

Any problem that requires active work to solve will benefit from having money thrown at it. Of course, that’s assuming the money is actually going towards solving the problem.


Any problem that requires active work to solve will benefit from having money thrown at it. Of course, that’s assuming the money is actually going towards solving the problem.


That must be why they need so much more money than the rest of us.


I don’t drink coffee, my breakfast is usually a meal replacement shake, and I work from home on most days. I wonder what long series of extremely improbable events would have to happen for me to end up owning any coffee at all and then somehow having it end up in my shaker bottle while I’m on route from the kitchen to my office.
This seems like the same problem that we have with shuffling music, where a truly random shuffle doesn’t feel random; if you make it less random, it ends up feeling more random. Similarly, making a movie less realistic can make it feel more realistic.


There’s “honey bee” if you want to specify that you’re talking about the type of bees that produce honey, and there’s “bee honey” for the honey they produce, as opposed to the kind made by wasps.


No, it’s exactly 21.00⁰C. It’s like a bell curve. Once you go above or below that, it’s back to pants.


I feel like that just overcomplicates things. As long as they can’t use the money, they’re not causing harm, right?
If you want a more consistent stream of income, a wealth tax would make more sense.


It’s especially nice to see a comment go from -5 to +5 after you do so.
Bring the money to Canada and build it here!


It’s insane that this happens. I’ve had memberships at six different gyms over my lifetime. For all but one, I’ve had to explicitly tell them that I want to renew, or else the membership gets automatically cancelled at the end of the contract term.


Thanks for informing us that you’re rich, I guess?


And also have their AIs read another 100 emails for them.


TAA as in temporal anti-aliasing? Is that not frame generation? It’s interpolating between frames to create a frame that wasn’t previously there. Just like how spatial anti-aliasing generates pixels that weren’t previously there.
I think maybe we have a different idea of what “generation” means. I’m guessing your idea of “generation” is when it surpasses some threshold of information added through the process.


Upscaling = artificially increasing the sampling rate through some sort of inter/extrapolation.
Temporal = it’s happening on the temporal axis.
Samples on the temporal axis are frames.
Therefore, temporal upscaling = artificially sampling more frames = frame gen?
I was just talking about the bread that one tier up from the basic grocery store sliced white bread. But yes, when you have actual good bread, the crust is an essential part of the experience.
I think this might be correlated with the type of bread. When you have the really sweet highly processed white bread, the crust tastes very bitter in contrast. With higher quality breads, the crust is just a little dryer, but not too different from the rest of the slice. I never liked bread crust as a kid, nor did my partner. But my kid never complained about crust and this is my hypothesis as to why.
You can just leave milk out at room temperature for a few days and you’ll get yogurt. There’s tons of lactobacilli floating around in the air and on every surface. You might need ants for a specific strain, but you don’t need them if you just want any yogurt.
Probably makes more sense to kill their dog or something like that. Hint that there’s more where that came from.


It does rhyme. The e in second and best are assonant.
By the well ordering theorem, no matter what you choose as your definition of “chicken”, there must be a first.