brbposting

joined 2 years ago
[–] brbposting@sh.itjust.works 3 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

Damn sad, those poor people

[–] brbposting@sh.itjust.works -1 points 8 hours ago

Yes &

For every person like you

There’s at least 1/10 of a person doing their best to commit fraud. Maybe they’ll pretend they found a hair in their food, maybe worse:

Source of that is a terrible rap song, Punchmade Dev - Wire Fraud Tutorial

These are the kind of criminals support agents deal with all day long. Then you and I come along and nobody trusts us.

Well whatever is after Veo 3 should make all our lives easier. Hey we can always face-to-face barter whatever we whittle!

[–] brbposting@sh.itjust.works 1 points 18 hours ago

Ally Bank whoop! Online only bank. Used to be unlimited free ATM withdrawals, now $10/mo reimbursed. Plenty for most!

[–] brbposting@sh.itjust.works 2 points 20 hours ago

You & @basis@sh.itjust.works — thank you, very nice!

I imagine even the fk_ai crowd appreciate the non-gimmick stuff as long as it is nothing like a chatbot

Tiny example from Gmail:

This is all over, and it can be super useful from time to time.

They say “f AI!” but I mean sure they don’t want better searches than were possible five years ago? If it’s not sycophantic and confabulatory etc. etc.

Good point on intrusivity

PS

PS: I translated news from Iran this week using AI tools and using traditional translators. Who would advocate for the garbage traditional translation—soon as I went the “AI” route, it was suddenly possible to understand what the journalists were trying to say. That doesn’t mean I want translators to lose their jobs, it just means I know what the best available technology is and how to use it to get a job done. (And does not mean just because it translates well that I will also trust it to summarize the article for me.)

Not like any of these people are coming from fur farms where they were personally abused and need a space to talk about its ridiculousness

I suppose they are incredibly small, disturbed people

[–] brbposting@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 days ago

So the other day I’m traveling in my pollen conveyance, right

[–] brbposting@sh.itjust.works 3 points 3 days ago

QUICK

nobody who farms is poor by any means

COPY PASTE THIS TO A FARMING FORUM

[–] brbposting@sh.itjust.works 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Def rag on the USA cuz USA is sucking hard rn, please

Small introspection might be worth considering on this 1:1 comment here

 

I want to translate the news that people in Iran are reading. I found a source that works but this state news agency website will not load for me:

https://www.irna.ir/

I’ve tried multiple methods:

But no English speakers report any problems online?

 

cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/38722302

Sam & Jony introduce io || OpenAI's Sam Altman & Apple's former iPhone designer Jony Ive

Source

openai.com/sam-and-jony

 

Source

openai.com/sam-and-jony

 

Bode Ioiô (c. 1915 – 1931) was a celebrated goat who became a folk figure in the Brazilian city of Fortaleza during the early 20th century, particularly in the 1920s. Originally brought to the city by drought migrants, he gained fame for wandering the city center, frequenting bohemian circles, and eventually becoming the subject of a protest vote where he was unofficially "elected" city councilman in 1922. After his death, Ioiô was taxidermied and displayed at the Museu do Ceará. He became a cultural icon of the region.

 

Feeling blessed and thinking about folks who operate a “hardware store” in Kibera, Africa’s largest slum:

(As I recall, they’d recover rusty screws and bent nails from the pig manure-laden ditches; watched a YouTube video years ago.)

Or less interestingly for some, maybe your experience vs. the top 100 elites’. Though for many of us that gap might not seem too notable (if I can choose where to apply/work, choose what to eat, choose leisure activities, etc., who cares about zero or fifty yachts at that point—not losing sleep).

Monaco (people who care about) Yacht(s) Show:

Yes, the images focus on wealth, but I’m thinking about the freedom and the power, or lack thereof. Perhaps y’all have read good books on this subject. Closing with the Oxford English Dictionary definition of agency:

Action, capacity to act. - Ability or capacity to act or exert power; active working or operation; action, activity. 1606–

 

Ever experienced the beauty of Lemmy automagically refreshing when a new comment is posted?

It just came to mind how many duplicative comments that feature has prevented.

Thanks for this small quality of life boost, and since it might be my only post like this for a while, thank you to all those making this place work 🙇‍♂️ you’re either bringing your IQ or EQ here (or more likely both), keep it up!

 

It would save not one but two entire taps! Think of the milliseconds!

Especially when posting images, it’s nice to confirm you are indeed posting a meme and not a screenshot of your tax returns. And formatting can always get messed up once in a blue moon.

So, the existing flow is to write your comment/post, tap the three dots, tap preview, review your comment/post, tap done, and tap post.

The new flow would be to enable “preview by default“ in settings once. Then, write your comment/post, tap preview, review your comment/post, and tap post.

 

Or can try restarting both devices, of course, or signing out of your Apple Account (iCloud) on both devices.

If you found this via Google as intended, welcome! (Apparently this is now the one page on the public web with this exact AirPlay error message written out verbatim.)

 

Issue present for the past week or two on the latest and previous latest iOS versions. Likely unreliable to reproduce, but just experienced it here:

https://lemmy.world/comment/14264451

I tapped on the GIF, swiped down (… or up?) to close it, and the GIF zoomed in. From that point it’s difficult to close the GIF with one finger, but zooming out with two fingers works fine.

 

Reposting a comment I just made:

Course you got some weirdos too

Billionaire @ the world’s most popular burger joint every morning, paying with exact change thanks to his wife, picking it up himself*

*in his hail damaged car

 

alt-text (full)

Screenshot of news:

“Dying boy, 15, gets wish: losing virginity Chicago Sun Times ^ | 12/23/01 | BY BENJAMIN ERRETT Posted on 12/23/2001, 6:26:24 AM by Mopp4

A terminally ill boy had his dying wish granted in Australia this month, but ethicists are still at odds over whether it was the right thing to do. The wish was not for a trip to Disneyland or to meet a famous sports star. Instead, the 15-year-old wanted to lose his virginity before he died of cancer. The boy, who remains anonymous but was called Jack by the Australian media, did not want his parents to know about his request. Because of his many years spent in the hospital, he had no girlfriend or female friends. Jack died last week, but not before having his last wish granted. Without the knowledge of his parents or hospital staff, friends arranged an encounter with a prostitute outside of hospital premises. All precautions were taken, and the organizers made sure the act was fully consensual. The issue has sparked fierce debate over the legal and ethical implications of granting the boy's request. By law, Jack was still a child, and the woman involved could in theory face charges for having sex with a minor. The debate was sparked by the hospital's child psychologist, who wrote a letter to "Life Matters," a radio show in which academics debate ethical and moral dilemmas. The scenario was presented in the abstract, with no details about the boy's identity.

"He had been sick for quite a long period, and his schooling was very disrupted, so he hadn't had many opportunities to acquire and retain friends, and his access to young women was pretty poor," the psychologist said recently in an interview with Australia's Daily Telegraph newspaper. "But he was very interested in young women and was experiencing that surge of testosterone that teenage boys have." Hospital staff initially wanted to pool donations to pay for a prostitute, but the ethical and legal implications prevented them from doing so. The psychologist presented members of the clergy with the dilemma and found no clear answer. "It really polarized them," he said. "About half said, 'What's your problem?' And the other half said [it] demeans women and reduces the sexual act to being just a physical one."

Dr. Stephen Leeder, dean of medicine at the University of Sydney and a "Life Matters" panelist, said the issue was a difficult one. "I pointed out that public hospitals operated under the expectation that they would abide by state law," he said. "While various things doubtless are done that are at the edge of that, it's important the public has confidence that the law will be followed." Jack's psychologist, who works with children in palliative care, said the desire was driven in part by a need for basic human contact. "In a child dying over a long period of time, there is often a condition we call 'skin hunger,'" he said. The terminally ill child yearns for non-clinical contact because "mostly when people touch them, it's to do something unpleasant, something that might hurt." Leeder called the diagnosis "improbable." Judy Lumby, the show's other panelist and the executive director of the New South Wales College of Nursing, argued that the details as presented made it abundantly clear the boy's wish ought to be granted. "I said that I would try my darndest as a nurse to do whatever I could to make sure his wish came true," she said. "I just think we are so archaic in the way we treat people in institutions. Certainly, if any of my three daughters were dying, I'd do whatever I could, and I'm sure that you would, too." National Post”

Source

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