Agaricus

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Agaricus

Agaricus

@agaricus

Random and untidy. Cloned at https://t.co/asN3wXo1Pv and sometimes elsewhere.

Katılım Şubat 2009
234 Takip Edilen3.5K Takipçiler
Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
"“Gas Town is an industrialized coding factory manned by superintelligent chimpanzees, and when they feel like it, they can wreck your shit in an instant.”
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
Two kinds of social solidarity: universal solidarity (respect for every individual's human rights, the basis of mutual care and civil society) and ethnic solidarity (dissolution of the individual, along with their rights, into a non-human amalgam).
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
that's not writing that's typing
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
Forgot to give the verdict. So impressive, so exasperating, so typical. It "works." Takes any csv, has clear instructions for domain customization, and suite of common analytical maneuvers and design knobs. And that was... 11 hours later.
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
Two hours later, sort of working. New stuff to add...
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
Today's question: Can I vibe-mod my QS data visualization tools?
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
@JoeyAnuff So weird right now, that I can even try to do this, working on things legit pros found too hard like, a few months ago? The only price: hours of frustration and a sense of impending doom. Feels like the old days.
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Joey Anuff
Joey Anuff@JoeyAnuff·
@agaricus You might not get likes, but I'd bet you get results.
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
@oldestasian Robbery at Trader Joe's on Berkeley/Oakland border this week: quick target of an SUV just driven from airport to start a road trip. Thieves waiting in the (full) lot broke into the car in a flash, went right for the laptops. Pretty sure they picked up BT signal.
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Andy Kong
Andy Kong@oldestasian·
Chrome has a built-in Bluetooth scanner! Just go to chrome://bluetooth-internals/#devices to see what people around you have named their devices pic.twitter.com/16NtoQGCzJ
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
Chat GPT sounding a like human high school math tutor this afternoon, finals week must be getting to it: "You can't ask, "What angle has a sine of 2?" — that's nonsense."
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
@BasilHalperin History of literacy is interesting to look at in this context. It is not just a press, or books, but the skill to read them. Some of the slow pace can be explained by "elite suppression" but this would have to be interpreted broadly. ccsenet.org/journal/index.…
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Basil Halperin
Basil Halperin@BasilHalperin·
Jon Steinsson's textbook draft also has an interesting defense of the view that the printing press was the "watershed" invention for the Industrial Revolution
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Maxwell Tabarrok@MTabarrok

I mostly agree with @Oklahomaharper on the Roman Industrial Revolution Rome was missing the high science that fuels growth, but it's not because they lacked ideas They just lacked a good way to spread and preserve them. Rome needed the printing press! maximum-progress.com/p/kyle-harper-…

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Damon Lisch
Damon Lisch@DamonLisch·
@InnaVishik My experience as well. Absolutely no reason a student can't mess up in HS, do well in CC, transfer to an excellent Land Grant university and then get into any one of dozens of great Ph.D. programs. Do well there, and there are few limits.
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Inna Vishik
Inna Vishik@InnaVishik·
I did PhD at Stanford, postdoc at MIT in physics. As a professor at a solid but not elite state school, I have interacted with/mentored students who went on to physics PhD in elite programs. I have not met people like this profile. This post conflates absurd hoops to elite undergraduate admissions (if you are trying to get in on the basis of being smart) with elite PhD STEM admissions. The former, people do to get close to the levers of power (or because in the parent’s country of origin, all unis except the best two are considered shit). The latter people do to spend their 20s poor with their brain constantly hurting. PhD admission into an elite physics program is relatively accessible for those with the raw intellectual chops: go to a research university for undergrad (State flagship is great, CC transfer is fine), get very good grades, engage heavily and successfully (publications) with research starting relatively early (sophomore year), probably be agreeable to help with LORs and interviews.
sarah@atheorist

Most people don't actually know the lengths parents will go to try to raise an academic superstar. In this post, I will detail the life of the average thoroughbred in STEM PhD programs at a top university. The thoroughbred lives a difficult life full of enormous amounts of pressure. The thoroughbred's parents have oriented the next 18 years of their family life to evolve around the academic success of their children. The thoroughbred's parents don't simply move houses within their country so their kids can go to the best school in the district; they do a nationwide search to decide where to raise their children based on the schools in that area. The thoroughbred's parents tell their kids that getting straight A's in school isn't enough because the kids in their class are "normal," and to cut it, they are going to have to strive far beyond what's taught in a classroom. They usually have various tutors starting in elementary school, do math and language courses after school, and engage in summer enrichment activities. They make sure their kids get into the gifted and talented programs in their kids' school, and if their kid doesn't make the cut, they hound the school as hard as possible to make sure their kid stays with the leaders of the pack. Their parents give them extra homework during the summer so that they can test out of as many subjects as possible during the school year. Their parents know the algebra readiness exam is in 6th grade and that their child needs to score above a 90% to be able to take algebra 3 years early. They have their child prepare for this exam as early as their kid can handle the material. For these children, school should be a breeze, and they learn the real stuff during their studies outside of the classroom. By middle school, they are spending summers at various math and science camps and doing STEM after school programs. I cannot stress how common math camp is. Most people I have met in STEM PhD programs have gone to math camp, and basically all know each other from their early days going to various math camps as kids. Moreover, in middle school, a lot of the parents start on SAT prep and hope they can do the bulk of their preparation before high school because in high school they have more difficult things to worry about. I know a lot of folks who got the SAT score they used for college in 8th grade. Some kids even have dubious non-profits that they started in middle school that they build up throughout high school in order to project sincere interest in outreach over a long time period—god forbid college admissions programs think you just created a non-profit to get into college. If the high school they want their kid to attend requires testing, they start their kids in test prep classes a few years prior to the high school admissions exam. In high school, they are maxing out AP courses and taking the hardest possible courses available. Usually by junior year, they are taking at least one course at a nearby college. They are entering science competitions and scoring very well at the national and international level. Many of the students who do well at Intel science competitions or Science Olympiads have parents in that exact field of study who can help guide them towards more sophisticated ideas. I know someone who won the Intel science competition by doing a project in spectroscopy whose parents worked on spectroscopy professionally. That being said, the parents aren't doing the projects for them—they know that would ultimately hurt their child—they can just steer them towards actual cutting-edge science and tell them which projects are promising. By high school, all of the thoroughbreds are together at various prestigious public and private schools. Scattered amongst the thoroughbreds are incredibly smart kids who got lucky, and a few people who are struggling in that academic situation who just got lucky during the admissions process. The kids who aren't thoroughbreds have no idea what's going on underneath the surface. They think the thoroughbreds are simply geniuses - they just have so much better mastery of the material and seem to learn everything more quickly than they do. They have no idea what they are stacked up against. They simply do their assignments, try to get good grades, and do a good job in the clubs at school. If a thoroughbred finds themselves struggling in school for whatever reason, they get a tutor and work on it incredibly hard outside of school, though the parents would see that as a personal failure as they should already be so far ahead of their peers that it shouldn't be possible. When the thoroughbreds apply to college, they end up all over, not just fancy institutions. This is primarily because colleges have unofficial admissions quotas for how many students they can admit from each high school. So the top 10% of the thoroughbreds from the top 10% of high schools fill up prestigious universities, and the rest go elsewhere. But do not fret; those who go elsewhere kill it in college and become academic superstars at their respective universities. Once PhD programs come around, the thoroughbreds all end up back together. They all know each other from math camp, science competitions, and shared social circles from prestigious high schools. They have an academic base that's just incredibly hard to compete with if you did not have similar academic training. The additional dexterity you get with that much additional exposure to material is hard to overstate. Of the 50 students admitted to a physics PhD program at my university, most of their parents have PhDs, and all but one student took calculus in high school. Their parents are not necessarily wealthy; they simply prioritized their child's education to an extent most families don't even realize is on the table. Very few people seem to realize just how far families are willing to go to ensure their kids succeed academically, and I hope this post shines some light towards what is going on under the surface of what it actually takes to raise a thoroughbred.

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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
@realwxforecast Thank you for these. Watching closely. Looks like winds still from NNE and no evacuation anywhere in the valley. Post more if you see any changes.
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J. Mesh, AMS 🇺🇸
J. Mesh, AMS 🇺🇸@realwxforecast·
Here are some update videos from Santa Monica and from tarzana up in the hills up Reseda boulevard. They have closed the dirt Mulholland on the San Fernando valley up reseda Blvd, side as the fire is slowly making its way close to the San Fernando valley. Curious to see if the winds shift and what the wind storm for Monday and Tuesday look like. This area needs to be watched on the hills of the SFV. 👀👀👀 More later.... @RichIMET @NWSLosAngeles #PalisadesWildfire #palisadesfires #SoCal #lafires
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
@alexeyguzey I'm bothered that we aren't compelled to believe the paper by negating either proposition. Maybe a hint that standard practice doesn't get us quite as far as we'd like.
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Alexey Guzey
Alexey Guzey@alexeyguzey·
If a scientific paper uses statistics and is not fully pre-registered, you should not believe anything it says.
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WIRED
WIRED@WIRED·
Over the years, the internet has gone terribly wrong, or so common wisdom has it. Online spaces are besieged by bad actors, from roving groypers to troll militias to tyrannical oligarchs. But it’s time to come clean. We are also part of the problem. 📷 James Marshall // 🔗 wired.trib.al/6f39qMj
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Andy Kong
Andy Kong@oldestasian·
A good reason to start tracking "alertness" early is to eliminate practice effects — my Stroop test scores took 3 months to level off, and only now can I correlate it w/ my other biometrics!
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Agaricus
Agaricus@agaricus·
@oldestasian Can you share what tool you used for your measurements? Did you take only one test per session or multiple tests and then average?
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