jonathan xyl

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jonathan xyl

jonathan xyl

@jon_xyl

Defending the commons. Technology optimist/brother

New York Katılım Nisan 2020
998 Takip Edilen240 Takipçiler
jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
never thought about how big of a flex this sounds like (And Is)
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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
Please just call me LeBron Jim. LeBron James is my father
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hope hopes hoping
hope hopes hoping@hopes_revenge·
naming my firstborn son william sonoma and sending him to private school in marin county
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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
what do you call an abg ai researcher? a fine tuner
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Daniel Yang
Daniel Yang@punished_daniel·
My opinion on the ABG discourse is that I prefer the douyin makeup look tbqh
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Basil🧡
Basil🧡@LinkofSunshine·
The reaction of the post-liberals in Israel to the failure of democracy there has been one of the most fascinating phenomena ive seen on the internet
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Richard Morrison
Richard Morrison@RichardMorrison·
New status level uncovered: "I mean, I *would* fly commercial, but my board insists on me going private."
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James
James@jamesbeef_·
@MariGO2thepolls Does he still go on about how guilty he feels for being wealthy?
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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
@patrickc Are there any sequencing providers that don't sell your genome data or store it in perpetuity to be sold in bankruptcy?
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Patrick Collison
Patrick Collison@patrickc·
I'm lucky enough to have a great doctor and access to excellent Bay Area medical care. I've taken lots of standard screening tests over the years and have tried lots of "health tech" devices and tools. With all this said, by far the most useful preventative medical advice that I've ever received has come from unleashing coding agents on my genome, having them investigate my specific mutations, and having them recommend specific follow-on tests and treatments. Population averages are population averages, but we ourselves are not averages. For example, it turns out that I probably have a 30x(!) higher-than-average predisposition to melanoma. Fortunately, there are both specific supplements that help counteract the particular mutations I have, and of course I can significantly dial up my screening frequency. So, this is very useful to know. I don't know exactly how much the analysis cost, but probably less than $100. Sequencing my genome cost a few hundred dollars. (One often sees papers and articles claiming that models aren't very good at medical reasoning. These analyses are usually based on employing several-year-old models, which is a kind of ludicrous malpractice. It is true that you still have to carefully monitor the agents' reasoning, and they do on occasion jump to conclusions or skip steps, requiring some nudging and re-steering. But, overall, they are almost literally infinitely better for this kind of work than what one can otherwise obtain today.) There are still lots of questions about how this will diffuse and get adopted, but it seems very clear that medical practice is about to improve enormously. Exciting times!
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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
@devahaz People love posting this exact same story in airline subreddits for some reason
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Deva Hazarika
Deva Hazarika@devahaz·
Frequent flyer followers, are you experiencing this? I read posts about this ALL THE TIME nowadays, but as someone who flies a lot I basically never see it. Have I just been getting really lucky or are people way overstating the level of seating chaos these days?
Ellie Hall@ellievhall

I’m currently in the boarding process of an international flight and I truly cannot believe the AUDACITY of so many passengers on this plane. People (including 1 family w/ kids) are just sitting wherever they want and then guilt-tripping the people who actually have those seats

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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
@KelseyTuoc Life if Sherrill was elected: <Picture of Singapore but with better weather>
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Kelsey Piper
Kelsey Piper@KelseyTuoc·
This is, somehow, meant to be an anti-Sherrill argument, but even when trying to pretend affordability would be bad they make the upzoned city look unfathomably cool. We could have this. You could afford to own a home and start a family. It'd be amazing.
Kim Chi@KimChiSpicey

Vote for Stephen Sherrill in D2 so we drastically transform the Marina into a hyperdense waterfront urban center. Let’s make it look like Miami! We could fit 200K-700K MORE people in D2 alone. 90% of the city wants this!

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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
korean christian americans are the mormons of canada
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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
Claude, DJ my wedding. Make no mistakes
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R.F. Kenmore
R.F. Kenmore@rfkenmore·
@michaelmiraflor I feel like they don't even have a design team. And I know they don't hold inventory. They send references to the factories, they iterate/rip it off, and then dropship to customers
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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
"When you shoplift, you directly and unambiguously impoverish your community. You make prices higher for everybody else, you make stores less usable for everybody else, or you make businesses not viable that would otherwise be viable. The direct impact each time is small, but it's a lot larger than the direct impact of taking some trash out of the trash can to throw on the ground, or pouring just a tiny bit of poison into your local river, and most people have a deep, instinctive abhorrence of antisocially wrecking your community like that."
Kelsey Piper@KelseyTuoc

I doubt that anyone I know steals from Whole Foods, but the milieu that the article depicted, where it's normal for perfectly well-off people to steal things because why not, was really upsetting to read about, so I actually want to try to earnestly explain why you shouldn't do this just in case there's someone out there who has never had it explained to them. When a business opens - or really, as soon as a business starts making plans to open - a defining question for the business is how it will collect payment for the goods or services it provides. If you trust the people you sell to, you can be pretty relaxed about this; send people an invoice, most of them will pay it on time, any who don't will pay it a bit late. You have to think about convenience and mistakes but not about people trying to cheat you. This saves you so, so much defensive planning to make sure you get paid. It's so much easier. But if you're selling to the general public, you do have to think about people trying to cheat you. You have to structure the physical store so that it's hard for them to steal. You have to not carry some items that you'd like to sell, because they'd also be attractive targets to steal. If people swap price tags between items, you can't use stickers. If people put things on in the dressing room and wear them out, you need to pay someone a full time salary to monitor the dressing room. The world that we all live in is much poorer than the world we'd live in if people didn't steal. The stores don't carry things that they could carry if people didn't steal. They don't use pricing and inventory systems that would be way easier and more convenient if people didn't steal. But it could be much worse! If I walk down to my local Whole Foods today, items on the shelves won't be locked behind sheafs of plastic - that is only worth it when the background rate of stealing is much higher than it is at my local Whole Foods. When more people steal, businesses have to further intensify security, or go out of business. When you shoplift, you directly and unambiguously impoverish your community. You make prices higher for everybody else, you make stores less usable for everybody else, or you make businesses not viable that would otherwise be viable. The direct impact each time is small, but it's a lot larger than the direct impact of taking some trash out of the trash can to throw on the ground, or pouring just a tiny bit of poison into your local river, and most people have a deep, instinctive abhorrence of antisocially wrecking your community like that. So don't steal. The other thing that it seems possible some people might not understand is that while you might have a social circle that is incredibly nihilistic and cynical and thinks that everybody steals, in fact this is not true. Most people do not steal. Most people, if they learn that you steal, will lose more respect for you than you had to lose. I don't know anyone who has shoplifted except 'as a kid/teenager'. It is not always the case that virtue is rewarded and vice is punished but even before you bring the legal system into it, the risk-reward tradeoff of having everybody you know know that you steal things sometimes is absolutely terrible. Who would hire someone who steals things? Who would trust them around a vulnerable person? Who would want to live in a society with someone who will delightedly and routinely wreck it for the slightest personal benefit? I hope that "Gina" turns her life around. I hope that Gina realizes that she needs to. And if you have been told that it's just a corporation or that having ethics is lame or that if you think about it, other bad things happen too, like wage theft, so that means stealing is okay, I hope you really, actually, think about whether you'd accept any of those as excuses for anything else.

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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
@mattyglesias Have you considered the existence of (highly representative) Leo DiCaprio
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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
@bryancsk You can take the man out of Columbia but never the Columbia out of the man
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Bryan Cheong
Bryan Cheong@bryancsk·
Cluely is like a leftist's imaginary tech bro. Some brooklynite that has never been west of the Hudson thinks this is what SF and tech look like. This is why he had to go to NYC, because he's drawn from the wellspring of a dreamscape that is interdicted by San Francisco.
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jonathan xyl
jonathan xyl@jon_xyl·
One must imagine Clavicular happy
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roon
roon@tszzl·
ignoring all the purple prose and the fact that i hadn’t even heard of rlhf this kind of aged well scale.com/blog/text-univ…
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jonathan xyl retweetledi
meatball times
meatball times@meatballtimes·
wait this graph is crazy BART installed anti-fare-hopping gates and the amount of station maintenance and cleanup they had to do went to basically zero strong evidence that the poor condition of public transit is fairly easy to fix + caused by a very small group of people
BART@SFBART

@maxdubler And there are other real benefits such as fewer corrective maintenance requests and time spent cleaning and fixing things.

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