It’s worth mentioning that Servo also exists. It began as a Mozilla project, but eventually got dropped by them and picked up by a different team.
Ms. Haze
Wow, thank you so much for this post, you might have just gotten my (trans and thus endangered) girlfriend out of the US. This saves us so much trouble with the immigration process. Seriously, thank you so much.
Oh, I parsed it as a single misaligned AI, which purchased us from the society we had built. It became a more effective market actor than anything else, it reaped the reward, and then it bought us.
I was going to write something like this a few years ago. This is better than that would have been: thanks for making it.
I have a lot of feelings about this, but they’re mostly the same feelings the story expresses, so there’s not actually much point in me repeating them here.
I guess, good luck out there, everyone.
Good post! This is definitely the approach I use for these things, and it’s one of the most frequently-useful tools in my toolkit.
Ok so this is an old comment but apparently nobody responded to it, so: Tons of connections from the brain to the body are swapped. The left arm, leg, and many other things but importantly the left ear are all connected to the right hemisphere.
So, while I’m not certain as to what’s happening here, it briefly waking up the damaged revolutionary module is much more likely than you seem to assume, here.
Hope that helps!
I think you accidentally a digit when editing this. It now says “7% accuracy”.
my two cents on the fingertip marks thing: it definitely happens, but normal amounts of practice and play don’t generally cause them to last very long. if you see them, it’s very good evidence that the person plays a string instrument, but you’re not that likely to see them, so absence isn’t good evidence to the contrary.
Conservatives do this, but so do leftists, so all you really learn is that they’re not a democrat. And even then, it’s not that strong evidence.
In a similar vein, I have only ever seen the term “classical liberal” used by people who identify with the term.
Oh, also it looks like you forgot to finish your sentence in the astrology section.
In-line with lace code is flagging, which has also mostly fallen out of use recently, and is not really done by gay youth these days, but you’ll still sometimes see it with older folks. Notably, to my knowledge, it has somewhat less geographic variation in colors than the lace code stuff does (though there still is some).
I know it’s a joke, but I really wanna know what the paid posts actually are.
I really hope they get posted somewhere tomorrow because apparently bitcoin is at $58 right now, and that’s a pretty steep price to see a few joke posts.
Oooooh man, I relate to this too hard.
While your specific examples of things you were ignoring are different from mine, and I never developed the judgemental worldview you mentioned in “…and now?”, I realized a while ago that this was something I was/am doing, and that it’d been causing me to ignore important things.
I think it might be more common with AMABs, due to the way they’re generally socialized. Toxic masculinity’s a bitch, y’all.
Also, I specify “AMABs” instead of “guys” because apparently one of the things I was ignoring is that I’m trans; yay me for managing to intentionally miss THAT for 22 years.
I agree. I definitely would have run through common encodings before going to Markov Chains.
I’m glad to hear there’s a proper solution planned at some point since mine is somewhat hacky, but I’m not surprised there’s no clear timeline.
I’ve been wanting to set LessWrong as my home page for a while but kept avoiding it because the site is so visibly bright.
I looked up ways of viewing the site without hurting my eyes and found https://www.greaterwrong.com, but didn’t really like it.
Then I found https://github.com/lfaucon/lessbright, which looked right, but wasn’t technically the real LessWrong site (which meant it couldn’t tell I was logged in, among other things).
But I already use Stylus to apply stylesheet modifications to webpages, so I looked at lessbright’s source code, found the CSS code it used to change the site’s appearance, and applied a modified version of that to a new Stylus style:
html { margin: 0px; filter: invert(100%); } body { margin: 0px; background-color: black; } img, iframe { filter: invert(100%); } .intercom-lightweight-app, intercom-namespace, div.grecaptcha-badge { display: none !important; }And now the site looks exactly how I want it!
Just figured I’d share this, in case the site’s excessive brightness annoys anyone else.
EDIT: Fixed image inversion.
As used in the post, “parasitic” refers to the language game’s relationship to the other language game (of honest truth-telling), not the relationship between VC and founder in either language game.