AmericanEconomicThinkTank

joined 1 week ago
[–] AmericanEconomicThinkTank@lemmy.world 2 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

To quote some of my most respected and honorable colleagues on the hill:

"Stephen Miller plays with dolls"

Kinda like that other guy, once I ripped my cd collection to digital, just didn't even get into streaming.

Still make mixtapes the old fashioned way for my partner (corny lol I know) and I buy the occasional remaster at a local thrift shop, or the old baked out hippie running a music / instrument shop.

It's an honest joy.

I try to curate zines from around the world into local exhibitions, do hand translating alongside if need be, imitate the original paper best I can.

It's kinda fun lol. That and kinda similarly, but I love♡ spending time on online software radio sites, just listening into different channels like I was there myself.

Oh I can tell you from experience, like full on star wars, hate and anger literally does this to you.

[–] AmericanEconomicThinkTank@lemmy.world 19 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

I had an Aunt, reserved woman, but honest. She was the first woman born in the entire family to be born with the right to vote. She managed to chisel herself a career in civil service for her entire adult life, never married, through all the rather distasteful attitudes she'd deal with on a daily basis.

Even she kept a copy of the constitution in her purse, a document that forbade her own mother from being able to vote well into adulthood.

Way I see it, our nation as such beautifully unceasing promise behind it, and they're damn afraid of that fact.

[–] AmericanEconomicThinkTank@lemmy.world 5 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Lol sorta. For me, I run official accounts in these sorts of circles mainly because I despise modern corporate social media platforms, I'd still be on newsgroups if it weren't so much work lol.

So, I do enjoy seeing notifs, mainly in the hope (like every other boring ass economist) that I get to have some dialog on an interesting topic.

[–] AmericanEconomicThinkTank@lemmy.world 12 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

I miss the Car Talk days of NPR, just on my commute to night class today I get to hear them make the statement "Democrats shut down the government."

God this shit is disheartening.

Interesting, I'm starting to see what you mean there. Comparable to US steel quality dropping and being supplanted by Japan, or currently China.

Hell even the axis started using compressed cardboard by the end of the war.

I recall hearing the statements about bone health increasing in the generations after the collapse of the Rome and the such. That ring true? What piqued your interest in the era?

If that's what you're facing, maybe try thinking of it like you're trying to get to know them a little. If you start talking about say, your recent effort to make sambal oelek for use in say noodles, asking if they're familiar with the name, talk about how it has some origin in French cooking from the colonial period, add some info about how you like to use it etc.

Like if I'm ordering food, I'll always go for the full pronunciation, then maybe follow up with the server or whoever asking if it's the dish with this or that main focus.

I also love having fun with themed dinner parties with friends and the such, give full presentation on the pronunciation, it's history in different areas that make it slightly different, give everyone a copy of the recipe (minus a few key but subtle ingredients lol) in both the original language and English.

All in all I say just try to make it a chance to be enjoyed one way or another and it doesn't take long to get your confidence flowing lol. I totally empathize, I used to be absolutely mortified about the same thing, still do sometimes, just less so these days.

I would say absolutely in the general sense nost people, and the salesmen, frame them in.

When I was invited to assist with the GDC development, I got a chance to partner with a few AI developers and see the development process firsthand, try my hand at it myself, and get my hands on a few low parameter models for my own personal use. It's really interesting just how capable some models are in their specific use-cases. However, even high param. models easily become useless at the drop of a hat.

I found the best case, one that's rarely done mind you, is integrate the model into a program that has the ability to call a known database. With a properly trained model to format output in both natural language and use a given database for context calls, and concrete information, the qualitative performance leaps ahead by bounds. Problem is, that requires so much customization it pretty much ends up being something a capable hobbyist would do, it's just not economically sound for a business to adopt.

Wow that looks delicious ♡

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