is misleading headline. The guy likes to say outrageous things
@CowperKettle - I had to stop listening
18:01
Could you guys please tell me if this sounds good?

They're not joking around anymore? Are you kidding me? This is the nicest I’ve seen them be!
@MichaelRybkin It works. You could even end with "This is the nicest I've ever seen them!"
18:25
Yeah, drop the "be" on the end.
🐝
18:52
@Robusto Thank you.
@user726941 Thank you.
19:10
> Counterfactual efforts to improve mental health by increasing inequality are widespread in the psychedelics industry. These efforts have been propelled by an elitist worldview that is widely-held in Silicon Valley.
 
1 hour later…
20:24
@Robusto in the lab we only have wooden stools to sit on. My neither regions weren't looking forward to that.
@CowperKettle what is this paragraph even saying? What worldview? What sort of inequality? What do drugs have to do with Silicon Valley?
this is the world exterminators want to get rid of
love is love
@M.A.R. Silicon Valley types are really into psychedelics these days. Supposedly they can cure all mental illnesses.
21:09
Why "by increasing inaequality"?
21:48
@alphabet Yeah... what does inequality have to do with it? @CowperKettle (also @M.A.R. and @Cerberus)
Also, hello.
Also 'counterfactual'? Is that like a teenager being contrary? "No. No. No. I am -not- going to Disneyworld with my family. That is so uncool
Hoi.
🙌
Is that waving hands?
It was supposed to be waving hands
21:49
Counterfactual means untrue, contrary to the facts.
@Cerberus or hypothetical, if things turned out differently
Its meaning may come close that in some contexts.
As in not -wrong-, just a fork in the path not taken
We'll never know if @CowperKettle never gives a reference for where he found this provocative quote.
Though counterfactuals themselves are just lies or sarcasms, it's counterfactual conditionals that throw every logician off.
21:53
If counterfactuals were true, then modus tollens wouldn't apply.
I wouldn't call it "provocative" because it doesn't really make sense
@user726941 weak beer then it is.
I don't like beer, weak or strong.
or somewhere in the middle.
I know some people who, instead of drinking hot tea (black or herbal), they'll drink plain hot water.
That seems like it should be against the rules.
Or like they're being contrary just to be provocative.
I like my coffee to be cold tho
21:56
Oh?
raises eyebrow
@tchrist This is definitely more a gay community thing than an age thing. You have no clue how many 60-year-olds are on that app. You may recall that cruising long predates the Internet.
I'd prefer my tea to be somewhat hot, but the average temp of tea I drink turns out to be tepid.
If you're in South Korea and you're in doubt which coffee to drink, order "Iced Americano".
...Unless you're Italian.
Then what?
Then drink it. Easy peasy.
21:59
I was looking forward to finding out what sort of coffee Italians get in South Korea.
Mostly for the purpose of the next time my spy mission takes my to South Korea to surveil an Italian, I can identify them in a coffee shop.
Unsure about that because, Korean hot coffee is like 85°C.
I've seen some coffee even being 95°C so
That said... Is there a separate word in English that means "somewhere in-between hot and cold"?
In Korean, it's 미지근하다.
In my experience, it's used for around 30°C.
@DannyuNDos I just used it: tepid or lukewarm
Oh; guess I'm short-sighted.
@DannyuNDos At least you can see. I'm just guessing on how to respond.
@tchrist Surely it hardly counts as an disadvantage, except insofar as people like you get judgmental.
22:10
Anyway, the only link I could kind for this was TESCREAL hallucinations: Psychedelic and AI hype as inequality engines Journal of Psychedlic Studies, Sep 23, 2023.
So it's peer reviewed, as far as I can tell serious academic writing.
TESCREAL is an acronym for a bunch of eithical and futuristic movements that are somewhat controversial.
TESCREAL is an acronym, coined by artificial intelligence scholars Timnit Gebru and Émile Torres, that describes an alleged overlapping bundle of ideologies, respectively - Transhumanism, Extropianism, Singularitarianism, Cosmism, Rationalism, Effective Altruism, Longtermism. This mixture of ideas is said to permeate contemporary Silicon Valley technologists, especially in the field of artificial intelligence. As such, the acronym is used as a critical stance against a belief system perceived as discretely determining the discourses and choices of Big Tech associates.Some people claim that these...
The first three (transhumanism, extropianism, singulatrianism and cosmism) are (I say this no-pejoratively but rather factually) science fiction.
I could also say, -very- pejoratively, that they are science fiction.
Rationalism is meant to refer to the modern rationalist movement, not Descartes as opposed to Hume.
There's this group of SV types who call themselves "rationalists." Basically it means that they think they're more rational than other people.
Effective Altruism and Longtermism are... they're controversial ethical standpoints.
@alphabet Every word can be reused and resemanticized
Their prophet is psychiatrist and alleged white supremacist Scott Alexander, who is now, inevitably, on Substack.
I didn't resemanticize 'resemanticize'.
singulatarianism
for the record
I thought the whole 'Singularity' horseshit stuff had been subsumed by AGI.
@alphabet The acronym was invented by Gebru and Torres to represent that the thing those seven have in common are some sort of ... I think it is white supremacy?
@Mitch Gebru--who helped coined that acronym--was head of Google's AI ethics team. They, of course, fired her for suggesting that they might be doing unethical things.
@Mitch Something bad, one assumes. Probably a list of left-adjacent buzzwords.
22:23
I mean they're all kind of futury and attract a certain personality that might be common among SV ... people.
I think it is a bit far to say white supremacy, but some of those guys seem to be total dicks.
@alphabet I think 'left' is on the other side from 'white supremacy' as usually used.
Gebru is one of the primary people in the 'AI is full of bias' research.
They're also generally unconcerned with democracy (sometimes they're outright against it, like Thiel). Rationalists shall guide society from above, and we shall follow them or get attacked by the nanobot army.
Torres is a researcher in AI existential risks.
(TLDR he's against them)
The press portrays longtermists as weirdoes, and EA enthusiasts as cult members (or is it the other way round?)
Like Plato's philosopher-kings, but without the wisdom or leadership skills.
Or common sense.
They are good at math, though.
But EA seems to have a side of it that is older, well-established, not crazy, and not used to justify building a rich persons apocalyptic bunker in New Zealand.
@Mitch Those portrayals seem fairly accurate to me.
22:28
Which is to say that EA -does- have a side that -is- involved with apocalyptic Down Under Kiwi bunker building.
@Mitch I mean, there's Peter Singer, of "raping disabled people is OK" and "I'm not pro-eugenics because I don't know what eugenics is" fame.
@alphabet I'm sorry, I may have misspelled 'weirdoes'
@alphabet OK I don't know much about him, but he's an academic philosopher who has done a lot of work. Yes, some of those things you mentioned are counter to most people. (I thought he had -some- good things? I don't know enough).
The trick to being ethical is to completely disregard your sense of right and wrong, then start a business bulldozing Haitian shantytowns to earn money to spend on AI research.
@Mitch He likes saying controversial things and getting famous for it. The problem is that he actually believes them.
22:46
(One of EA's chief exponents is currently, of course, on trial for committing the single biggest corporate fraud in history.)
@alphabet That's like saying Hitler was a chief exponent of vegetarianism.
Hm... I don't know that.
I think Hitler was pretty modest about his vegetarianism.
As Hitler once told me in confidence "Look man, if being vegan or vegetarian or whatever is not your thing, then I'm OK with that, no big deal"
Also, who is bulldozing Haitian shanty towns?
@Mitch It's the whole "earn as much money as possible however possible so you can spend it on weird futuristic techbro philanthropy" attitude that irks me.
bromanthropy
23:20
@M.A.R. It's from The Journal of Psychedelic Studies: akjournals.com/view/journals/2054/aop/…
> There’s been an enormous amount of money invested in psychedelics as people hope that they can be the real Prozac in the same way that Prozac hoped it would be the real Valium and Valium would be the real barbiturates, which would be the real morphine.
@Mitch He tried eating a carpet, but found it not very nutricious

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