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00:38
Could you please tell me if this sounds alright to a native speaker?

Are you going to be out filming tomorrow night? I'm visiting Manchester and planing on shooting a nightlife video tomorrow. We can link up if you want, so I learn something from a local.
@MichaelRybkin Good, but try ending like this: "I'd like to link up if you have the time. I'd love to learn things from a local perspective."
There are many ways to say that. I'm going for a bit more polite than direct, since you're asking a favor.
01:06
"Link up".
 
2 hours later…
02:53
@jlliagre Robotic?
03:12
@user726941 when I joined the mod team, I wanted it to be easier for others to type my name
"There was a young man from Peru,
Whose limericks stopped at line two.
But with some support,
And words to escort,
He rhymed all the way till line two!"
Australian of the day: Back o' Bourke -- extremely remote place
There was a young man from Peru / whose limericks stopped at line two. / He tried to write five / But he didn't survive / When Castillo attempted a coup.
(Edited and revised to reflect current events.)
03:28
:)
Actually, I pasted a variant produced by ChatGPT, over in the C# chatroom: chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/7/c
03:56
@CowperKettle Ah. That explains why the last line ("He rhymed all the way till line two") didn't make any sense.
HAMAS killed a theoretical physicist born in the Urals, along with his wife e1.ru/text/incidents/2023/10/11/72796649
He's been living in Israel since the early 1990s
Born in the Urals, studied at the Kharkiv Institute (a high class institute for math and physics), and then wrote scientific papers, and moved to Israel
Maybe the solution is to just merge Israel and Palestine into a single state, with two official languages.
04:51
> The 2022-2023 Journal's Impact IF of Environmental Science and Pollution Research is 5.19, which is just updated in 2023.
The journal has an impact factor of 5, and yet it has no human editors who actually read through articles? O_O
 
1 hour later…
05:53
@CowperKettle Main issue: if Palestinian refugees returned into that merged state, then Israeli Jews would likely become a minority in the resulting country, a bit of a potential problem for them.
@CowperKettle Let's hope this destroys the whole impact-factor stuff and the publishing insanity.
06:11
@Cerberus How then to quickly assess the quality of a journal?
@CowperKettle There shouldn't be a need.
Academics in the field will know.
Without quantification.
How then to quickly assess who is the real academic in the field?
People working at respectable universities?
You can make a list of reputable journals.
But it doesn't have to be quantified.
You live in a country where a respectable university might be really so. But in Russia a respectable university can be infested with all sorts of crooks and sharlatans, together with real scientists.
And there is no quick fix for this.
No, indeed.
In that case, one will need to go by personal reputation.
06:19
Russians are used to the fact that when a doctor prescribes you several pills, you go on the Internet to figure out which of these pills you should not buy - because it's a placebo, produced and prescribed in full accordance with the decisions of the Ministry of Health, whose former head is still in the upper echelons of power, and still goes by the moniker Madame Arbidol (Arbidol is the placebo drug foisted on millions of Russians at every clinic)
My mother was prescribed Arbidol a month ago.
At the state outpatient clinic.
Placebos are not good for public trust.
Even though they may work...
@CowperKettle The one on the right with big ears is made of flesh and bones, the one on the left is indeed a robot.
07:07
Wordle 844 4/6

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2 hours later…
08:50
Wordle 844 5/6

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09:38
Poland-Lithuania Commonwealth in 1667.
10:25
@CowperKettle They are good at speech but no so good at spelling ;-)
Happens to the best of us :)
Yuo bet!
> Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness,
Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun;
Conspiring with him how to load and bless,
With fruit the vines that round the thatch-eves run;

To offer bounty to both beast and man,
With nature's harvest, a plentiful display;
The orchard yields its treasures in a grand plan,
As golden sunbeams dance upon the hay.

The air is crisp, with whispers of sweet delight,
As autumn paints the world in vibrant hues;
Apple and pear, a cornucopia in sight,
Nature's masterpiece, a gift she bestows to amuse.
ChatGPT of the day.
I asked him to contunue Keats's "To Autumn" poets.org/poem/autumn
Not bad for an LLM.
Provided that it can only "feel" letters, and is not yet connected to sights, sounds, fragrances, etc.
I'm having this heaviness in the stomach, and now bloating too. I wonder if this "narrowing of the colon at hepatic flexure" can somehow be the culprit. It's on the right, but I feel heavy always on the left, though.
I'll go to the gastro doc again, but she's an old overworked lady.
Sverdlovsk Oblast has a deficiency of doctors, they have left in droves.
And this was the right thing to do.
I should read up on Botswana.
A Wagner fighter, former convict, returned to his hometown in Volgograd Oblast and promptly raped two teenagers, one of whom managed to flee and report him to the police. v1.ru/text/criminal/2023/10/10/72795467
Now he's back in jail.
He had a kind of holidays consisting of 6 months of fighting and some weeks of drinking and making love. Now back to jail. Maybe people like this should be researched by neuroscientists.
What if there are some genetic variations or metabolic derangements or something else predisposing to poor cognitive self-control.
10:49
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad ns for domain in answer, potentially bad keyword in answer, username similar to website in answer (155): What is the term for the little viewing window with a sliding cover in a castle or convent?‭ by Perth Cars Removal‭ on english.SE
Because surely he returned with a lot of money. Why not just make love with women legally, without getting to jail.
As a teenager, he was known for sniffing glue. Which is quite toxic to the brain.
11:06
A Russian schoolboy who became famous in 2016 after making photos of himself in a local bog, produced a remake
He has grown up.
> Aspects of intensive therapy of diabetic ketoacidosis in pediatric practice
Does it look good - "In pediatric practice"?
I sometimes replace it with just "in children".
But this is a headline of a paper, so I'm trying to be close to the Russian original.
11:50
Interesting how we lose our baby teeth
But we keep our kid knees.
Thanks to the loss of other people's teeth, dentists have bee's knees.
12:37
@Robusto As usual, thank you very much once again for your invaluable help.
@CowperKettle it works well.
Much superior to "in children" in this context
@Cerberus IME there has always been a lot of subjectivity in academia, and the numbers partially alleviate that. A knowledgeable reviewer reading a terrible article, infuriated at the shoddy work, will check the institution, find out it's a Chinese/Indian/Iranian university, and develop a heavy bias against any future papers from said institution in the future
12:57
@M.A.R. Thank you!
The truth is that there are quite good safeguards in institutions in developed nations against such embarrassment, but everywhere else the good is bunched up with the bad.
And of course I'm not referring to myself, I'm not even nominally a researcher yet.
13:12
Wordle 844 6/6

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@M.A.R. And yet we see published papers in developed countries getting excoriated for cheating. Where will it end?
There's currently an article in The New Yorker about two authors of a paper faking data independently and unbeknownst to one another. I haven't read it yet, but it looks interesting.
13:31
@Robusto I like "unbeknownst". The first time I saw it, I thought it was a German word :-)
13:46
@jlliagre in German it's another word for 'sausage'
@M.A.R. :)
unbeknownstwurst
A good nickname, with zero google finds.
Geezis, don't you people have jobs?
It's a perfectly ordinary word, apparently unbeknownst to present company.
@jlliagre German wouldn't have a w in that position, I'm pretty sure.
I don't think they use it as a semi-vowel.
But my German is rusty, so who knows?
14:02
@Robusto Ten years from now, probably less, there will be an article in The New Yorker about two authors of a paper who are both shocked to find out that the other was an AI.
3
@MetaEd Don't even ...
I'm already nostalgic for the days of Alvin Toffler's Future Shock. How quaint it seems now.
2
I'm nostalgic for the days when I was in grade 1 and dreamed of the upcoming Communism.
I'm nostalgic for the future. This future.
So: $20 says this stupid, stupid war ends with Israel annexing Gaza, committing various atrocities, and creating another massive refugee crisis. The first nakba to be broadcast on TikTok.
Hang on to your keys when you leave; you'll need them for the protests twenty years from now.
Noun: نَكْبَة • (nakba) f (plural نَكَبَات‎ (nakabāt))
  1. catastrophe, disaster
  2. ‏النَّكْبَة‎ ― an-nakba ― Nakba
  3. failure, fiasco
Instance noun of نَكَبَ‎ (nakaba, “to afflict, distress”), from the root ن ك ب‎ (n-k-b).
@alphabet I once hoped that everything will somehow get peaceful there, but then I stopped hoping. My whole life there's something going on there.
14:17
The Nakba (Arabic: النكبة, romanized: an-Nakbah, lit. 'the "disaster", "catastrophe", or "cataclysm"'), also known as the Palestinian Catastrophe, was the destruction of Palestinian society and homeland in 1948, and the permanent displacement of a majority of the Palestinian Arabs. The term is used to describe both the events of 1948 and the ongoing occupation of the Palestinians in the Palestinian territories (the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip), as well as their persecution and displacement in the Palestinian territories and in Palestinian refugee camps throughout the region.The foundational...
Yes, it's all horrible and nobody knows how to solve this.
14:46
@CowperKettle It's like the news from there never really changes.
@Robusto The movie looked pretty out of date 30 years ago (when I saw it)
@MetaEd Cripes... reading comprehension... slowing down... like molasses
14:59
@CowperKettle A lot of vocabulary in there that is very misleading 'awareness', 'conscious', 'learn' 'intelligence'.
And then he makes the usual sci-fi leap from 'we don't understand how these work' into 'they might escape control' and 'writing their own code to modify themselves'.
15:29
@Mitch Maybe "the thing that can predict more efficiently is allowed to control".
If there will be an AI engine that can efficiently predict weather, humans will rely on it for this.
This means that it will control humanity, to an extent. Because airliners and ships will adjust their routes taking into account its weather predictions.
And gradually, AI will thus insinuate itself as part of humanity's structure.
Without any conscious will or malice.
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Manually reported answer (batch report: post 1 out of 2) (93): Appropriate preposition to go with "concerned"‭ by akfakamli8‭ on english.SE
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Manually reported answer (batch report: post 2 out of 2) (93): Appropriate preposition to go with "concerned"‭ by akfakamli8‭ on english.SE
@CowperKettle Replace 'AI engine' with 'weather network model (a big set of PDEs)'
Already done.
or cars
> Monkey survives for two years after gene-edited pig kidney transplant. Survival time is one of the longest for any inter-species transplant — and moves pig organs closer to human use. nature.com/articles/d41586-023-03176-2
Cars have changed the entire worlds cities and one could say, with its need for fuel, caused many deaths in the Middle East.
> In principle, Mohiuddin agrees that some of these edits might be “overkill”, but he is optimistic that one day there will be genetically modified pigs that eliminate the need for immunosuppressive drugs.
Wow.
@Mitch Yes.
And AI will want even more energy.
15:45
@CowperKettle Yeah I've seen articles about that
much older ones
I haven't seen a good comparison with non-AI computations, like how much energy does an app like Tinder take up, or how much compute to run a drone light display (instead of fireworks).
16:20
@Mitch Isn't most of the energy consumed by the Internet video streaming?
But, yeah, bitcoin mining and artificial intelligence are probably the biggest consumers outside of the Internet.
@Cerberus I haven't seen a comparison of either of those with consumption by other categories. But bitcoin operations are inherently supposed to use energy per time to ensure trust so I can see that it is plausible that it uses a lot that the rest of us weren't expecting. As to AI, that's underspecified. If you say an LLM training run, then that's very quantifiable, but I still haven't seen that compared side by side with a comparable application.
Which is to say I don't know.
@Mitch I don't know either, but I have heard that AI, in whatever capacity, buys up tons of video cards.
Exactly like bitcoin, they use farms of video cards.
And those use a ton of power.
That is why Yudkowsky wanted to forbid such farms, to slow down AI.
Bitcoin already uses as much electricity as a country.
GPT suggests that cryotocurrencies use about 100-250 TWh of energy per year.
How much is a "farm" of video cards?
A lot.
I don't know.
16:35
np
@Cerberus Which country? Nauru or China?
@Mitch I think maybe Australia or something.
In other news, I can't make jokes about the intractable Palestine/Israel problem anymore
But be aware that the production of electricity is only a smaller part of the world's total energy use.
Much burns fuel directly.
@Mitch Why not?
The powers that be?
16:40
@Cerberus You're right. Here goes: A Palestinian, an Israeli, an American and a lawyer were riding on a train together.
Whither?
@Cerberus That's not part of the joke, but let's say... Timbuktu?
> According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the world’s total final energy consumption in 2019 was 418 exajoules (EJ). The share of world total final consumption by source in 2019 was as follows 1:

Coal: 9.5%
Oil: 40.4%
Natural gas: 16.4%
Biofuels and waste: 10.4%
Electricity: 19.7%
Other: 3.6%
@Mitch That could be dangerous.
@Cerberus I mean it's a hot ride, and the Boko Haram are active in that area, and they're trying to get rid of the French...
cripes
any suggestions?
Boko Haram, really?
That far north?
16:43
well, that's northern Nigeria... which is not exactly that close to Timbuktu
So the oil percentage is number 1, by about double.
> In a middle-ground scenario, by 2027 A.I. servers could use between 85 to 134 terawatt hours (Twh) annually. That’s similar to what Argentina, the Netherlands and Sweden each use in a year, and is about 0.5 percent of the world's current electricity use.
From the NYT article that @CowperKettle just linked
@user726941 Yeah also because lots of vehicles use oil products, probably.
So the Palestinian says "Our falafel is the best and it is known world-wide. IT is so good and we make so much of it, that we just don't care, we can throw it out of the window". And the Palestinian opens the train window and throws the big falafel sandwich out.
Then the Israeli says "No no no. -Our- falafel is the best and it is known world-wide. It is so good and we make so much of it, that we just don't care, we can throw it out of the window". And the Israeli opens the train window and throws the big falafel sandwich (that he was just eating) out.
I never did figure out why an algebra 1 textbook would refuse to use the word "percentage" when teaching percents :-/ any ideas?
16:52
Then the American says "No no no no. -We- have the best lawyers in the word."
2014.
Pale orange, or yellowing salmon, is/was Al Qaeda.
@user726941 Hmm what do they use instead, proportion?
Mali. Timbuktu is in Mali... I think on the Niger river
Timbouctou is in the southern part of the circle with the unnamed colour.
which eventually flows into Nigeria... but I think Boko Haram's influence is north of it?
@Cerberus yes, or some variation there of.
16:55
@Cerberus and the green is Boko haram... so fairly far apart.
They avoided using the word "percentage" at all costs.
well anyway, the Malians (people from Mali?) are not particularly happy with the French at the moment.
I suppose because the concept is called proportion. A percentage is just one kind of expression of a proportion.
And you can't what, "the percentage of people doing x" is you want to be extremely super correct.
@user726941 In places you think would be natural? Or are you saying they're explicitly showing hate for the word 'percentage'?
@Mitch Yeah. Boko Haram had forays into neighbouring countries around Lake Chad, but probably not as far as Mali.
16:58
They used "percent of" a lot instead
@user726941 sounds OK to me
My intuition would agree with the book.
tomato vs tomato
Maybe in Dutch I would feel better about using percentage than in English.
I am really glad that the days of the IS are past.
What days are those?
@Mitch in places where it would be natural
They didn't say it explicitly, but they avoided using it completely
17:08
@user726941 Don't you remember, when they conquered large parts of Iraq and Syria around 2014, raked in heaps of oil money, beheaded and tortured and killed and raped many thousands in their territories, and killed thousands in terrorist attacks around the world?
Oh ISIS
(IS)^2
Yes I do recall
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in answer, potentially bad keyword in answer (89): What is the term for the little viewing window with a sliding cover in a castle or convent?‭ by Janet Lucy‭ on english.SE
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
The smoke detector doesn't like me.
@SmokeDetector why
17:49
Wordle 844 4/6

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where do I take disputes?
I have flagged my own question and gotten no response
 
1 hour later…
19:03
ABQ Balloon Festival Week.
Not often you get up close and personal with a lot of balloons.
Hot-air balloons, I mean.
Well, except for the ones you encounter at political rallies and the halls of Congress.
19:36
@goodguy5 can you identify the question
This one?
0
Q: Phrase Request: Lyric Subversion

goodguy5I've noticed this quite often from Disney sound tracks. Lyrics are in a certain rhyming scheme - one line happens and the next line approaches the end of the line, but the last word subverts the rhyme. I have looked at this question and feel it's related, but not the same effect. Example: "In Summer

howdy futhark ... o wait that's not right
19:57
@Robusto I always hope that airships someday become popular again.
20:11
Come, take a trip in my Air-ship,
Come, take a sail 'mong the stars,
Come, have a ride around Venus,
Come, have a spin around Mars.

No one to watch while we're kissing,
No one to see while we spoon.
Come, take a trip in my Air-ship,
And we'll visit the man in the moon.
Wow. Recorded in 1904. This is.. 119 years ago
John W. Myers (c. 1864 – c. 1919?), who was usually credited as J. W. Myers, was an American baritone singer, who recorded widely in the United States between the early 1890s and early 1917. His recordings, including "Two Little Girls in Blue" (1893), "The Sidewalks of New York" (1895), "Just Tell Them That You Saw Me" (1895), "When You Were Sweet Sixteen" (1901), "On a Sunday Afternoon" (1902), "Way Down In Old Indiana" (1902), and "In the Good Old Summer Time" (1902), were among the most popular of the period. == Biography == Little is known of his life, although he is believed to have been born...
The record is probably out of copyright.
Could be uploaded to Wikimedia.
I should add this to my mp3 player for jogging.
It will be the oldest record I've jogged to.
This was the previous oldest song I've listened to while jogging.
Recorded in 1918.
William Thomas Murray (May 25, 1877 – August 17, 1954) was one of the most popular singers in the United States in the early 20th century. While he received star billing in Vaudeville, he was best known for his prolific work in the recording studio, making records for almost every record label of the era. Murray was the best-selling recording artist of the first quarter of the 20th century, selling over 300 million records during the phonograph era. == Life and career == Billy Murray was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Patrick and Julia (Kelleher) Murray, immigrants from County Ker...
Blue Amberol Records was the trademark for a type of cylinder recording manufactured by the Edison Records company in the U.S. from 1912 to 1929. Made from a nitrocellulose compound developed at the Edison laboratory—though occasionally employing Bakelite in its stead and always employing an inner layer of plaster—these cylinder records were introduced for public sale in October 1912. The first release in the main, Popular series was number 1501, and the last, 5719, issued in October 1929 just as the Edison Records concern closed up shop. The Edison company also maintained separate issue number...
I wonder if they are all on torrents. Even though pirating cylinder records is a crime. You would not download a Ford T.
20:37
@CowperKettle speak for yourself
"You Wouldn't Steal a Car" is the first sentence of a public service announcement created in July 2004, which was part of the anti-copyright infringement campaign "Piracy. It's a crime." It was created by the Federation Against Copyright Theft and the Motion Picture Association of America in cooperation with the Intellectual Property Office of Singapore, and appeared in theaters internationally from 2004 until 2007, and on many commercial DVDs during the same period as a clip before the main menu or other previews appear, as either an unskippable or skippable video. The announcement depicts either...
What BS analogy
20:52
A mosaic recently unearthed in a villa at Pompeii
> I met a girl who was a solid 10 but she hated Harry Potter
Now she is a 9¾
@MetaEd Thank you! This is more recent!
this album is a gem
Yes, a great record!
It's amazing, but in their examples (videos in the article) I could not recognize some reconstituted words pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2300255120
Maybe with context, it would be easier. Still an amazing achievement.
Locked-in persons would be able to communicate.
 
1 hour later…
22:06
#waffle628 4/5

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🔥 streak: 7
wafflegame.net
Ralph Douglas Kenneth Reye ( "rye"; 5 April 1912 – 16 July 1977) was an Australian pathologist. In 1958, he discovered a muscular disease that was later named nemaline myopathy. A brain disease he and his colleagues described in 1963 is eponymously known as Reye's syndrome. == Life and career == Reye attended Townsville Grammar School and the University of Sydney, where he completed undergraduate studies in medicine and was awarded a MBBS in 1937. He was later awarded an MD from the University of Sydney in 1945. Reye joined the staff of the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children (RAHC) in 1939 as...
A guy who saved a lot of people by discovering a syndrome named after him.
22:45
@goodguy5 That's because most of the flags here these days are handled by me and that's not turning out to be very sustainable. But it's handled now
23:38
Hi guys. Check this sentence for me please:

War can be sometimes entertaining.
@MichaelRybkin Usually adverbs like "sometimes" go after the first auxiliary verb, so you would say "War can sometimes be entertaining." The adverb can also go at the start or end of the sentence; I would say "War can be entertaining sometimes."
(The rules for correct adverb placement are, unfortunately, very complicated.)

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