

I bet it happened.


I bet it happened.

This made me laugh.
Not funny “haha”. Funny “oh of course volcanoes too.”
I know we are biased towards the negative, but it does feel like we are speed running everything that could contribute to massive loss of life.


Or for expats who buy a phone in their new country and cant access their apps anymore. Even worse as more businesses require the use of their app for certain things and don’t offer a web app.


So right now, I assume, the store content is based on your apple account country not your geolocation?


Almost like theres a difference in attention.


This is an interesting idea:
The “at least one” in the prompt is deliberately aggressive, and seems likely to force hallucinations in case an article is definitely error-free. So, while the sample here (running the prompt only once against a small set of articles) would still be too small for it, it might be interesting to investigate using this prompt to produce a kind of article quality metric: If it repeatedly results only in invalid error findings (i.e. what a human reviewer
Disagrees with), that should indicate that the article is less likely to contain factual errors


How would you describe it?


Like it’s vibrating around inside. Bouncing within the bounds of my body. I feel like I am coiling up inside myself.
I get tense when I suppress stims, I get tense when I feel perceived, I freeze to not be perceived (so I suppress stims). It can lead to me being totally frozen.
Add in extra stimulation (i.e. if those people are talking, making noises, moving, etc) then I tense up and try to push away the world even more. Making that feeing of being tense/energized even stronger and subsequently working to freeze myself more (thus trapped to my body).
Maybe I am feeling overwhelmed about needing to do something stupid easy (like eat, or send an email) at the same time. So I’ll beat myself up about that while simultaneously keeping myself from being weird (i.e. letting myself release the energy), while trying to shut out other noises/lights/whatever, while worrying about how I’m being perceived/what I’m doing wrong, while…
Anyway, yea. Even without all the added drama, just simply being in a room with other people just sort of zooms me into my body. Maybe because I am more aware of it? Maybe because I can’t do what I want with it?
I sort of assumed this was common. If its not, that explains how some people can watch AFV or boxing and not feel the icky tingles and nausea.
What do you like about it? Why did it surprise you?


I usually try to just edit the large sections that could be deleted (making them longer).


Are there certain factors that lead to this?


a hand-soldered 14×17 cm PCB with twelve different connectors, all broken out to labelled test points. Hook up a dodgy cable or device, connect a known-good counterpart, and the board makes it painless to probe continuity, resistance, or those pesky shorts where D+ suddenly thinks it’s a ground line.


I don’t doubt your common sense, just other people’s.


I don’t mean to question the sincerity of your post when I ask this. Did you use a LLM, like chatgpt, to edit/phrase your question? This style of writing is also used by humans, so I absolutely could be wrong. I am just checking my AI detection calibration.


I’ve not used this, so I can’t promise anything, but I bookmarked it from another thread. Maybe it has some pertinent info?


My neighbour’s mom came to visit and got the wrong house. She just opened my door and walked right in.
Unfortunate, but ultimately my neighbour understood I had to keep my family safe. He was actually very apologetic on behalf of his mother. They said she was a sweet lady, but anyone who so brazenly breaks the law is surely a danger to society.


I’m uninformed about this, do you have any sources handy?
for fucks sake
Vscodium might be an option for you