asklemmy Asklemmy With all the bad stuff happening in the world like politics war racism homophobia etc. What is some good news that isI happening that we don't read or see about?
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    simplymath
    2 weeks ago 97%

    COVID research made generic sequencing for viruses and bacteria incredibly cheap. You can run a PCR test for most things now for $10 (USD) or less. This opens a whole world of highly specific diagnostics and cheap, hyper-personalized treatments.

    Also, MRNA vaccines are being tested for several other diseases and it seems very promising.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Is there any way to save storage on similar images?
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    simplymath
    2 weeks ago 100%

    and my point was explaining that that work has likely been done because the paper I linked was 20 years old and they talk about the deep connection between "similarity" and "compresses well". I bet if you read the paper, you'd see exactly why I chose to share it-- particularly the equations that define NID and NCD.

    The difference between "seeing how well similar images compress" and figuring out "which of these images are similar" is the quantized, classficiation step which is trivial compared to doing the distance comparison across all samples with all other samples. My point was that this distance measure (using compressors to measure similarity) has been published for at least 20 years and that you should probably google "normalized compression distance" before spending any time implementing stuff, since it's very much been done before.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Is there any way to save storage on similar images?
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    simplymath
    2 weeks ago 100%

    Yeah. I understand. But first you have to cluster your images so you know which ones are similar and can then do the deduplication. This would be a powerful way to do that. It's just expensive compared to other clustering algorithms.

    My point in linking the paper is that "the probe" you suggested is a 20 year old metric that is well understood. Using normalized compression distance as a measure of Kolmogorov Complexity is what the linked paper is about. You don't need to spend time showing similar images will compress more than dissimilar ones. The compression length is itself a measure of similarity.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Is there any way to save storage on similar images?
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    simplymath
    2 weeks ago 100%

    Yeah. That's what an MP4 does, but I was just saying that first you have to figure out which images are "close enough" to encode this way.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Is there any way to save storage on similar images?
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    simplymath
    2 weeks ago 66%

    Definitely PhD.

    It's very much an ongoing and under explored area of the field.

    One of the biggest machine learning conferences is actually hosting a workshop on the relationship between compression and machine learning (because it's very deep). https://neurips.cc/virtual/2024/workshop/84753

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Is there any way to save storage on similar images?
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    simplymath
    2 weeks ago 100%

    Compressed length is already known to be a powerful metric for classification tasks, but requires polynomial time to do the classification. As much as I hate to admit it, you're better off using a neural network because they work in linear time, or figuring out how to apply the kernel trick to the metric outlined in this paper.

    a formal paper on using compression length as a measure of similarity: https://arxiv.org/pdf/cs/0111054

    a blog post on this topic, applied to image classification:

    https://jakobs.dev/solving-mnist-with-gzip/

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Does anybody know an open source self hosted application to create diagrams? Like draw.io or something like that
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    simplymath
    2 weeks ago 100%

    By no means the best option, but the tikz latex package works and pandoc can handle the conversion to your preferred format. I would limit this to very simple diagrams.

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  • asklemmy Ask Lemmy I use Qobuz for music. Recommendations don't exist. What are the best sources for creating playlists with suggestions?
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    simplymath
    2 weeks ago 100%

    There's a python application for managing the meta data better than lidarr called beets. You need to be familiar with a terminal, but it has a ton of plugins and options. If you want a GUI, try MusicBrainz Picard, but it's old and not great on really big libraries. For playlist suggestions, plexamp can do that, but only for music you already have.

    https://beets.io/

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  • asklemmy Ask Lemmy Would you rather fight a lion-sized ant, or 1,000 ant sized lions?
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    fuckcars Fuck Cars The Netherlands's urban planning is very well known but what about other EU countries?
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    fuckcars Fuck Cars The Netherlands's urban planning is very well known but what about other EU countries?
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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 100%

    Barcelona is kinda famous for their pedestrian transformation over the last decade or two and the hiking and trains were excellent.

    https://learn.sharedusemobilitycenter.org/overview/barcelona-superblock-initiative-barcelona-2016/

    I just think an American would find the salaries for the kinds of jobs that get you visas (healthcare, tech, finance) to be pretty underwhelming, especially if OP has student loans or other debt in dollars.

    Glassdoor says €66k/year for a doctor in Barcelona vs $154k/year in NYC. I assure you that anyone who can get a work visa to Spain would come out financially ahead in the US by a long shot. It also becomes pretty hard to travel to the US, even if it's comfortable to live on the salary in situ. That's not to say it isn't totally doable. I do it.

    Are public health are and vacation time nice? Yeah, but anyone with a visa-worthy job with an American passport isn't worried about the cost of employer based healthcare and pay substantially less taxes in the US. It's great to be rich in the US, but really sucks to to be poor. I just think the unique position of people who can get work visas raises serious questions about whether or not it's "worth" it.

    If a doctor can pocket an extra $50k/year (after college, healthcare, taxes) from the higher paying American job at the expense of paying for some human rights out of pocket, it's hard to say that doctor shouldn't hustle in the US for a few years first before finding a way to retire in Spain in 10 years vs working in Spain for the next 30. Visas for owning property or starting a small business are far more flexible and less scary than something attached to a particular employer, city, etc (work visa).

    source: I am expatriate American in Europe struggling with this question daily

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars The Netherlands's urban planning is very well known but what about other EU countries?
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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 100%

    I specifically didn't mention it because it's the singular country in Europe that doesn't really have work permits for non EEA nationals. As you've said, wages are high and the government is great, so it's naturally a desirable place to live. I've got a PhD in AI from a respected European university and I straight up do not qualify for a Swiss work visa, but OP might have better luck if they work in healthcare or attend school there.

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars The Netherlands's urban planning is very well known but what about other EU countries?
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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 100%

    Yeah. Super impressive considering the track changes with Denmark, France, Switzerland, and Poland (what about Austria? I don't remember changing tracks). I've had delays of 45 mins on 30 minute NYC subway commutes and Sweden's trains stop running in the winter because they didn't bother to get the kind that work in snow.

    You can keep arguing, but you're not gonna convince me DB is bad which is where this discussion started.

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  • til Today I Learned TIL the term Redneck likely originated from the sunburned red neck of those working in fields.
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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 100%

    yes. The book, "The red badge of Courage" was printed in 1895 and the color's association with the far left dates back to the french revolution of the 1780s.

    Also, iirc Blair Mountain was backed by the IWW which is anarcho-syndicalist and not Communist.

    I dunno why the downvotes but I googled it for you:

    iww Blair mountain flyer:

    https://omekas.lib.wvu.edu/home/s/minersorganization/media/1109

    who are the iww? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_Workers_of_the_World?wprov=sfla1

    history of red for left wing politics: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_flag_(politics)

    when the black flag diverged front he red flag. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchist_symbolism

    red AND black symbolism associated with the IWW https://www.iww.org/how-we-organize/

    red and black flag https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Anarchist_flag.svg

    Previously I had mistakenly said that the red flag dated back to the 1880s and the Paris commune. No, that's the black flag as this article states. That split is actually kinda a big deal. The IWW and red/black symbolism is about grass roots power and not some revolutionary vanguard or dictatorship by the proletariats and I think that distinction is actually kinda important.

    You can see the same symbolism and terminology (redneck) used in the US today: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redneck_Revolt

    which has far more in common with black Panthers style neighborhood defense than it does with Stalin or Lenin or Trotsky.

    it's more in line with thinkers like:

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Kropotkin

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_Goldman

    which is about building resilient communities that exist apart or in spite of capitalism. It's not really an economic policy or ideology concerned about the existence of the state or a dictatorship of the proletariat or really even collective ownership of the means of production. You can join the IWW and work for Amazon and not be committed to a 1917 Russian style revolution. They wanted better working conditions, not a bloody coup. While I agree that that's associated with the Marxist ideal communist ideal future post-capitalist Star Trek furture is great, I think the IWW is notably and distinctly different than what Americans in the 1920s would have associated with the word "communist".

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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 100%

    And where does that put the US for sending 50k Tons of munitions. I agree that the immediate moral culpability is with the person firing the missiles, but how many more bombed hospitals and dead kids before the US says, "no more".

    Downvote away, but the district that is represented in that clip sure as fuck isn't going to come out to vote for the Democrats. It's not like Michigan has a huge Palestinian community and is a critical swing state with a history being ignored by the Democratic party, right? Right?

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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 100%

    Sorry for the down votes. It's quite obvious that if the US arms industry didn't send 50,000 TONS of weapons to feed people. I'm having a hard time believing that many people are that stupid, but I've been wrong before.

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars The Netherlands's urban planning is very well known but what about other EU countries?
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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 33%

    How is that a correction? I predicted that a German would respond to this by shitting on DB.

    Also, those rail lines are only decades old total.

    Take an Amtrak from Chicago to NYC or a 15 hour ride across Sweden in SJ. You have no idea how good DB is. As much as y'all complain, a quick Google says they are within a 6 minute window 90% of the time. The publicly funded American rail company doesn't even own the rail it uses.

    https://www.bts.gov/content/amtrak-time-performance-trends-and-hours-delay-cause

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars The Netherlands's urban planning is very well known but what about other EU countries?
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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 91%

    Sweden is basically Europe's version of the American Midwest. For example, it's a 10 minute walk across nothing but parking lots to get from the high density housing to the grocery store. Stockholm has around 6 story buildings and a housing crisis, which obviously follows from the lack of high density housing. Instead, all of Southern Sweden is one giant blob of suburban sprawl and SJ (Swedish national rail) is as useful and cost effective as Amtrak.

    Denmark is Copenhagen+ lots of suburban sprawl. Transit... existed.

    Germany is very much about cars, even if their transit network is robust. You'll never hear a German say anything good about the trains though.

    France has 300km/hr high speed rail that takes you most places you'd want to go, but you have to switch to local regional trains for smaller destinations. No complaints. €2 tickets one weekend a month too.

    Belgium is up there with the Netherlands re: trains, but their bike infrastructure isn't nearly as safe. It's also like a day to walk across the whole country, so that's not super impressive. All of BENELUX (Belgium Netherlands, Luxemburg) is half the population of the DC-NYC --Boston corridor, which also has a billion transit options (bus, train, boat, car, plane).

    Honestly? You generally can't go wrong with the Krushevkas of Poland and the Baltics. High density housing with jobs, shopping, schools, and services close by and access to transit anywhere. The soviets really loved their street cars that are still hanging in there and provide service every 10 or 15 minutes , often using nuclear power (Bulgaria, Romania, Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania Slovenia).

    Western Europe is alright but Ljubljana just turned their entire old city into a pedestrian only zone, leaving the main road for busses only. You'd never see Paris do that to the Champs-d'Elysée.

    Belgrade built a whole new city across the Danube with high density housing after ww2. Unfortunately, they forgot to place the housing near any jobs which causes transit problems to this day. They also tried this thing out, which failed for the opposite reasons.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_City_Gate

    Overall, Western Europe has the same affordability crisis as the US, but with lower wages and higher taxes. Granted, rents are generally lower too, but there's a lack of high density urban housing everywhere that's not already been gutted and turned into an empty city filled with nothing but tourists and airbnbs (Zagreb and Prague come to mind).

    By Northern European standards, both Portugal and Spain are poor, so they're great to visit, but not really ideal for escaping the US. They've both been building out high speed trains like crazy in preparation for some EU rules that will finally tax the pollution from airplanes in a couple years. And Lisbon inherited lots of the EU financial services sector from London during Brexit, but going that route means you'll be gentrifying a 500 year old city to work for British hedge funds.

    In general, though, the trains are pretty good, but that has a lot more to do with the logistics of trench warfare than being a thing targeted at helping working class people. That is, you can often find cheap flights that will get you to your destination faster and cheaper than the train. It's not like there were daily passenger rail trips between France and Germany in 1904. Being able to move civilians in addition to artillery shells was just a happy byproduct.

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  • python Python Core Python developer suspended for three months
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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 100%

    wow. Someone besides either author got all the way here in the thread to downvote the guy saying open source communities shouldn't keep people around who make volunteers uncomfortable. Like, what exactly was lost here? A guys right to do free labor? Python is just about the worst language for any task you can imagine anyway, yet someone is going around spending their free time picking 3rd party fights about the community that manages it.

    question for the downvoters:

    Why do you care? Personally, I like having women and racial minorities in computer science. That's why I care.

    But why would you defend Tim? Please note that I'm not saying you shouldn't-- it's just clear that this was never an argument in good faith.

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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 66%

    Maybe if they ran on popular policies like ending interventionist foreign policy, reforming the migration system to allow more legal pathways, ending the police terror of communities of color, and codifying female bodily autonomy into law, it wouldn't be a coin flip every 4 years. But they don't.

    Instead, they chase after the mythical center that moves further right every year. If it makes you feel productive to vote for that, then by all means.

    I'm just surprised that this community thinks the woman who just dropped her progressive positions on weed, immigration, criminal justice reform, and fracking is going to do anything meaningfully progressive in the face of escalating wars and a few years before irreversible ecological collapse.

    Or was the foot in the door Joe Biden, the guy who was against integrated bussing in the 80s?

    Or was it Obama, the man who was against gay marriage in 2008 and then bombed and deported more people than Bush?

    How many more times should I "fall in line" before I'm allowed to be upset that widely popular issues like maternity leave, abortion rights, vacation guarantees, a higher minimum wage, etc are ignored?

    Can we not have a discussion about how fucked US foreign policy without devolving into "orange man bad?" Things simply are not that binary.

    Personally, I would find it hard to vote for anyone who supports the US military industrial complex because all I'll be able to remember is my buddy who lost eleven cousins in a single night in Raffa.

    "Why would america let this happen?" is all he could say in his broken English and I'll never forget his wailing. Or the children fleeing the war in Syria whom I met in refugee camps in Greece-- a war that was the inevitable result of these decades of neoliberal, reactionary foreign policy.

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    simplymath
    3 weeks ago 62%

    Sorry about the down votes. I'm old enough to remember when war was considered a bad idea by progressives. I refuse to believe that bombing the middle east is the best solution we can come up with. It's been decades and nothing is better.

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  • retrogaming RetroGaming Anybody tried one of these RPi based N64 cart dumpers off Aliexpress?
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    retrogaming RetroGaming Anybody tried one of these RPi based N64 cart dumpers off Aliexpress?
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 22%

    what's denigrating about calling the game a number? Is the hobby collecting devices from China? Why not figure out how an N64 works and dump it yourself if that's your hobby?

    I'm not against the idea, homey. I just wouldn't plug this device into my computer. Grab an Arduino or JTAG cable.

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=V0CPjHO_3Yo

    -5
  • retrogaming RetroGaming Anybody tried one of these RPi based N64 cart dumpers off Aliexpress?
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 33%

    The binary blob is essentially just a number stored in a fancy configuration of electrons, OP. In the best case scenario, this device is just e-waste.

    -6
  • retrogaming RetroGaming Anybody tried one of these RPi based N64 cart dumpers off Aliexpress?
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 96%

    A sketchy USB device from Alibaba with 0 documentation is significantly less safe than grabbing a ROM, which are widely available and have known file hashes. The security risk alone from a no name USB device is probably not worth it unless there's a save file you reeeeeeeeally care about, as another user mentioned.

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  • world World News OpenAI says Iranian group using ChatGPT tried to sow division ahead of U.S. election
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 50%

    My Lord. Type "Halliburton oil Ukraine" into Google maps and look at the god-damned oil field that's owned by a US company. Or look at how the US has has record natural gas exports every year since 2014.

    Or look up how the US weapons weren't given to Ukraine. They were sold and those loans must be paid back. Britain and Russia didn't pay back their WW2 lend-lease debts until 2006.

    The US is making a killing on this conflict. Ukrainians are also dying for their nation, but two things can be true at the same time. Anyone who isn't a moron can see that.

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  • asklemmy Ask Lemmy What was the path like to your current career, and what parts would you recommend for or against another person following?
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 100%

    must be your client. the link works fine for me. If you see the timeline, locals mostly weren't involved and lots of local anti fascists organized and fought back. This island was nominated for the Nobel prize when the crisis started, but there's only so much people can take when the refugees kept coming, the island couldn't support thousands of extra people, and refugees were forced to cut down centuries old olive trees for cooking fuel. Greece is not a wealthy country and they felt betrayed by places like Sweden and Germany that have robust economies and a much smaller proportion of the refugee crisis.

    Something had to give. Moria camp is essentially an open air prison without running water or showers. Most people who arrive are children, or were before they walked to Turkey from the Congo or Afghanistan or whatever and boarded boats for a chance at a better life.

    I heard stories from teenagers who had escaped slavery or been forced to work in fast fashion factories in Turkey without pay or had their passports stolen in Iran or picked up by a militia in the Syrian civil war and handed a weapon. And the EU just leaves them there. They get like €200 a month, if and when their legal case ever concludes, but that's not enough to actually live and they're not allowed to work. Not like Greece has extra work anyway.

    Maybe the countries that make a fortune by selling arms to conflict zones (France, Germany, Sweden, Belgium, Italy) should step up and take care of the crises they manufactured for profit. But nah, they just elect far right parties because brown people are scary.

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  • linux4noobs linux4noobs Help burning CDs?
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 100%

    If in reading lurch's comment correctly, he says it's /dev/cdrom and not srX, but that the wrong thing won't break anything.

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  • world World News OpenAI says Iranian group using ChatGPT tried to sow division ahead of U.S. election
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 100%

    ah. I apologize. As this Quora post explains, it does appear on the keyboard, but it's just awkward to press.

    https://www.quora.com/Why-do-Russians-use-as-a-smiley-instead-of

    here's another link verifying the claim that )) is more common than :) for Russian speakers.

    https://news.itmo.ru/en/features/life_in_russia/news/13133/

    but I'm gonna mute you, because you're clearly just a moron.

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  • world World News OpenAI says Iranian group using ChatGPT tried to sow division ahead of U.S. election
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 100%

    you mean the photo you shared? I'm confused. There are Qwerty letters on the left side of each key cap and Cyrillic on the right, or were you under the impression that Cyrillic uses both alphabets?

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  • asklemmy Ask Lemmy What was the path like to your current career, and what parts would you recommend for or against another person following?
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    linux4noobs linux4noobs Help burning CDs?
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 100%

    Look at the top level comment by the user, lurch. If I'm understating him correctly, a reboot should fix it in case that happens. Generally you need to run the dd command to brick stuff in the way you're imagining. It's short for either disk duplicator or disk destroyer (if you fuck up). I suspect the cdrecord utility would prevent you from doing anything too stupid on accident.

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  • world World News OpenAI says Iranian group using ChatGPT tried to sow division ahead of U.S. election
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    simplymath
    1 month ago 100%

    Unless you think Russia is capable of hacking google maps...

    Here's an oil field owned by Halliburton in Ukraine. https://g.co/kgs/F7e761g

    For those of us not old enough to remember, Halliburton got famous for being deeply connected to George W. Bush's Vice President, Dick Cheney, and profited massively from the Iraq war.

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  • lemmyshitpost
    Lemmy Shitpost simplymath 3 months ago 97%
    Thanks, Copilot

    https://www.theverge.com/24066646/ai-electricity-energy-watts-generative-consumption

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    backpacking
    backpacking simplymath 5 months ago 100%
    A Scandinavian Specialty

    Scandinavia often has these three-walled cabins available on a first-come, first-served basis. In Swedish, they're called _vindskydd_, or wind shelter. This particular one is northeast of Umeå, Sweden. No guarantees on what they're called elsewhere, but I have seen them in Finland as well. And I have heard of but not seen of them in Norway. In general, the freedom to roam is quite strong in these three countries as long as you are respectful and stay out of obviously private spaces like personal gardens or farm fields. Happy travels!

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    shoestring
    Shoestring Travel simplymath 5 months ago 100%
    Comino Island, Malta

    https://timesofmalta.com/article/camping-on-comino-these-are-the-rules-for-the-tal-ful-camping-site.961601 Camping opportunities are relatively rare in Europe, but this island in Malta has cheap camping. on the other inhabited islands (Malta and Good), public transit, restrooms, and wifi are plentiful and local food is extremely cheap. You can get local tfira for a couple euros or a passtizzi filled with peas or cheese for even less. With an ultralight pack, all of Gozo is walkable, though the island of Malta is split by a largely impassable highway. I'd recommend the bus for €2.50.

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    backpacking
    backpacking simplymath 5 months ago 100%
    Ramla Beach, Malta

    near Mixta Cave

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