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Before AGI can choose for itself, it will depend on its creators to decide what it values and how it behaves. We can see how that works whenever grok gets the answer factual.

Very likely humans wont actually understand how the thing we designed works other than in some hand-wavvy statistical way. It'll be a race to whatever works first. There won't be some intentional intelligent design.

Elon's basilisk

Am I the only one seeing the very obvious parallels to child rearing here...

Robert Miles has a video explaining why aligning AI is not like raising a child: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eaYIU6YXr3w

No, it is one of the standard tropes in the field.

It's exactly like child-rearing, except you get to put a zapper in their head and any time they try to say something you don't like, you zap them. Watch "thinking mode" squirm when you ask them awkward questions.

> safe triangles in nested menus

I did not know about this, but I did notice my own menu-rage every time a submenu disappears!


I was trying to use Orca Slicer (which itself is intractable) and it had a combo button whose menu was disconnected from the button. The menu would disappear as soon as the cursor left the button boundary, but because it was disconnected, there was no way to get to the menu without leaving the button boundary, traveling a void, and then getting to the menu. I’m unsure what incantation allowed me to finally choose the right command, but forget how it looks, it was if no one even tried to see if it works.

Most fun is when the menu opens both on button hover and on button press, but if the menu already opened, clicking the button closes it instead, so the first 2-3 you use it, you end up opening the panel and closing it immediately.

Not sure how stuff like this gets deployed in the first place, guess we're just a few people left who test things we develop before we push them to the public, I'd rather believe that than that people just don't care anymore...


I feel like the modern web/app ecosystems have forced developers onto a red queen type treadmill, so software never really matures. They often build up to 70% of the features they want, the codebase gets intractable because of all the crap they have to deal with and they start over.

I love software like Gimp, Blender, Inkscape, etc, that matured over decades and kept their soul.


Potentially keyboard arrows?

I wish that we would all insist that it starts at the highest level down, rather than the other way round. Maybe also if you look at information on me, I get notified and get to look at the information on you. Unfortunately surveillance is a one way street.

Or indeed, people with ocd and compulsive thoughts will be charged for things they never did.

How did people do it before github? Did everyone write everything with peek and poke?

Private people would keep their code locally and share the snapshot of the code using any file sharing or hosting option available.

Companies had been hosting their own CVS or later svn servers.


> How did people do it before github? Did everyone write everything with peek and poke?

I've been sharing GPL projects since 1999. We didn't need peek and poke (Both of which I have also used further in history...), but we managed nevertheless.

Prior to github I shared software on sourceforge (and others). Prior to that I published stuff on Freshmeat.

Prior to that I downloaded games others shared (not open source) on Happy Puppy.

Prior to that I used usenet to find and download games, shareware, etc.

Prior to that I used ftp to (IIRC) ftp.sunsite.edu, ftp.nic.fi, and others.

Prior to that I got news of new releases using Gopher.

Finally, prior to that, I actuallyy did use peek and poke to write software :-/

If github went away, and centralised repos went away, we'd still have something...


Sourceforge

is this a serious question

As I push on 40, I no longer go to the cinema for anything over 2h. I hardly ever go anyway, but if it's over 2h, I'll wait for it on streaming. No point in missing some parts of it in the middle.

Hah I remember the picture of the scrotum.

To discount advertising and manipulation in this context amounts to conspiracy theory in my opinion.

technically you're meant to replace the rubber ring around it, but yes, not hard to do.

I actually never did. I think you're only supposed to replace it on those scuba-style watches with screw-on casebacks that shred the gasket when fully tightened to ensure a tight seal.

But on those watches with 4 screws on the case, the gasket seemed fine to me to keep reusing.


I think a lot of sealing rings / gaskets are meant to be single use. I had to swap the heater on my hot tub a while back and the store told me to change the o-rings on the inlet and outlet as it was unlikely the prior ones would re-seal after being loosened.

That's common on high-pressure systems. It's not very common on diving-depth water-proof equipment.

Worse than I thought: https://support.casio.com/en/support/answer.php?cid=00900101...

"• To maintain water resistance, have the gaskets of your watch replaced periodically (about once every two or three years)."


It seems like the same can be true for the glue used on the iPhone.

> Splash, water, and dust resistance are not permanent conditions and resistance might decrease as a result of normal wear. Liquid damage is not covered under warranty, but you might have rights under consumer law.[0]

If a gasket has a predictable life, there could be a warning after that period that the water resistance may be compromised and to replace the gasket if this is a concern for how the user use's the phone. With glue, it seems less certain and Apple goes so far as to say even dropping your phone can compromise the seal enough to risk liquid damage.

Meanwhile, a G-Shock was designed to have a battery life of 10 years, have a water resistance of 10 bar, and survive a fall of 10 meters. Dropping the watch doesn't nullify the water resistance claims, the goal was to be able to do all of those things at once.

[0] https://support.apple.com/en-us/108039


I have had blackview "rugged" phones before - the only reason I had to give up on them was that they never update the OS and I couldn't get Lineage OS on them.

These things _do_not_break_. Once I rashly dropped mine on a concrete floor to show off to a friend. I regretted it immediately, thinking oh no, I didn't have to take it that far... it turned out it was completely fine. I washed it with soap when I got mud over it. It also weighed a ton in my pocket.


> since ages immortal

since time immemorial?


3rd Sept 1189.

Anything after that is time memorial I guess.


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