[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 hour ago

Sounds like a great way to evolve vaccine-resistant rabies

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 10 points 2 months ago

Sounds amazing. Could you provide a link or at least enough names that I can google it?

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 15 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Nah, that's great because you can so easily escalate to heavy talk. Disagree with the political opinion. Insist car culture is just pointless fashion fads. Dive into the morality of reality TV.

Either they disengage and you're free, or you get to have an actual meaningful debate instead of echoing hollow platitudes.

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 9 points 4 months ago

The actual results are in the text. 56% personifiers among autists vs 33% among not autists, p<0.05. Self report is p=0.06.

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 18 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Scientific papers are often titled "What it's actually about: something witty." This one is about object personification and so after the colon they personify the paper itself by giving it an emotion.

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 11 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The perfect colinearity of most of the lines is very suspicious too.

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 15 points 1 year ago

Allow me to introduce: Firefox vim keybindings extensions. So many more shortcuts if you don't need to worry about typing characters in normal mode.

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 8 points 1 year ago

A friend of mine just used it to write a script for an Amazing Race application video. It was quite good.

How the heck did it access enough source material to be able to imitate something that specific and do it well? Are we humans that predictable?

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 year ago

How do you sort the content without votes? How do you pick out the good stuff from the spam?

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I have been thinking about this problem recently and believe the solution may be a new fediverse protocol/service that provides:

  • Federated Emergent Topic Taxonomies

That is, a model of the relationships (e.g., is the same as, is a type of, is related to, etc) between different communities (/groups/services/instances, etc.) that emerges from the way that users/servers interact with them, that different servers can maintain independently and merge or split by consensus if they choose. Then other services (like Lemmy instances or clients) can tap into this information to provide solutions to problems like the one you describe (e.g., a feed of all the photography communities, regardless of which instance they're on).

I think there are several big conceptual and technical challenges to implementing this. I'm keen to discuss them.

Does anyone know where I would go to discuss this with the people who care, have struggled with developing new fediverse protocols and/or are best positioned to spot the flaws and possiblities in the idea? So far I see mostly w3c working groups taking behind closed doors.

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 43 points 1 year ago

"New lab rule: no Ph.D. defences in poetry form."

Still passed and had a grand old time.

[-] ArcticPrincess@lemmy.ml 10 points 1 year ago

I read this as:

Wealthy, coddled city-dwellers---for each of whom thousands of animals, bred for fatness and compliance, are raised in factories and systematically slaughtered---upset to witness sustainable, traditional harvest practices. Floating corporate safety bubble apologises for failing to protect their naivete.

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ArcticPrincess

joined 1 year ago