Dietzsche Nostoyevsky

3.8K posts

Dietzsche Nostoyevsky

Dietzsche Nostoyevsky

@DzscheNostovsky

Enjoying The Life of a Great Sinner

Skotoprigonievsk Katılım Nisan 2013
803 Takip Edilen98 Takipçiler
Dietzsche Nostoyevsky
Dietzsche Nostoyevsky@DzscheNostovsky·
@MattP1Gallagher It's amazing when the only variable regarding strategy is tires, and we have only single mandatory pitstop. Make it atleast 2. Teams must run all available options per race, in any order
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Matt Gallagher
Matt Gallagher@MattP1Gallagher·
The choice of a two/three stop made this race excellent to watch Take note Pirelli, please.
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Mango_Indian
Mango_Indian@MangoIndian6·
@alpha_defense Not possible with HAL!! The biggest enemies of India are internal. A company which has got tuition for last 50 years assembling 2,000 + aircraft but cannot do anything on its own. Transfer the LCA program to L&T or Tata. In 10 years this will yield results
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Alpha Defense™🇮🇳
Alpha Defense™🇮🇳@alpha_defense·
At least now, can we get the LCA flying with a European or Russian power-plant, if not an Indian one?
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Dietzsche Nostoyevsky
Dietzsche Nostoyevsky@DzscheNostovsky·
@_S0mnambulist_ @KenKirtland17 Actually, this very platform is you're debating on, is under that launch provider now. X is under xAI, which is under SpaceX now. It's not just a launch provider anymore. Infact, according to the IPO, launch provider part is about 15 percent
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Somnambulist
Somnambulist@_S0mnambulist_·
@KenKirtland17 yeah sure, one launch provider is worth as much as nearly all other aerospace companies, both air & space, civillian & military, combined. be for real man...
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Dietzsche Nostoyevsky
Dietzsche Nostoyevsky@DzscheNostovsky·
@MihalisBenko @KenKirtland17 15 years ago they were saying the same thing about landing boosters. And not normies, CEOs of freaking launch providers. 5 years ago they were saying the same thing about Starlink. And yet, here we are...
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Vajrakant
Vajrakant@pathak_the_merc·
@tikshatriya When did I say we should surrender. I want the Indian state to do things which I would get my account banned if I say that here. We should hold kashmir under our military boots forever
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Dietzsche Nostoyevsky
Dietzsche Nostoyevsky@DzscheNostovsky·
@alpha_defense @MSriv14 IDK why people have this notion that those other guys actually wanna work with us. They only want our money. Nobody in the world is gonna give up tech. Plus Russians were very clear that our labs don't even have the capability to absorb their tech, hence outright sales
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Alpha Defense™🇮🇳
Alpha Defense™🇮🇳@alpha_defense·
As a kid I read a chacha Chaudhry story It said : A thief was caught and given a choice: Either eat 100 onions or receive 100 shoe-beatings (sau jute). Thinking onions are easier, he starts eating them. After a few onions, the burning becomes unbearable, so he switches to shoe-beatings. After a few shoe-beatings, he finds those even worse and switches back to onions. He keeps changing his mind until, in the end, he has eaten all 100 onions and received all 100 shoe-beatings. Moral : Failure to commit to a difficult choice makes things worse.
Alpha Defense™🇮🇳 tweet mediaAlpha Defense™🇮🇳 tweet media
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Saif
Saif@SaifCS24·
@VishnuNDTV @joe_sameer Why it took you so long @joe_sameer? Next day after PL-15 smoked Rafale at long range people were saying how it could have happened. Now IAF will build a suicide squad to take down PAF AWACS and win the war, last time it failed.
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Vishnu Som
Vishnu Som@VishnuNDTV·
This detailed analysis from @joe_sameer - a former fighter pilot and Mirage 2000 man is a simple explainer on how networks, data links and off-board cueing of targets will define ultra-long range air to air engagements. Advertised ranges of missiles such as the Chinese PL-16 are just that - advertisements: the real winner will be defined by robust EW systems, state of the art AWACS platforms, humble aerial refueling tankers and multiple systems that provide stable tracks. That is the immediate future of air to air warfare. Collapse the network and win the war.
Sameer Joshi@joe_sameer

x.com/i/article/2058…

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Adam Dyer
Adam Dyer@PrimeMecharical·
@MarioNawfal Incorrect, the native British simply need to have as a non-negotiable article of their faith the mandatory carrying of a fully automatic American made assault weapon with at least 5 magazines at all times. It's time we gave back to our older siblings.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇬🇧 This is the knife that Vickrum Digwa used to kill Henry Nowak He said he carried it as part of his Sikh faith Sikhs in the UK are allowed to carry knives called Kirpans, but for regular Brits, if they carry a knife the same size, they face a prison sentence Baptized Sikhs say carrying the kirpan is a mandatory article of faith, and it's non-negotiable However, the UAE introduced strict rules around carrying them, so many Sikhs residing in or traveling to the UAE opt to leave their kirpan at home or wear a symbolic miniature pendant. It's time for the UK to do the same
Mario Nawfal tweet media
Piers Morgan@piersmorgan

This is such a shocking story, that shames Britain’s police. RIP Henry. 🙏

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Dietzsche Nostoyevsky retweetledi
Jason Wei
Jason Wei@_jasonwei·
Becoming an RL diehard in the past year and thinking about RL for most of my waking hours inadvertently taught me an important lesson about how to live my own life. One of the big concepts in RL is that you always want to be “on-policy”: instead of mimicking other people’s successful trajectories, you should take your own actions and learn from the reward given by the environment. Obviously imitation learning is useful to bootstrap to nonzero pass rate initially, but once you can take reasonable trajectories, we generally avoid imitation learning because the best way to leverage the model’s own strengths (which are different from humans) is to only learn from its own trajectories. A well-accepted instantiation of this is that RL is a better way to train language models to solve math word problems compared to simple supervised finetuning on human-written chains of thought. Similarly in life, we first bootstrap ourselves via imitation learning (school), which is very reasonable. But even after I graduated school, I had a habit of studying how other people found success and trying to imitate them. Sometimes it worked, but eventually I realized that I would never surpass the full ability of someone else because they were playing to their strengths which I didn’t have. It could be anything from a researcher doing yolo runs more successfully than me because they built the codebase themselves and I didn’t, or a non-AI example would be a soccer player keeping ball possession by leveraging strength that I didn’t have. The lesson of doing RL on policy is that beating the teacher requires walking your own path and taking risks and rewards from the environment. For example, two things I enjoy more than the average researcher are (1) reading a lot of data, and (2) doing ablations to understand the effect of individual components in a system. Once when collecting a dataset, I spent a few days reading data and giving each human annotator personalized feedback, and after that the data turned out great and I gained valuable insight into the task I was trying to solve. Earlier this year I spent a month going back and ablating each of the decisions that I previously yolo’ed while working on deep research. It was a sizable amount of time spent, but through those experiments I learned unique lessons about what type of RL works well. Not only was leaning into my own passions more fulfilling, but I now feel like I’m on a path to carving a stronger niche for myself and my research. In short, imitation is good and you have to do it initially. But once you’re bootstrapped enough, if you want to beat the teacher you must do on-policy RL and play to your own strengths and weaknesses :)
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Dietzsche Nostoyevsky
Dietzsche Nostoyevsky@DzscheNostovsky·
@coincidentaldoc @aravind No such thing as "ayurvedic medicine". If it's effective, gather 100 people, do a randomized trial, publish your results, and voila, it's just a "medicine".
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𝒟𝓇.🅁 🄺 🅅
𝒟𝓇.🅁 🄺 🅅@coincidentaldoc·
@aravind Ayurvedic medicines are among the most common causes of hepatic failure in India but as usual, people think it has no side effect since it isn't regulated and researched properly.
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Aravind
Aravind@aravind·
Singapore has fined a local company some hefty amount for importing "Ayurvedic" pills from India contaminated by lead that caused at least two developed side effects (due to high amounts of lead). India needs to find out from which company in India these pills were imported and take action. @jagograhakjago @MoHFW_INDIA Because forget Ayurvedic exports, such incidents can kill the reputation of India's medical pharma industry costing India a lot. And one more reason why a social media / media monitoring & rapid response cell is required. It can monitor all such news to direct relevant authorities to act asap to prevent further issues. @MIB_India @GoI_MeitY
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Aditya Raj Kaul
Aditya Raj Kaul@AdityaRajKaul·
No questions taken by #QUAD leaders in New Delhi at the Joint Statement. If you ask why? My dear @sidhant may have an interesting take on this. 😎😎
Aditya Raj Kaul@AdityaRajKaul

Wonder if #QUAD leaders will take questions today at the Joint Statement in New Delhi after Rubio’s answer to racism question on Trump’s hellhole comment led to a PR disaster for the American State Department and US Embassy Comms. What do you think @sidhant? 😎💥

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Dwijendra Tiwari
Dwijendra Tiwari@TiwariDwijendra·
@TelanganaMaata @vishnureddy_899 Yes, that’s horrible in European trains. They don’t have AC, only heaters. You can not travel in Underground trains in London in June July, without heavy sweating 😰
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Telangana Maata
Telangana Maata@TelanganaMaata·
Heatwave hits the trains in Paris. The cars weren't air-conditioned. Passengers had to get off the train to catch their breath That’s the situation in first world country. Meanwhile in India, trains are working smoothly
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Jeremy
Jeremy@ManaByte·
When Riot detects a DMA board, they have plenty of options. The following are acceptable for dealing with the cheater: 1. Ban the user 2. Permanently hardware-ban every component attached to that motherboard 3. Force-close the game and refuse to launch it until the user turns on basic Windows security features (IOMMU) to block their cheat cards The following is not acceptable: 1. Letting pathetic losers inject hardware-level exploits into a competitive game because they are terrified of basic BIOS settings
GIGABEAR@Gigabear_X

When Riot detects a DMA board, they have plenty of options. The following are acceptable for dealing with the cheater: 1. Ban the user 2. Shut the game down and don't let it launch till IOMMU is properly configured The following is not acceptable: 1. Messing with windows

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Justiceplays
Justiceplays@justiceplay_s·
@Pirat_Nation @Chaotickeyblade Yeah no shit That's why if it's in your possession, it's yours. If it's in their possession it's theirs. Not yours regardless if your name's attached to it cuz now all of those files are Google's
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Pirat_Nation 🔴
Pirat_Nation 🔴@Pirat_Nation·
A Japanese manga artist lost his entire Google account forever after he uploaded private files from an old comic he drew to Google Drive. Google’s AI checked the files and flagged them as not allowed. He asked Google to review it again, but they rejected his appeal and banned the account immediately. He can no longer access years of his private drawings and lost access to many websites and services that used his Google login. The artist said this is very embarrassing and causes him a lot of trouble. He warned that it might not happen to people who always follow every rule, but others should be careful. So Google is scanning files that people upload to its cloud storage even if they are supposed to be private. I wonder how long they have been doing this.
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Chris Daniels
Chris Daniels@vessel4truth·
@kane @pmarca Or we might just believe the 1000’s of videos we’ve seen on social media. I suppose those are all misinformation. I love this coordinated push on this platform for data centers. It’s almost like the Iran war, or support for Israel. This is just comical.
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Kane 謝凱堯
Kane 謝凱堯@kane·
This is the author who thrust AI water hysteria into the mainstream by overestimating data center water use by 100,000% in her book Empire of AI by mixing up units. She is a source of wild misinformation. Imagine writing an Econ book on the premise that minimum wage is $7,250/hr
Kane 謝凱堯 tweet media
Karen Hao@_KarenHao

On the one-year anniversary of EMPIRE OF AI, I am so, so excited to announce The AI Resist List, a new project that documents examples of resistance to the AI empires around the world. airesistlist.org

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Avishar Dutta
Avishar Dutta@AvisharDutta·
@AVE_603 Sorry but an F1 team is a far more serious outfit than GTRE.
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Dietzsche Nostoyevsky
Dietzsche Nostoyevsky@DzscheNostovsky·
@dotsamarai @piperocktheory It's the same like people who say they work 15 hours a day, because they got a cook, a maid, a laundry man, a housekeeper, a nanny, a personal assistant, a planner, and managerial assistants.
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InSearchOfSun
InSearchOfSun@dotsamarai·
@piperocktheory It probably technically is true but only because he has someone else do it for him. He still uses it all, he just pays someone else to do it lol
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Dietzsche Nostoyevsky
Dietzsche Nostoyevsky@DzscheNostovsky·
@prakdadlani They threatened you, didn't they? And people wonder why manufacturing is booming in China and not India
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farrukh saleem
farrukh saleem@SaleemFarrukh·
Iran-Pakistan-India Pakistan imports nearly $17 billion worth of oil, LNG, LPG and coal every year. Yet our power plants run below capacity. Our fertiliser plants cry for feedstock. Our industry waits for predictable energy. LNG is expensive. Spot cargoes are risky. The energy gap is real, growing and costly — in lost output, idle factories, pressure on the rupee and foreign exchange spent at the worst possible time. The answer sits next door. Iran has oil — around 208 billion barrels of crude oil reserves, with a notional gross value of nearly $22 trillion. Iran has gas — around 34 trillion cubic metres of proven natural gas reserves, with a notional gross value of around $20 trillion. These are not cash-in-hand numbers. These are in-ground, gross-value numbers. But they show the scale just across Pakistan’s border. Gas from South Pars. Oil from Iranian fields. Moving east into Pakistan. Into our power plants. Into our fertilizer sector. Into our industry. At prices potentially below imported LNG. Without the volatility of spot cargoes. Without full exposure to distant shipping routes and chokepoints. That is what an Iran-Pakistan energy corridor means — before India even enters the equation. Cold truth: Pakistan’s energy crisis is not only a shortage problem. It is a geography problem. The solution begins next door. Now talk about India. Pakistan must convert geography into transit income. Not millions. Billions. Consider the equation: India needs energy. Iran needs markets. Pakistan needs dollars. Last year, India imported nearly $137 billion worth of crude oil — roughly 88 percent of the crude it consumes. It also imported another $15 billion worth of LNG. Then there is LPG: roughly $10 billion more. Add crude, LNG and LPG together, and India’s fossil-energy import bill stands in the range of $175 billion to $190 billion a year. Cold truth: India does not run its economy on oil and LNG. India runs its economy on imported oil and imported LNG. Three facts: India has demand. Iran has supply. Pakistan has geography. Pakistan must turn geography into economics. The pipeline logic is simple. Gas from South Pars moves through Iran’s internal gas network towards Iranshahr, then to the Iran-Pakistan border, across Balochistan to Gwadar, and onward to Nawabshah — Pakistan’s gas-grid junction. From Nawabshah, the same corridor can move eastward towards India. South Pars becomes the source. Gwadar becomes the energy node. Nawabshah becomes the grid gateway. India becomes the market. Pakistan becomes the transit state. Imagine: Gas moves east. Dollars move west. Pakistan earns in the middle. Pakistan’s geography has no value until it is monetised. Pakistan’s map earns nothing — a corridor earns. Assume the corridor carries 1 billion cubic feet of gas a day. At $12 per MMBtu, that is a $4.5 billion annual gas flow. At Asian LNG-linked prices, it can cross $6 billion a year. Imagine: 1 bcf moves east. $6 billion moves west. Pakistan earns $500 million in the middle. Nawabshah to India is commercial geography. Nawabshah to China is strategic geography. A South Pars–Gwadar–Nawabshah line could, over time, become part of a CPEC energy spine moving north towards Xinjiang. China has the demand. China has the capital. East to India. North to China. India offers demand next door. China offers capital and scale. Under sanctions, Iran is closed. Under normalisation, Iran becomes one of the biggest energy openings in the world — one of the largest undeveloped hydrocarbon prizes on earth. ExxonMobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, Halliburton, Baker Hughes, Schlumberger — the entire American energy ecosystem would look at Iran. Not out of charity. Out of scale. Out of reserves. Out of technology gaps. Out of long-term cashflows. Sanctions have kept capital out. Technology has lagged. Fields need recovery, drilling, compression, LNG, pipelines, processing plants and petrochemicals. That is not a million-dollar opportunity. That is a multi-hundred-billion-dollar reconstruction of an energy system. Five ground realities: India needs energy. Iran has gas. Pakistan has geography. Gwadar has location. Nawabshah has the grid. The missing piece is policy. thenews.pk/print/1414665-…
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JangoRU
JangoRU@itsjangoru·
@SemiAnalysis_ @veritasium Veritasium was bought like 3-4 years ago if you think they haven’t uploaded a lot of bangers during that time you are just larping as a nostalgic old fan.
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SemiAnalysis
SemiAnalysis@SemiAnalysis_·
OPINION: Ever since private equity bought the @Veritasium YouTube channel, the content just hasn't been as good. Used to be a GREAT channel, maybe the best Science channel on YouTube, and now? SAD! Very UNFORTUNATE 😭
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