Here’s a video
It’s also written up on Cognitive Revolution’s substack for those that prefer text.
Here’s a video
It’s also written up on Cognitive Revolution’s substack for those that prefer text.
Feel free to comment—since only the user you’re replying to (and anyone that has chosen to subscribe to updates for that specific post) is notified, you don’t need to fear being a distraction to masses of people who might no longer care.
Eliezer said it in http://lesswrong.com/lw/ul/my_bayesian_enlightenment : “That scream of horror and embarrassment is the sound that rationalists make when they level up.”
Here’s the post about it: AI presidents discuss AI alignment agendas
Explanation here: http://lesswrong.com/lw/mo0/open_thread_aug_24_aug_30/couo
I’m not sure if this is what you were thinking of (seeing as how it’s about a year old now), but “blog post summarizing the most useful bits of LW’s lore” makes me think of Yvain’s Five Years and One Week of Less Wrong.
Robin Hanson’s “EquaTalk” seems relevant: http://mason.gmu.edu/~rhanson/equatalk.html
Among other things I suppose they’re not super up on that to efficiently colonise the universe [...] watch dry paint stay dry.
clicked first relative to receiving are the same person! And also that person is from the majority group
A majority member being the initial clicker also isn’t terribly surprising because a group being larger means one-or-more of any given sort of person—in this case, a quick-responder-type—is likelier to crop up among them.
Perhaps the article you read was Yvain’s The Virtue of Silence?
Here are some links I compiled on this topic recently when my cousin lost her cat. Best of luck!
TIPS
http://www.missingpetpartnership.org/recovery-tips/lost-cat-shelter-tip-sheet/ http://www.missingpetpartnership.org/recovery-tips/lost-cat-behavior/ http://www.catsinthebag.org/
(CONSULTING) DETECTIVES
http://www.missingpetpartnership.org/lost-pet-help/find-a-pet-detective/pet-detective-directory/ http://www.getmycat.com/pet-detective-database/ (not all consult via phone & email, but it seems many do, e.g. http://www.catprofiler.com/services.html)
eBOOKS
The following book apparently has an epilogue regarding finding missing pets: http://smile.amazon.com/Pet-Tracker-Amazing-Rachel-Detective-ebook/dp/B00UNPGD9Y/ (there’s also an older, dead-tree edition called The Lost Pet Chronicles—Adventures of a K-9 Cop Turned Pet Detective)
http://smile.amazon.com/Three-Retrievers-Guide-Finding-Your/dp/1489577874/ http://www.sherlockbones.com/ http://www.lostcatfinder.com/lost_cat_finder/search_tips.html
FORUM: https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/MissingCatAssistance/info
Also perhaps of interest might be this discussion from the SSC subreddit awhile back where someone detailed their pro-Bigfoot case.
The person whose tweets were linked above when mentioning “they become Zealots, doing lasting damage to their lives, and then burning out spectacularly.”
Before I read the aphoristic three-word reply to you from Richard Kennaway (admittedly a likely even clearer-cut way to indicate the following sentiment), I was thinking that to downplay any unintended implications about the magnitude of your probabilities that you could maybe say something about your tracking being for mundane-vigilance or intermittent-map-maintenance or routine-reality-syncing / -surveying / -sampling reasons.
For any audience you anticipate familiarity with this essay though, another idea might be to use a version of something like:
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on [by default][and {also} tracking <for posterity>].”
(spoilered section below just corrals a ~dozen expansions / embellishments of the above)
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on and tracking.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on and tracking for posterity.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on and also tracking.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on by default.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on by default and tracking.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on by default and tracking for posterity.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on by default and also tracking.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on by default and will track mindfully for posterity.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on by default (mindfully though—and so will also just track as a matter of course).”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on by default (mindfully though, so tracking then for posterity).”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on and will track mindfully for posterity.”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on (mindfully though—and so will also just track as a matter of course).”
“The plumber says it’s fixed, which I’m splitting on (mindfully though, so tracking then for posterity).”
Somewhat similar to you I’ve thought of the second group as “Vroomers”, though Eliezer’s talk of cursed bananas has amusingly brought “Sunnysiders” to mind for me as well.
I can’t vouch for this personally and don’t even recall the source (always a great way to start advice...), but I remember reading once that a pinch of sugar sublingually with a touch of salt might also help for quickly returning to sleep.
I don’t have a direct answer for you, though I imagine the resource mentioned at https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/MKvtmNGCtwNqc44qm/announcing-aisafety-training might well turn up what you’re looking for :)
While I’m sure you’ve thought of setting silent alarms on your phone, a slightly less obvious idea would be to get a watch that has a vibrating alarm capability.