baumpop
baumpop t1_j6o0nyf wrote
Reply to comment by ToothlessGrandma in AI Has Successfully Imitated Human Evolution—and Might Do It Even Better by AdGroundbreaking1870
Dont worry well be seeing plenty of articles pulling water out of the air too.
baumpop t1_j69olbd wrote
Reply to comment by NinjaLanternShark in Why not use chat gpt to spot obvious fake news? by Irate_Librarian1503
You curb this by having the ai write the news then check it then also be the audience for it.
baumpop t1_j65kf8x wrote
Reply to comment by Laowaii87 in Longest ‘dako’ iron sword at 2.6m, along with a unique shield-shaped mirror, found in 4th-century Japanese burial mound — Finds indicate that the technology of the Kofun period (300-710 AD) was more advanced than previously thought by marketrent
You not liking a source is not the same as discourse of the content of the source.
Read Shakespeare. I don't know what to tell you.
baumpop t1_j64sbi6 wrote
Reply to comment by Laowaii87 in Longest ‘dako’ iron sword at 2.6m, along with a unique shield-shaped mirror, found in 4th-century Japanese burial mound — Finds indicate that the technology of the Kofun period (300-710 AD) was more advanced than previously thought by marketrent
So is what you're telling me.
Bust me off your source for 13th century coloquialisms.
baumpop t1_j645ve9 wrote
baumpop t1_j62ms09 wrote
Reply to comment by Laowaii87 in Longest ‘dako’ iron sword at 2.6m, along with a unique shield-shaped mirror, found in 4th-century Japanese burial mound — Finds indicate that the technology of the Kofun period (300-710 AD) was more advanced than previously thought by marketrent
they were the lynch pins because they made literal lynch pins and other very vital but common place things. now obvious they are 1/1000 of the quality of they used to be but hinges for example while stamped on machines havent really changed much in a thousand years.
nails. for example were so crucial they used to burn down buildings just to recover the nails. once these nails were at their final end of life they were used to make doors and nailed over and into themselves through the door. Hence the term - dead as a doornail.
baumpop t1_j5znkw0 wrote
Reply to comment by Laowaii87 in Longest ‘dako’ iron sword at 2.6m, along with a unique shield-shaped mirror, found in 4th-century Japanese burial mound — Finds indicate that the technology of the Kofun period (300-710 AD) was more advanced than previously thought by marketrent
You just described the trade of blacksmithing for thousands of years. Almost all the work is small piece work to pay the bills while you take commissions or contracts for larger pieces. Every blacksmith was a ferrier before, now it's a standalone profession.
baumpop t1_j30k90f wrote
Reply to comment by SituatedSynapses in NYC Bans Students and Teachers from Using ChatGPT by blueSGL
you forgot the part where it becomes a dumbed down watered version of its original intent like everything else has been regarding technology for the last 40 years.
baumpop t1_j2ovszx wrote
baumpop t1_j2ooh1h wrote
Reply to comment by I_play_trombone_AMA 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
Welcome to live music baby. Most bands play for hours at a time without the accompaniment or sheet music. All in the noggin.
baumpop t1_j294b41 wrote
Reply to comment by katycake in Google Home speakers allowed hackers to snoop on conversations by chrisdh79
hal open the refrigerator doors.
baumpop t1_j1gj240 wrote
Reply to comment by stoneman217 in Future of Games by stoneman217
this is often thought of as why super mario 4 was the most innovative game at the time of release. up to that point mario while super addicting and approachable was often difficult for non gamers and new players. creating a rift between gamers and non gamers until mario world came out.
instead of starting levels over from the beginning you could instead save checkpoints and save power ups to use later in levels. checkpoints would also fully heal you to a big mario. this along with a link to the past making zelda more approachable for a bigger audience grabbed the entire world by storm in the 90s.
​
just some shinfo.
baumpop t1_iyez9vl wrote
Reply to comment by do_or_pie in BBC to produce ‘lighter’ content to attract Britons from poorer backgrounds by do_or_pie
Y'all peaked at mighty boosh
baumpop t1_iy9l5uj wrote
Reply to comment by Arstanishe in Spiders were probably an absolute nightmare to early mammals. by psychoxxsurfer
Weren't they micro fauna initially? Like prey to pretty much anything?
baumpop t1_iy8xgce wrote
Reply to comment by Swampwolf42 in Spiders were probably an absolute nightmare to early mammals. by psychoxxsurfer
I mean yeah.
Where'd the entomologist go?
baumpop t1_iy8wtd7 wrote
Reply to comment by Swampwolf42 in Spiders were probably an absolute nightmare to early mammals. by psychoxxsurfer
Everything came from water.
baumpop t1_iy8u1b9 wrote
Reply to comment by BuncleCurt in Spiders were probably an absolute nightmare to early mammals. by psychoxxsurfer
Lunch? What are you a boomer?
baumpop t1_iy8tlwa wrote
Reply to comment by Swampwolf42 in Spiders were probably an absolute nightmare to early mammals. by psychoxxsurfer
I didn't say they were out of the water. The largest pre-spider on record was around 22 inches. Bout the size of my dog.
baumpop t1_iy8ooif wrote
Reply to comment by oldshitnewshit78 in Spiders were probably an absolute nightmare to early mammals. by psychoxxsurfer
Interesting. We know for sure that scorpions, dragonflies, and certain worm types were hundreds of times larger than today's species.
baumpop t1_iy8doks wrote
Reply to comment by Thexin92 in Spiders were probably an absolute nightmare to early mammals. by psychoxxsurfer
Shinfo side note. Venom has evolved over 20 separate times on earth.
baumpop t1_iy8dhp0 wrote
Reply to comment by MansfromDaVinci in Spiders were probably an absolute nightmare to early mammals. by psychoxxsurfer
Spiders were the size of dogs
Submitted by baumpop t3_z28r23 in Showerthoughts
baumpop t1_iqrsab3 wrote
Reply to comment by -Rivox- in What's a laureate? A classicist explains the word's roots in Ancient Greek victors winning crowns of laurel leaves by MeatballDom
I'm sure there are a lot of Roman traditions where Rome used to be
baumpop t1_j74uyv9 wrote
Reply to comment by FirstSynapse in Back in the late 90s, I remember hearing that scientists “cloned a sheep”. What actually happened with the cloning, and what advancements have been made as a result of that? by foxmag86
What about regrowing tissue? And does this tangentially related to the new knowledge that cells are sending information and can be "reprogrammed" (like in the anti aging studies on mice).