s5eeo pfp

s5eeo

@s5eeo

401 Following
444 Followers


s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
For running shoes, I found https://runrepeat.com to be very helpful. They have filters for terrain type, intended running distance and some physiological parameters among others, although there are no filters directly for foot flatness. But you might still find it helpful.
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

Anuraj R pfp
Anuraj R
@anurajenp
lol https://x.com/schopenhauernow/status/1937907154834366953
2 replies
4 recasts
14 reactions

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
What’s the rate of success with that in your experience so far? Does it ever result in a mess rather than improvements?  Also curious about how detailed your instructions are before you let the agents run.  In my experience, it often takes a detailed implementation plan to ensure they don’t make a mess. But it’s a lot of work to create it for all the tasks.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
Do you think it’s because radiation therapy is often combined with chemotherapy, giving some people the impression that the side effects of chemotherapy (hair loss, nausea etc.) are due to the radiation?
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
Coal is way more problematic from a deaths / TWh perspective that most people would expect. Our World in Data has a great breakdown if this here: https://ourworldindata.org/safest-sources-of-energy “these estimates for fossil fuels are likely to be very conservative. They are based on power plants in Europe, which have good pollution controls and are based on older models of the health impacts of air pollution. As I discuss in more detail at the end of this article, global death rates from fossil fuels based on the most recent research on air pollution are likely to be even higher.” https://farcaster.xyz/kaufman/0x2368a378
0 reply
0 recast
6 reactions

packy pfp
packy
@packy
"When I first started using AIs, I feared that machines were becoming more human. And yes, it is getting harder to tell the difference. But that's not just because machines are becoming more humanlike, but because humans are becoming more like machines." "We worry AI will replace writers but have you seen most of what's online? Half the internet is engagement farmers on LinkedIn selling you five steps to 10x your productivity by 6 a.m." "Create unlimited presentations in seconds... like who wants to create unlimited presentations in seconds? Who wants to go from a half-baked thought to like a fully baked mediocre idea in like five seconds?" "I think like ambition is a part of us, and I think the ways in which we will channel our ambition might change and I think that's extremely exciting." The one and only @sariazout on Hyperlegible 011. BECOME unLLMable https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xk24Y0SP7iE
11 replies
8 recasts
86 reactions

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
Now there’s MedGemma! https://developers.google.com/health-ai-developer-foundations/medgemma The weights are available on Huggingface and it can be run locally: https://huggingface.co/collections/google/medgemma-release-680aade845f90bec6a3f60c4
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
The International Longshoremen's Association trying to prevent or reduce port automation in the US
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
This reminded me of a passage from “On the Shortness of Life” by Seneca that hit home for me. https://warpcast.com/dwr.eth/0x98f903ef
0 reply
1 recast
11 reactions

Jason Crawford pfp
Jason Crawford
@jasoncrawford.eth
Where is the equivalent of the YIMBY movement for healthcare? Who is pointing out the gross violation of economic wisdom and common sense, or campaigning for reform against the worst inefficiencies? This field is wide open, and some smart writer or savvy activist should step in and fill the vacuum. https://newsletter.rootsofprogress.org/p/where-is-the-yimby-movement-for-healthcare
2 replies
5 recasts
17 reactions

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
I like these videos that make manufacturing look cool. Although it’s very short on details, it’s interesting to see the collaboration between humans and robots as well. https://youtu.be/i8ycR2VTrA4
0 reply
1 recast
3 reactions

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
For privacy purposes, it’s easy to download and set up a model for local inference with ollama for example. It’s especially easy as a developer and takes just a few lines of code. Open source models small enough to be run on a laptop (e.g. Gemma 3) have gotten very powerful. This is not the most user-friendly option but has been working well for me.
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
It’s parody but this video captures some of the realities of this so well. https://warpcast.com/teleyinex.eth/0x78b52a7b https://youtu.be/JeNS1ZNHQs8?si=vCb-7MYiRFU2BG_f
6 replies
8 recasts
39 reactions

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
Nice. So the data shown there is sourced from NRC and DOE?
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
Nope, didn’t work for me either.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
Thanks!
0 reply
0 recast
2 reactions

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
Humanoids might just be the most versatile form factor, not skeuomorphism. https://warpcast.com/s5eeo/0xbdbb4033
2 replies
8 recasts
10 reactions

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
The style reminds me of 3blue1brown. Great content!
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
Interesting to hear. Have you observed any failure cases or mistakes yet? Would be super interesting to hear examples, if you have any. Or anything that you have been particularly impressed by?
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

s5eeo pfp
s5eeo
@s5eeo
Seconded. I’ve experienced this a few times but it’s still way too rare. Another pet peeve I have with LLMs and more complex queries is that they never ask clarifying questions or for missing information if needed and instead just go ahead and do something, which often ends up not being what you needed.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction