cleaning_my_room_
cleaning_my_room_ t1_j98ngzb wrote
Reply to How do language models like GPT-3 synthesize information and grammar to make it sound like you’re talking to a person? by m0nkeybl1tz
The best explanation I have seen is this one from Stephen Wolfram.
cleaning_my_room_ t1_j6mzgg7 wrote
Can we bury all the peeps with him? Those things are disgusting.
cleaning_my_room_ t1_j5uqd48 wrote
Reply to comment by cesiuum in Everyone Wants Your Email Address. Think Twice Before Sharing It. by 08830
I have my own domain set up with an email wildcard so any address followed by @mydomain.net (not my real domain) goes to my inbox. I set up a new address for every website or email list.
I also have email rules to automatically put email in folders or delete it based on what address they send to (or from).
So not only can I see when my address was leaked or sold, I can easily filter it out when it happens.
cleaning_my_room_ t1_izfqt1t wrote
Reply to Great article using data to show the rise in Covid misinformation on Twitter. If there was no groundswell of coordinated misinfo on Twitter, this chart would be full of disconnected dots. Data and graphs supplied by Timothy Graham of the Queensland University of Technology by pedrointas
It is full of disconnected dots.
cleaning_my_room_ t1_iy4pcou wrote
Reply to Eye-tracking study suggests that negative comments on social media are more attention-grabbing than positive comments by giuliomagnifico
Further study is needed to determine if pictures of boobs are more attention-grabbing than apples.
cleaning_my_room_ t1_irez6l7 wrote
Reply to comment by royiroyi in TIL that following their execution (by beheading) for treason, the heads of Baron Saye and his son-in-law were unceremoniously impaled on pikes by a mob and pushed together so that they appeared to kiss. by SilasMarner77
Now we need an alternate Harry Potter ending.
cleaning_my_room_ t1_jaetkqj wrote
Reply to [OC] From sweet to bitter: How many insulin vials can you buy per year? by PietroViolo
Are these the same type of insulin? Somehow I expect the answer to be no.
I have heard doctors say that the type of insulin US health insurers cover is massively more expensive than other types that are available in generic form and that have statistically similar clinical outcomes for patients.
The expensive kind keeps blood glucose in a narrower range, which is how they convinced insurers to require it, but clinical studies have shown no improvement in patient outcomes over the cheaper insulin.