Stillwater215
Stillwater215 t1_jcw0v1v wrote
Reply to comment by _Face in What’s your favorite time-loop / “Groundhog Day” episode of a TV show? by wet_bandits23
That was a great guest character who should have been given a follow up episode. Or really any follow up from a whole crew finding themselves flung into the future.
Stillwater215 t1_jcoqbfw wrote
Reply to comment by AutoModerator in [WP] Everyone knows the hero won't defuse the bomb until the are less than 10 seconds left. That's why I've set it to explode at 20 seconds. by Sh4d0w927
This is the opposite of Galaxy Quest, where no matter how early you diffuse the explosion, the timer can only stop at one second left, because it always stopped at 1 on the show
Stillwater215 t1_jc5caks wrote
Reply to comment by Shadeauxmarie in Why were the control rods in the reactor featured in the HBO series 'Chernobyl' (2019) tipped with graphite? by Figorama
Passively safe reactors should be the future of electricity generation. Modern reactors are designed so that the job of the operators is to “fight” the reactor to make it more reactive. If they walk away or are incapacitated, the reactor brings itself into a steady, low-power state. But whenever people think of nuclear power, they only think of Chernobyl…
Stillwater215 t1_jbd5vw8 wrote
“Sailor, Statesman” as a description doesn’t do Robert Smalls justice. Read up on this man’s story, and then can someone please get Lin Manuel Miranda to write a musical about him?
Stillwater215 t1_jbd5qyx wrote
Reply to comment by imaraisin in Navy renames warship after Black sailor, statesman by citytiger
He speaks!?
Stillwater215 OP t1_j6lkwg2 wrote
Reply to comment by drphillovestoparty in Finding joists in ceiling by Stillwater215
I didn’t know about this. Thanks!
Stillwater215 OP t1_j6hzbza wrote
Reply to comment by OutinDaBarn in Finding joists in ceiling by Stillwater215
Unfortunately I’m in a first floor condo, so no access from above.
Stillwater215 OP t1_j6hvmj3 wrote
Reply to comment by wb6vpm in Finding joists in ceiling by Stillwater215
I’ve done projects like this before, but I’ve never had this much of a problem finding a joist. I’ve got no problem with patching a few holes, so this could work.
Stillwater215 OP t1_j6hve8h wrote
Reply to comment by danauns in Finding joists in ceiling by Stillwater215
It’s not too heavy, but heavy enough that I wouldn’t be comfortable with just drywall anchors. Same with the projector screen.
Submitted by Stillwater215 t3_10p1iq7 in DIY
Stillwater215 t1_j6gcwv9 wrote
Reply to Private UBI by SantoshiEspada
I think UBI is where we’ll eventually end up, but I can’t see the transition being something smooth. I am anticipating some kind of economic collapse to rival the Great Depression, followed by a period of civil unrest, that (hopefully) turns into a near post-scarcity economy.
Stillwater215 t1_j6023ex wrote
Reply to HoloLens AR actually makes soldiers less lethal, soldiers hate it | Report comes after Microsoft lays off various VR/AR employees by BlueLightStruct
I can get why soldiers currently in the field who are being transitioned to it hate it, but I’d be curious if new soldiers who would be trained on this equipment from the start would see any improvement in effectivity compared to soldiers who were trained without it.
Stillwater215 t1_j3c7zgx wrote
Reply to AI, the so called "self thinking" machine. by Bakariiin
You’re kind of way off on how AlphaGo works. It wasn’t programmed with any knowledge of good vs bad moves in Go at all. It was programmed with the basic rules, and then played against itself millions of times, each time adjusting its neural network so that it learned how to make the best move in any given position.
Stillwater215 t1_j2pqoui wrote
Reply to comment by bayesian13 in In 1930s, Music Defense League launched a campaign against recorded sound in movie and live theaters, claiming that numerous musicians would lose their jobs if "canned music" was preferred over live recordings. by Profanion
I’ve seen a number of these! The Boston Symphony Orchestra typically does a couple of these events every season.
Stillwater215 t1_j2fegjv wrote
Reply to Israeli pens plan for belt of solar panels on moon to power oxygen production. With NASA mulling nuclear reactor to generate energy, Ben Gurion University expert says his idea would produce same amount of power with six times less mass. by Zee2A
The only scary thing about a fission reactor on the moon is getting fuel there. Rockets are definitely moving in the direction of being safer, but a rocket loaded with enriched uranium, if it were to explode during lift-off, would potentially contaminate a massive piece of land with radioactive material. Even if a rocket only fails 1/100th of the time, that’s still a huge gamble to make.
Stillwater215 t1_j2f8mq3 wrote
Reply to [OC] Around 30% of countries spend more than 2% of GDP on their military by IndeterminateYogurt
Nice graph. Though I would actually take out having it be “per capita.” Since you’re using that for both axes, it’s actually not having any effect on the data points.
Stillwater215 t1_j2ani40 wrote
Reply to Old Christmas trees could be saved from landfill to make renewable fuels. Research has found that pine needles from discarded Christmas trees or other sources could be turned into renewable fuels and new products, with the potential to reduce the UK’s carbon footprint. by MistWeaver80
Dumb question, but wouldn’t the best use of old Christmas trees be to just use them directly as fuel. They’re just wood. Can they just be thrown into the furnace of a power plant?
Stillwater215 t1_j23uxww wrote
Reply to comment by LaJolla86 in What, exactly, are we supposed to do until AGI gets here? by gaudiocomplex
Would the key inflection point for that be an AI that’s capable of writing and training another AI quickly?
Stillwater215 t1_j23uicc wrote
Reply to comment by PapaverOneirium in What, exactly, are we supposed to do until AGI gets here? by gaudiocomplex
The thing I keep worrying myself about is that any AI doesn’t need to be perfect to be threatening to peoples jobs, it just needs to be better and cheaper. We’re definitely heading to cheaper, and given that ChatGPT is already being used by students to help with essay writing, we’re not that far off from it being better.
Stillwater215 t1_j1zkt02 wrote
Reply to comment by 7ECA in what could be the next big resource or science that will change our lives? similarly to how Electricity, a wheel or fire did it. by minde0815
If quantum computers ever come to fruition, the biggest challenge will be updating old encryption technology to be quantum secure.
Stillwater215 t1_j1zkoam wrote
Reply to comment by weenie007 in what could be the next big resource or science that will change our lives? similarly to how Electricity, a wheel or fire did it. by minde0815
As long as it doesn’t make the frogs gay I think folks will be alright with it.
Stillwater215 t1_j1zkltj wrote
Reply to what could be the next big resource or science that will change our lives? similarly to how Electricity, a wheel or fire did it. by minde0815
General purpose AI. Imagine being a doctor or scientist or lawyer and not needing to read through a dozen papers to find the one piece of information you need.
Think of “the computer” from Star Trek that had every piece of information available at a single vocal command. That it what a general purpose AI could offer.
Stillwater215 t1_j1rze0r wrote
Reply to What do you see happening over the next 300 years to a millennia? In what way will it be different to how it is today? by Serious_Final_989
I would bet that we reach a level of commercial space travel akin to commercial air travel. The moon/mars will have some form of rudimentary base, probably after a couple of failed attempts. Though I don’t think they will be colonized in any real way.
Stillwater215 t1_j1hnio1 wrote
Reply to [Image] My fellow Kings and Queens, dont let your negative selftalk mud who you truly are 💎 by mantasmark
If you believe yourself to be average, then any great accomplishment of yours could have been done by anyone.
-the ongoing source of my imposter syndrome and depression.
Stillwater215 t1_jean4qk wrote
Reply to I read an article about Missouri’s House cutting funding to their libraries and it made me really sad. by poopmaester41
Cool. Now cut the tax breaks for churches that talk about sex and sexual orientation. Oh, they won’t do that? Hmm, interesting.