JournaIist
JournaIist t1_ja89ukp wrote
Reply to How the US and Canada Reduced Their Power Sector Emissions: Top Source of Electricity in Each State and Province Since 2005 [OC] by NoComplaint1281
EDIT: NVM, reading is hard
JournaIist t1_j2kegyj wrote
Reply to comment by Em_isme in Defying Expectations, EU Carbon Emissions Drop To 30-Year Lows by doyouhavetono
The article has a graph that total EU energy is down about 35 GW from 2021. Wind and solar are the only ones up, for what looks like maybe 10GW together.
EDIT: nuclear is down about 20 GW with France apparently having some issues so that's playing a big non-fossil fuel factor playing a role.
JournaIist t1_j22glda wrote
Reply to comment by CollegeMiddle6841 in What do you imagine the world will look like in 2050? by psychosil444
I know little about AI but even if we created AI that's only on par with humans on an intelligence level, I'm sure it'd blow us out of the water.
It wouldn't need 30+ years of development and education to be useful, just weeks or months before it's fully up to speed. Then, once it is up to speed, it can work 24/7, unlike humans, and can incorporate new information much faster than any human ever could and process things much faster.
Add in the things that computers are already far superior at, like data analysis, and I'm sure a human intelligence level ai could outperform a whole team of scientists.
I find it kind of terrifying, not because of the whole sentient ai kill all humans thing that usually comes up in science fiction but because I think it will be used for ill by some for sure, plus we might well be the equivalent of horses in the 20th century.
JournaIist t1_j1l8zv0 wrote
Reply to comment by Annual_Version_6250 in LPT: If you are hurting this year for money and you don't have a lot for your kids for Christmas/holidays, hide what the gifts you have, make a treasure hunt with clues and riddles, and stretch it out to give them a great experience. by pinheadbrigade
We've bought an "end of the roll" roll of newspaper from our local newspaper (the roll is too small to use for another issue but has plenty left on there) for like 30-50 bucks. It's a couple of feet wide and is thin white/gray paper. We often unroll a stretch on the floor and let the kids paint on it. At Christmas time, we then use that for wrapping (for anything not from Santa), especially for gifts going to grandparents etc. We've had that roll for years, gets used year-round and it feels like we've barely made a dent. Just if you want something other than tissue paper.
JournaIist t1_ivgjmj6 wrote
Reply to comment by MikeofLA in Humanoid robots could generate $154 billion in revenue over next 15 years, Goldman Sachs reports by Gari_305
Nah, computers learned pretty quickly how to consistently beat humans in a game such as Dota 2, which is more akin to the type of "creativity" you're talking about than say chess. If they can do that, it wouldn't take them long to figure out how to do it in the real world if given a clear objective. Particularly, since they could run thousands of simulations a day just to "learn."
Sure when playing against humans the AI was got once or twice but it wasn't long before it was basically unbeatable.
Also, humans may be "immune" to EMPs but there's a lot of stuff we need that computers don't (i.e. drinkable water and oxygen) and a lot of stuff that we're vulnerable to that computers aren't (poisons, gasses, etc).
JournaIist t1_is7zkdw wrote
Reply to [Image] Less can be more by conversingwithoceans
Alright, I guess the kids are gone
/s
JournaIist t1_ja8iuxr wrote
Reply to comment by kimchiMushrromBurger in How the US and Canada Reduced Their Power Sector Emissions: Top Source of Electricity in Each State and Province Since 2005 [OC] by NoComplaint1281
Sorry my bad, struggled to read it on mobile