Edwin

5.4K posts

Edwin

Edwin

@dotinvoke

👨‍💻 full time, full stack dev and dad

Europe 🇪🇺 Entrou em Temmuz 2023
721 Seguindo711 Seguidores
Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@HistorianZhang It’s a kid superpower to piece things together despite only understanding 80% of the words you say, parents should make the most of that
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Lawrence Zhang 張樂翔
Lawrence Zhang 張樂翔@HistorianZhang·
There's no reason to use simple language around kids. They pick it up rather quickly and once they get to like 4 or 5 know to ask what a word means if they don't understand
Robert Pondiscio@rpondiscio

Flight from NY to Denver. Mom one row ahead has been speaking to her very young child using sophisticated language from takeoff to touchdown: control tower, aerodynamics, trajectory, manuever. A one-woman, 30-million word gap in action. Impressive.

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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@RMortvik @johannorbergSE Det handlar inte om ursprung utan om en strävan efter att alla ska ha lika förutsättningar. Andelen som inte klarar algebran är högre bland icke-vita, då tar man bort algebra från läroplanen för att inte cementera befintliga ojämlikheter.
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Roger Mörtvik
Roger Mörtvik@RMortvik·
@johannorbergSE Låter ändå som en skröna. Varför skulle algebra vara rasistiskt? Algebra har ju ett arabiskt ursprung. Är ju mer rasistiskt att inte undervisa i det i så fall.
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Johan Norberg SE
Johan Norberg SE@johannorbergSE·
Joel Mokyr ska använda Nobelpengarna till att sätta barnbarnen i privatskola: ”De kommunala skolorna i Seattle där de bor är fruktansvärda. Det här är en sann historia: Vi fick ett mejl om att skolan skulle sluta undervisa i algebra, eftersom de ansåg att algebra var rasistiskt”.
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Aristocratic Fury
Aristocratic Fury@LandsknechtPike·
It's wild to read about all the brutal Scottish clan wars in 16th century. Many of these battles were lost to history, and those that were recorded are often clouded in legend. But from what we can gather many of these battles were very brutal.
Aristocratic Fury tweet mediaAristocratic Fury tweet media
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@jessegenet So much of elementary school was just learning about things that my parents and grandparents had already explained to me. I was lucky to have such well-read adults around me. Most of my peers did not.
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Jesse Genet
Jesse Genet@jessegenet·
This is the way. A lot of education discourse avoids mentioning an inconvenient truth… an engaged parent who speaks to their kid early and often about the world around them is far superior to almost any curriculum or school by a magnitude in the early years
Robert Pondiscio@rpondiscio

Flight from NY to Denver. Mom one row ahead has been speaking to her very young child using sophisticated language from takeoff to touchdown: control tower, aerodynamics, trajectory, manuever. A one-woman, 30-million word gap in action. Impressive.

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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@AndyMasley This is what kills progress: a small group is invested in the status quo and their relative status is threatened, so they obstruct change to protect their privileges. A phenomenon so universal, that scientists now echo the talking points of luddites and aristocrats
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Andy Masley
Andy Masley@AndyMasley·
It is honestly alarming to me that stuff like this, the idea that we ought to significantly delay curing cancer exclusively to give human researchers the personal gratification of finding it without AI, is being taken seriously at conferences
Julian Togelius@togelius

I was at an event on AI for science yesterday, a panel discussion here at NeurIPS. The panelists discussed how they plan to replace humans at all levels in the scientific process. So I stood up and protested that what they are doing is evil. Look around you, I said. The room is filled with researchers of various kinds, most of them young. They are here because they love research and want to contribute to advancing human knowledge. If you take the human out of the loop, meaning that humans no longer have any role in scientific research, you're depriving them of the activity they love and a key source of meaning in their lives. And we all want to do something meaningful. Why, I asked, do you want to take the opportunity to contribute to science away from us? My question changed the course of the panel, and set the tone for the rest of the discussion. Afterwards, a number of attendees came up to me, either to thank me for putting what they felt into words, or to ask if I really meant what I said. So I thought I would return to the question here. One of the panelists asked whether I would really prefer the joy of doing science to finding a cure for cancer and enabling immortality. I answered that we will eventually cure cancer and at some point probably be able to choose immortality. Science is already making great progress with humans at the helm. We'll get fusion power and space travel some day as well. Maybe cutting humans out of the loop could speed up this process, but I don't think it would be worth it. I think it is of crucial importance that we humans are in charge of our own progress. Expanding humanity's collective knowledge is, I think, the most meaningful thing we can do. If humans could not usefully contribute to science anymore, this would be a disaster. So, no. I do not think it worth it to find a cure for cancer faster if that means we can never do science again. Many of those who came up to talk to me last night, those who asked me whether I was being serious or just trolling, thought that the premise was absurd. Of course there would always be room for humans in science. There will always be tasks only humans can do, insight only humans have, and so on. Therefore, we should welcome AI. Research is hard, and we need all the help we can get. I responded that I hoped they were right. That is, I truly hope there will always be parts of the research process which humans will be essential for. But what I was arguing against was not what we might call "weak science automation", where humans stay in the loop in important roles, but "strong science automation", where humans are redundant. Others thought it was immature to argue about this, because full science automation is not on the horizon. Again, I hope they are right. But I see no harm in discussing it now. And I certainly don't think we need research on science automation to go any further. Yet others remarked that this was a pointless argument. Science automation is coming whether we want it or not, and we'd better get used to it. The train is coming, and we can get on it or stand in its way. I think that is a remarkably cowardly argument. It is up to us as a society to decide how we use the technology we develop. It's not a train, it's a truck, and we'd better grab the steering wheel. One of the panelists made a chess analogy, arguing that lots of people play chess even though computers are now much better than humans at chess. So we might engage in science as a kind of hobby, even though the real science is done by computers. We would be playing around far from the frontier, perhaps filling in the blanks that AI systems don't care about. That was, to put it mildly, not a satisfying answer. While I love games, I certainly do not consider game-playing as meaningful as advancing human knowledge. Thanks, but no thanks. Overall, though, it was striking that most of those I talked to thanked me for raising the point, as I articulated worries that they already had. One of them remarked that if you work on automating science and are not even a little bit worried about the end goal, you are a psychopath. I would add that another possibility is that you don't really believe in what you are doing. Some might ask why I make this argument about science and not, for example, about visual art, music, or game design. That's because yesterday's event was about AI for science. But I think the same argument applies to all domains of human creative and intellectual expression. Making human intellectual or creative work redundant is something we should avoid when we can, and we should absolutely avoid it if there are no equally meaningful new roles for humans to transition into. You could further argue that working on cutting humans out of meaningful creative work such as scientific research is incredibly egoistic. You get the intellectual satisfaction of inventing new AI methods, but the next generation don't get a chance to contribute. Why do you want to rob your children (academic and biological) of the chance to engage in the most meaningful activity in the world? So what do I believe in, given that I am an AI researcher who actively works on the kind of AI methods used for automating science? I believe that AI tools that help us be more productive and creative are great, but that AI tools that replace us are bad. I love science, and I am afraid of a future where we are pushed back into the dark ages because we can no longer contribute to science. Human agency, including in creative processes, is vital and must be safeguarded at almost any cost. I don't exactly know how to steer AI development and AI usage so that we get new tools but are not replaced. But I know that it is of paramount importance.

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Seasonal Clickfarm Worker
Seasonal Clickfarm Worker@ClickingSeason·
dear zoomers, I want this for you. Here are some things you can do that used to exist before covid: -get together with your friends at bars. sometimes have them bring other friends with them you don't know yet -dinner parties. have people over for dinner -go see a band. better yet start a band -flirt with people of the opposite sex IRL. It's literally allowed
Circe@vocalcry

Apparently there is now a Gen Z TikTok trend where they are romanticizing being a millennial in 2012

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Maciej Kawecki - This Is IT
Maciej Kawecki - This Is IT@kawecki_maciej·
@elonmusk Just as Europeans do not tell you how to elect your US president, you will not tell us how we should manage our continent.
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@pegobry_en I live in an arctic country with homeless people and they don't seem to migrate south or freeze to death. Root cause is usually drugs/mental illness, municipal services keep their heads above water and sometimes house them among regular folk (neighbors tend to hate that!)
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@Duderichy If you’re used to learning without struggling, you give up before learning enough that practicing is enjoyable.
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the Rich
the Rich@Duderichy·
one thing I’ve noticed of all the “fast learner” people is none of them seem to be any good at instruments
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@airkatakana Isn’t north korea, with recurrent famine in the modern era, the poster child of “too expensive to raise kids”?
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Air Katakana
Air Katakana@airkatakana·
this is north korea’s tfr over time. can’t be explained by online dating, or women’s rights, or “too expensive to raise kids” or most other handwavy argument in fact the only thing that north korea might have, that undeveloped african nations don’t have, is heavy use of plastics
Air Katakana tweet media
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@bens0xred @columba_lovetxt If (if!) you have working public transportation it’s a great idea. Instead of needing buses for all workers and all students in the morning, you can have half as many buses going twice instead.
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ben
ben@bens0xred·
@columba_lovetxt I don’t disagree but “changing current transportation logistics” is the furthest thing from a trivial task and I’m worried people don’t really get that. It’s not impossible, but it’s not simple either.
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@levelsio Jesus no, Sweden isn’t the best but it is a prosperous and well run country compared to France, Italy, Spain. A United States of Europe would have France, Italy, and Spain forcing their terrible laws on us all and making us worse off.
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Because the EU is a good thing if it'd be democratic The US is also a federal union of states and seems to work fine Europe is much better if it's not fragmented in lots of separate countries There's little difference between me a Dutch person or German or Spanish in modern identity, we should keep our traditions though, just like Texas has its traditions while having a federal union called the United States of America But right now the European Union obviously does NOT function and is NOT democratic, because it's been taken over by an unelected authoritarian group of career politician cronies called the European Commission They stole the power from the people and we have to reform the EU to take it back Long term a federal European union of states is preferable Especially if you want to compete with China
Paper Bozz@PaperBozz

@levelsio Why are you not calling for disbanding EU completely?

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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@jmhorp Isn't median household income often expressed per capita to normalize for household size? So in your example they'd have ~92k per capita, slightly above average
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Jeremy Horpedahl 🥚📉
Average earnings for a male full-time worker with a bachelor's degree, ages 25 to 34 was $101,600 in 2024. For a woman it was $83,460. So a young, avg married couple with undergrad degrees is earning $185K Keep that in mind when someone tells you median household income is $84K
Jeremy Horpedahl 🥚📉 tweet media
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@FMannerheim Om du söker in till civilekonom efter att ha gått natur så har du svårare att komma in än någon som gått samhälls som har samma begåvning och har pluggat lika hårt, för natur har svårare ämnen. All antagning borde ske via högskoleprovet för att jämna ut spelplanen.
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Filippa Mannerheim 📖📚✍️
Förr var det statusfyllt att gå Natur och Teknik just på grund av att kraven var höga, ämnena svåra och man måste plugga hårt för att få bra betyg. Idag anses det ”orättvist”. Frågan är vad dessa program förvandlas till om man sänker kraven? dn.se/sverige/elever…
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Baele
Baele@AMurderOfDucks·
@Robotbeat It's a finite resource. Why be frivolous in its use?
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@MyLatinLife Most people don’t want to set foot in an open office when their employer provides it for free
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My Latin Life 🌴
My Latin Life 🌴@MyLatinLife·
I think the reason co-working spaces lose money and are unsuccessful is because of the open concept layout that 99% of co-working spaces have. Almost nobody that works remote does quiet work all day. Nomads need to record content and do calls. Almost every remote professional needs to do calls. But these co-working spaces you're lucky if they have 2 phone booths for calls. And of course those call booths are full the entire day. Even though they see the phone booths are popular, for whatever reason they don't buy more. A functional co-working space should be 95% phone booths, private rooms, and content recording rooms, and 5% open concept for networking. But most are the opposite with 5% of square footage allocated to content/privacy and 95% open concept nonsense. That is why they are unsuccessful.
My Latin Life 🌴 tweet media
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@kitten_beloved I watch almost no television and my wishlists right now is just "pens and paper", so this generalizes across ages
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Kitten 🐈
Kitten 🐈@kitten_beloved·
One of the crazy things about raising kids without broadcast television is they have no idea what to want as gifts One of my kids' christmas list this year featured, and I'm not kidding: * "pens and paper" * "a really big pillow" * "a kiss"
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@PeterWang873584 @gonglei89 The point isn’t to spend a ton of money on carbon scrubbing, it’s to spend just as much money on green tech!
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Peter Wang
Peter Wang@PeterWang873584·
@gonglei89 I feel like as a kid we already had all the solutions but every time the teachers just said some bullshit about them all being too expensive. Like that’s not a reason. Money isn’t fucking real, Bangladesh is going to be fucking flooded that’s over a hundred million people.
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Lei Gong
Lei Gong@gonglei89·
China is on its way to solving industrially useful carbon capture processes. If or when they make these kinds of processes economically viable though we’ll need a global net carbon control regime to ensure that we don’t *overdraw* CO2, which is just as dangerous as net emissions.
tphuang@tphuang

Wow, Chinese researchers have developed direct coupling of atmospheric CO2 w/ ammonia to produce urea using solar energy as sole input. Up until now, they have been synethesizing "green" methanol & urea through waste straws, animal wastes & such. Would be a game changer to directly take carbon from air & produce different kind of chemicals we need.

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Ángel Talavera
Ángel Talavera@atalaveraEcon·
I feel we´re not talking enough about the fact that Europeans decided in 2022 that they didn't need to buy any more stuff. Seems like a big deal.
Ángel Talavera tweet media
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Edwin
Edwin@dotinvoke·
@mattyglesias There are 75,000 of them in Minnesota alone
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