MakingAndStuff

5.9K posts

MakingAndStuff banner
MakingAndStuff

MakingAndStuff

@MakingAndStuff

Katılım Mayıs 2013
17 Takip Edilen52 Takipçiler
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@ErinIshimoticha @Pjlecy @SpaceX But they are in the US and they are Americans and they are proud of that fact and what they have accomplished in the US. There is nothing wrong with expressing that. Being proud of that dosen't make them enemies of everyone who are from elsewhere.
English
0
0
0
14
she builds their fires
she builds their fires@ErinIshimoticha·
@Pjlecy @SpaceX Exactly, you’re so close. We’re not doing this to prove the USA is better than other countries. This isn’t a game with sides. The rest of humankind isn’t our enemy or opponent, we’re doing this FOR THEM. For all mankind.
English
937
4
70
113.4K
she builds their fires
she builds their fires@ErinIshimoticha·
Maybe @SpaceX can ask its engineers not to chant nationalist dogwhistles on the livestream please? 😒
English
6.9K
57
924
1.7M
Ezra Feilden
Ezra Feilden@ezrafeilden·
Confirmed SpaceX is planning active cooling (ie pumped fluid loops) for their AI satellites. When you consider the power density of today's bleeding edge processors, and the distance the heat needs to be moved, liquid cooling is the obvious choice. Starcloud-2 will be demonstrate this in a few months.
Ezra Feilden tweet media
English
12
35
381
29.4K
James
James@Kloktklo·
@MakingAndStuff @laeelxa Om man fötts i Sverige så är svenskan också ens modersmål så länge inte föräldrarna har kedjat fast en i en källare.
Svenska
1
0
0
25
E l s a
E l s a@laeelxa·
Att andraspråkseleverna presterar sämre än eleverna med svenska som modersmål har flera förklaringar men jag tror starkt på att en av anledningarna är att de inte får samma stöd av skolan som sve-eleverna. Jag hoppas innerligt att jag har fel.
Svenska
13
3
23
6.6K
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@zdeborova It's not a mistake, it's fabrication. You are claiming your paper is based on work you haven't read. That's not true even if the work exists and happens to support your paper.
English
0
0
1
41
Lenka Zdeborova
Lenka Zdeborova@zdeborova·
To clarify: my point is not that standards or verification do not matter. Quite the opposite. Science works because verification is distributed across a community over time — through reproduction, criticism, use, and extensions — not because scientists never make minor mistakes.
English
42
7
89
27.6K
Lenka Zdeborova
Lenka Zdeborova@zdeborova·
@eiszett Have you read all the sources you ever cited? During my PhD we, along with dozens of other papers, cited a paper that I later found did not contain the result for which it was commonly cited. I should be banned I guess.
English
1.1K
20
389
2.4M
Lenka Zdeborova
Lenka Zdeborova@zdeborova·
Occasional errors and oversights are part of science. If we lost our driver’s license for a year every time we exceeded the speed limit by 10 km/h, daily life would become unworkable. Many countries instead use point systems, where trust can be rebuilt through good behavior.
English
83
22
316
236.1K
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@Stingbase Tycker nivån på ISK skatten är rätt rimlig. Skatten blir fortfande lägre än ett depåkonto i det flest fall. Har själv sparat flera hundra tusen i skatt på att ha ett ISK. Men då var förståss skatten ännu lägre när jag började spara.
Svenska
0
0
0
57
Stingbase 🇸🇪💙🇺🇦💙🇬🇱
Två skatter jag vänder mig emot är, för det första den låga brytpunkten för statlig skatt på arbete, och att den är så signifikant när den slår till Den andra är skatten på sparande på ISK. Båda skatterna är så oerhört destruktiva för ekonomisk frigörelse.
Svenska
13
10
94
2.2K
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@fctsMttrLsShttr @Anthony_Bonato If containing infinite themself is what we are talking about it's all of them, because the flag designs has tolerances and there is still an infinity of possibilitys within them. But only the Czech flag contains infinite Czech flags
English
0
0
0
53
facts matter, lies shatter 🇳🇱 🇺🇸
@Anthony_Bonato All flags with only parallel stripes. If you are allowed to stretch it in one axis. But since flags have specific aspect ratios defined it would only be flags with 2 parallel stripes and perhaps a few others.
English
2
0
42
34.9K
Anthony Bonato
Anthony Bonato@Anthony_Bonato·
The Czech flag contains infinitely many Czech flags. What other country flags have the property?
Anthony Bonato tweet media
English
177
302
10.6K
2.3M
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@zdeborova All new research is built upon older research. Citations should be works you try to build upon, or try to disprove. If you haven't even read them, what are you even doing. Certainly not research.
English
0
0
0
14
Lenka Zdeborova
Lenka Zdeborova@zdeborova·
Hallucinated references are a real problem. But the main job of researchers is to make new discoveries and train the next generation to do the same. Pretending every citation in every paper must be read in detail by the authors is simply not how research operates — nor should it.
JFPuget 🇫🇷🇺🇦🇨🇦🇬🇱@JFPuget

What about actually reading the papers you cite? I am really puzzled by the pushback on arxiv new policy. Is it just exposing that many people don't read the papers they cite?

English
159
6
165
91.4K
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@JimDMiller @7bBitters If you submit a hallucinated citation, that's proof you haven't done the work. A citation means you used that material when writing the paper, if it doesn't exist you obviously didn't write the paper.
English
0
0
10
97
James Miller
James Miller@JimDMiller·
You genuinely think an undergraduate paper that has a hallucinated citation would cause the paper to get an F? Almost no one ever gets F if they do anything close to turning in the work. You are not describing the world as it is, but as you would like it to be. The absolute number one virtue of academia should be truth speaking.
English
20
0
8
13.2K
James Miller
James Miller@JimDMiller·
I've gotten a lot of comments like this, so forgive me if this isn't very kind, but I'm at my limit. If you're a serious academic, you've spent a lot of time looking at citations, and you know they often contain errors. You know that it's very common for professors just to copy citations they found in other papers and put them into their own papers because they need a lot of citations to look credible. Given that this is going on, it's kind of silly to think that we should have a kind of death penalty for having an LLM, hallucination mistake What you're doing is virtue signaling and pretending that citations are somehow sacred to what academics do, when in fact they're mostly just poorly put up window dressing. You're being dishonest. Perhaps with yourself, perhaps with me.
English
404
25
355
864.3K
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@simonkalouche You got it backwards. The wider use case of humanoids will allow economy of scale to drive the price down orders of magnitude cheaper than industrial robotarms. It's the humanoids that will replace robotarms.
English
0
0
0
5
Simon Kalouche
Simon Kalouche@simonkalouche·
Too bad this humanoid will lose its job to a faster, lower cost robot arm.
English
207
147
4.8K
544.2K
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@ThePrimalDino @Orbital_Perigee Space is the way to save the planet and they don't need more interstellar ships. But with astrophage they could make single stage ships to anywhere in the solar system. They could also launch enough solar reflectors into orbit to compensate for the reduction in sunlight
English
0
0
1
42
David Willis
David Willis@ThePrimalDino·
Not exactly. Grace took the only interstellar ship capable of that kind of exploration with him to 40 Eridani. They’d have to build another ship to explore the solar system. Perhaps it could be done, but it wouldn’t be any time soon, since now they’re not trying to save the planet and won’t be working together anymore or have unlimited funds. Also this assumes the fuel farms are still operational, which, after the cure is found, may not be the case. Given the fuel production facility covers basically all of the Sahara, and each Saharan country is going to scramble to assert sovereignty over their portion of the production facility in order to use it for energy. Put simply I doubt it would continue to be used for spaceship fuel after all is said and done
English
3
0
21
1K
perigeeaero.shop
perigeeaero.shop@Orbital_Perigee·
something about PHM: once they have taomeoba, the entire solar system is open to them. I can imagine that once Earth is safe, there is a MASSIVE space colonization boom, given that trips to Mars, etc, with ear unlimited mass could be done in a week days. astrophage fuel depot…
English
13
8
224
6.4K
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@NosuSuishinV2 Where are you getting pre 2019 from? Book was released 2021 and is set in the near future.
English
0
0
2
158
Nosu || #CC1 Sun B43-44
Nosu || #CC1 Sun B43-44@NosuSuishinV2·
Thread: Just realized that according to the book, Hail Mary required 16 rocket launches to ship all components and propellant to orbit which is not very realistic in pre-2019 capacity #ProjectHailMary
Nosu || #CC1 Sun B43-44 tweet media
English
23
12
651
26.5K
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@NosuSuishinV2 So they mixed a tiny bit of astrophage in the fuel to increase prefomance.
English
0
0
0
35
Nosu || #CC1 Sun B43-44
Nosu || #CC1 Sun B43-44@NosuSuishinV2·
120 tons ship and 2,000 tons propellant that means 132.5 tons per launch and you know, only rockets that capable to do that was retired since 1973 Oh, don’t talk about Starship, Starhopper was really to launch back in mid 2019
English
3
1
86
3.8K
𝙷𝚒𝚌𝚔𝚖𝚊𝚗
𝙷𝚒𝚌𝚔𝚖𝚊𝚗@shagbark_hick·
If you're young in a truly rural area of the Northeast, you know this feeling. "90% of everyone in this bar is gonna be dead in the next 15 years, and when they're gone, this bar is going to close, and if I stay here, I am going to be alone." It's like a real-life horror film.
𝙷𝚒𝚌𝚔𝚖𝚊𝚗 tweet media
English
684
480
12.9K
1.6M
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@ChuckCook Guessing they want less disengagement for training. If people keep disengaging early Tesla gets less data on how the system handles these situations.
English
0
0
0
37
Chuck Cook
Chuck Cook@ChuckCook·
I haven't been able to drive the new software FSD v14.3.3 yet as I'm going to work for a few days. After reading the release notes I want to say something about the gamification of FSD intervention free streaks. In my opinion, this incentivizes not disengaging when it might be necessary. Keeping an intervention free streak going is not important. Driving safely is the most important. We are still supervising these vehicles. I implore everyone to not let this display, or keeping a streak alive push you into making a bad decision. Take care of yourself and those around you. Supervise safely.
English
130
58
1.3K
44.6K
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@KyleMau Here in Sweden many people have to take their vacation during the summer, workplaces close down. Ontop of that you don't know that it will be 75 degrees and beautiful, it can be dreary in July to. So if you want to be sure to get some sun you book a week somewhere south.
English
0
0
0
299
Kyle Mau
Kyle Mau@KyleMau·
I have never understood the Eastern and Northern European mindset of going on vacation during summer. When your city is 75 degrees and beautiful and everything is available, you go to Greece and pay $300 a day to turn yourself into a lobster. Instead of just... going in November. You know, when your city is 40 and dreary and grey with 4 hours of "sun "a day. And Greece is 75 and you get a private beach. Make it make sense.
English
1.3K
374
13.4K
2.1M
MakingAndStuff
MakingAndStuff@MakingAndStuff·
@peterrhague @KristinaFitzsi Fusion makes more sense in Space. On earth it has to be cost competitive with all other kinds of energy generation. In space there is alot less to compete with, basically just nuclear and solar.
English
0
0
1
13
Peter Hague
Peter Hague@peterrhague·
@KristinaFitzsi If they could make a self sustained fusion reaction they could use it to make electricity on earth and fund their business easily. If the engine can’t sustain itself it needs an external power source ie a nuclear reactor and the mass of that impacts the performance significantly
English
5
0
16
166
Peter Hague
Peter Hague@peterrhague·
I’m still skeptical of Pulsar, and they haven’t yet got fusion inside the engine, but these ideas are definitely worth investigating.
Maxi@AllForProgress_

In a workshop on the outskirts of Bletchley (it had to be there, didn't it), on the 26th of March this year, a small British company called Pulsar Fusion did something that has not been done by any other company or government on Earth. It ignited a controlled plasma inside the test chamber of a working nuclear fusion rocket engine. The plasma held, along with the chamber. The fusion reaction was the kind of reaction that, contained inside a sufficiently engineered magnetic bottle, will one day take a crewed British vehicle to Mars in 30 days rather than 8 months, and that will, within the working lifetime of the engineers presently building it, make the outer planets of the solar system accessible to anyone with a British passport. The geography of the achievement deserves a longer moment of pause. Bletchley, in 1942, was where Alan Turing and his colleagues broke the Enigma cipher and almost certainly shortened the war in Europe by two years. Pulsar Fusion's headquarters sits roughly 600 yards from the Hut where they did it. The country that did the maths inside that hut has just, less than a mile down the road, ignited the plasma that could power the next century of human space travel. There is a continuity of British scientific lineage here that is, on the face of it, almost embarrassingly providential, and it is almost completely unreported in the British press. It's not quite Kitty-Hawk-to-the-moon in 61 years, but it's close. Like so many great companies of profound importance, Pulsar Fusion is pretty small. It was founded in 2013, and employs around 50 staff. Its chief executive, Richard Dinan, is a working British physicist who has spent the last decade quietly assembling the team and the capital to do what the world's national space agencies have been promising for 60 years and consistently failing to deliver. The competing American programmes, principally at NASA's Glenn Research Center and at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, are years behind on the propulsion side. The competing Chinese programmes are obscure but, on what is known publicly, also behind. The European Space Agency is, as ever, organising a workshop. Pulsar fired its plasma in March and has been preparing the next-stage tests in the months since. What this kind of capability means, when commercialised, is genuinely vast. The economic argument for getting a payload to Mars in 30 days rather than 8 months is not principally about the human passengers, though there is one. It is about cargo. Given a 30-day transit, Mars becomes a logistically tractable destination for the kind of infrastructure-build that turns it from a flag-planting science mission into a working industrial site. The argument for the outer planets is even larger. The asteroid belt alone, on conservative mineralogical estimates, contains more economically viable platinum-group metals than the entire crust of the Earth has been mined for in industrial history. The first country with reliable fusion propulsion is the first country with reliable access to that supply. The country that holds that capacity, fifty years from now, will be holding the most consequential industrial advantage of the 21st century, and there is no obvious second prize. The standard British response to this kind of thing is to either ignore it entirely, sell the company to an American buyer at series B (the DeepMind path) for fire-sale prices, or fund it at the level of a Whitehall departmental tea and coffee budget (the Skycutter and Orbex paths). The standard British response will not be sufficient. Pulsar Fusion needs the kind of patient capital that turns a working demonstration into an operational engine, and that, in turn, into a manufacturing capability. The British state, on present form, is structurally incapable of providing it, British pension funds are structurally incapable of investing in it, and the British political class will, on present form, only notice if it somehow manages to swing a leadership election. I wantt= Pulsar Fusion treated as a national-strategic asset, and beyond that as a potential subject of national destiny. The Sovereign AI Fund that backed Ineffable Intelligence has a clear template. The Prosperity Zone programme we designed at Progress that anchors heavy industry at SaxaVord and Teesside has the geographic flexibility to include a fusion-propulsion cluster in Buckinghamshire, six miles from the most evocative site in modern British scientific history. The procurement architecture of every major British defence and space agency should, from this autumn, be writing offtake contracts contingent on Pulsar's milestones. There's nothing extreme about these ideas. We could have been doing it decades ago. I always conceived of Britain as being as much among the stars as it is on Earth. To buy into the idea of Britain as a culture and polity is necessarily to buy into the concept of the human being as an illimitable force. Our history is littered with happy instances of people of great fortitude hitting upon obstacles and, with a cry of "This will not stop us", clearing the way for our brothers and sisters to follow through. A small British company in Bletchley has, while nobody was looking, extended that arm of our tradition, by accomplishing one of the most important pieces of scientific engineering of the decade. The country that produced them is, in a measurable sense, the same country that produced the Bombe, the Colossus, the jet engine, the structure of DNA, and the World Wide Web. The capacity is intact. The political class capable of recognising it must catch up, and will.

English
15
7
138
9.8K
English_Gent
English_Gent@English_Gent40·
@Boba_Ball_ He does run regularly. I drive by him all the time. He has a long history of running.
English_Gent tweet media
English
10
2
387
30.1K