Pleometric

7.2K posts

Pleometric banner
Pleometric

Pleometric

@pleometric

Purple Penguin

The Pleorama Katılım Mart 2024
451 Takip Edilen8.1K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
I hereby grant my followers a royalty-free license to pilfer, repost, remix, screenshot, deepfake, and otherwise exploit any content on this timeline in any medium now known or hereafter devised throughout the universe.
GIF
English
15
2
115
4.3K
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
a very telling characteristic of millennial writing is that constant self awareness, a coy wink to a perceived audience "so I did a thing..." or maybe a naughty "they're really not gonna like this one". Defensive self-awareness vs a gen-z assume perfomace "chat, ..." etc
English
15
2
224
10.8K
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
@somewheresy I like Lanier, but he’s been doing the stolen future thing for over a decade at this point with few (if any) actionable suggestions
English
1
0
8
226
∿
@somewheresy·
Arguably one of the dumbest things I’ve ever heard. Produce Tokens. Build Infrastructure. Total Hippie Elimination
Existential Hope@HopeExistential

Most AI futures give us two options: mass unemployment, or a government handout to soften the blow. But what if there's a third option, one centered on completely new categories of creative work that don't yet exist, where people get paid for contributing to AI rather than replaced by it? In this episode, we talk with Jaron Lanier, pioneer of virtual reality and scientist at Microsoft Research. He proposes a radically different way of thinking about AI, and unpacks its consequences from AI safety to the future of the economy. Links below! Timestamps: 0:00 Cold open 0:50 40 years in Silicon Valley: how tech became a pseudo world government 4:19 Self-driving cars, Tesla, and the moral paradox of tech progress 7:13 Why "artificial intelligence" is a marketing term, and how you should think about it instead 15:16 AI as human collaboration: what it makes possible and how it makes you a better user 21:37 From the Turing test to the truth crisis: how science shifted from seeking truth to performing it 25:36 Data dignity: going back to the people to solve AI's biggest safety failures 32:55 The alternate future worth building, and challenging the AI orthodoxy 38:41 Why UBI won't work and why a creativity-based economy is more stable 45:20 How to be an optimist about technological progress while acknowledging the risks

English
8
0
31
3.1K
Pleometric retweetledi
𒐪
𒐪@SHL0MS·
trillions of human hours spent per year on social media and 99.999% of artists are using it as a media distribution mechanism for instead of as a canvas
𒐪 tweet media
English
10
13
201
5.2K
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
@wuheitek just take that as practice for the cadence and rhythms of the language
English
0
0
1
5
wuhei乌黑
wuhei乌黑@wuheitek·
@pleometric everytime i try consuming content i'm blasted by the uncomprehensible subtle variations in speech that my hsk1 can't even process, will study harder
English
1
0
1
5
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
almost done with HSK5, I've been slacking off a little to be honest, but I aim to have this finished in the next 30 days. I'm starting a 4 hours a day of immersion work (watching / reading -> essays to be graded by deepseek) to get off my current slog.
Pleometric tweet mediaPleometric tweet media
English
2
0
27
1.2K
medjed无为圆猫
medjed无为圆猫@medjedowo·
@pleometric @segyges genx irony was genuine in its own way, and lacked the recursion that defined millennial and later irony (analog media was too slow for meta-irony to degenerate) after internet, everyone entered a race to out-absurd the leader
English
1
0
3
23
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
@medjedowo @segyges gen x irony is much more directly confrontational and straight to the point, millennial irony was more a display of skill in navigating layers of abstraction and simulacra, like the famous comic.
Pleometric tweet media
English
2
0
4
64
medjed无为圆猫
medjed无为圆猫@medjedowo·
@segyges @pleometric it is actually a genx invention, but is known as a millennial register after they grew up on the counterculture media of their elders see: maddox, webcomics, tumblr
English
1
0
3
34
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
@segyges @medjedowo there is a defensive angle but there was also a differentiation thing between those who understood the irony and those who would fail to parse it. This evolved in different strains, 4chan in-group signaling operated in the same logic from every other irony laden posting style.
English
1
0
3
71
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
I'm not sure this can be entirely attributed to real name facebook posting. The "I speak sarcasm as a second language" graphic tees and the 9gag / Imgur "we're mean but in a chungus way", youtube etc came from a world where there was such a thing as an internet / IRL difference. You were basically signaling that you could code-switch
English
2
0
2
90
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
@segyges hell, even here under an ironic register
English
1
0
4
102
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
May update on tiktok, we have a meme number on the followers now 50 videos total, I sometimes forget to post for a week at a time. I'm gonna try to be more consistent going forward.
Pleometric tweet media
Pleometric@pleometric

31 days after I started posting on Tiktok I got to 10k It took 18 videos, which took me a collective 60 minutes to make, or roughly 3 min / video. I started this as a one month experiment to test a hypothesis about remixing memes from comments, I'll do larger write up soon.

English
5
0
48
1.8K
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
I think the most important lesson is to ignore you audience's cries for "more X" and just keep exploring. Always fight your audience
English
0
0
8
240
Pleometric
Pleometric@pleometric·
@_ontologic as a [nationality] [age] [race] [gender] [profession], THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS. I agree with you.
English
0
0
2
19