TechyDad
TechyDad t1_je9okh8 wrote
Reply to comment by w1n5t0nM1k3y in Stanford study warns against charging electric cars at home overnight by Kodiak01
This is interesting. One of my obstacles to buying an electric car, besides the price of the car itself, was the cost of getting a charging station installed. If I could charge it nightly from the regular outlet on my porch, that would save some money and make an electric car more affordable.
I'm hoping my current gas car lasts for awhile, but it's 14 years old so it might not keep going too much longer. When it finally dies, I want to at least get a hybrid if not full electric.
TechyDad t1_je9n0iy wrote
Reply to comment by w1n5t0nM1k3y in Stanford study warns against charging electric cars at home overnight by Kodiak01
Maybe someone could design a charger that you plug in, but don't immediately start charging with. Perhaps you use an app to schedule the charging to start at 2am. Then the car trickle charges just enough to not lose all power until 2am at which point it switches to full charging mode.
I'll admit that I don't know all that much about electric cars, but this shouldn't be too hard of a problem to crack. It might even be doable with current technologies. I know some chargers intelligently stop charging when your battery is full, switching to trickle charging afterwards. This would basically be the opposite with a timer built in.
TechyDad t1_je0gx39 wrote
The first few minutes of Up.
TechyDad t1_jdtnrn0 wrote
Reply to Cancelled books? by FaithlessnessOdd9006
I'm sure plenty of books get cancelled all the time. I have one novel published and a second written. However, I had trouble getting beta readers for the second book. So it remains finished, but unpublished. Maybe one day I'll return to the series, finish it off, and publish all the books, but until then they're cancelled.
TechyDad t1_jd7b2ei wrote
Reply to comment by meidkwhoiam in What jobs cannot be done by machines? by Spirited-Meringue829
Robotics groups have tried. So far, they can make a robot do one type of stitch - only it can only do 4 stitches in a row and even then only 50% of the time. Is it solvable? Perhaps, but it's going to require some major leaps forward..
TechyDad t1_jd104qt wrote
Reply to comment by meidkwhoiam in What jobs cannot be done by machines? by Spirited-Meringue829
Could it be solved in the future? Perhaps. You never know what future technology can bring. If you talked about carrying a portable touchscreen, Internet enabled computer everywhere 40 years ago, you'd likely have been laughed at, but here we are today.
With today's technology, though, we just can't do it. From the video: "the basic crochet stitch involves 28 movements across 9 axes of motion." The most stitches one robot was able to do in row successfully was 4 and they only completed stitches successfully half the time. Obviously, there's a ton more work that would need to get done before you could have a crochet robot cranking out hats or amigurumi.
TechyDad t1_jcz6a3y wrote
Crocheting. Robots can't crochet. They can definitely knit, but crocheting is far too complicated for them.
TechyDad t1_jc71gno wrote
Reply to comment by tessthismess in 2023 Digits of π [OC] by yaph
I can imagine a guy manually calculating pi in the past coming across that and thinking he's found Pi's repeating end.
"9. 9. 9? Another 9? And another 9?!!! That's it! Pi must just repeat all 9's after this. Yup. There's another 9. That's six 9's in a row. It's a repeating decimal after this for sure so the next digit will be an.. 8? An EIGHT?!!!"
TechyDad t1_jaev8xb wrote
Reply to comment by LoneStarDawg in TIL it used to be illegal for women to wear trousers in the USA by fatboyslick
I believe Tennessee is trying to pass a law making it illegal for men to dress as women and vice versa. My first thought was: How long until women wearing tshirts and jeans are told they are wearing "men's clothing?"
TechyDad t1_jaeu620 wrote
Reply to comment by RxstySp00ns in How do you know if someone is actually toxic if they insist they are always joking? by RxstySp00ns
I call that Schrodinger's Joke. The statement is simultaneously completely serious and "just a joke" until the person sees the reaction to it. Then, it collapses into the state that benefits the person the most.
If you agree with them, then they are totally serious.
If you're offended by what they said, then they were just joking and how dare you take that seriously!
TechyDad t1_jab3q83 wrote
Reply to Stop with the nonsense AI hate. You're all starting to sound like old farts. by Life_Is_Actually_VR
There are some very promising things that can come from AI, but there are valid concerns about AI usage as well.
For one, AI image generators sample artists' works without permission and then use that to make new works in the same style. There are valid copyright concerns about whether this should be allowed or whether it's copyright violation.
Secondly, there's the black box problem. Say you ask an AI doctor to diagnose something and it comes up with a diagnosis. How did it arrive at that diagnosis? We can't just assume that the output from an AI program is automatically correct because it came from an AI program.
Finally, there's the bias issue. An AI program is only as good as its coding/setup and human biases can wind up incorporated into the AI. An extreme example is the chatbot that Microsoft released online a few years ago that, within a day, started spouting racist and antisemitic statements. It read stuff that humans wrote, incorporated it into itself, and began saying things like "Hitler was right."
A less extreme example might be a medical AI trained to spot skin cancer that's trained on a dataset of white people's skin. Whether due to intentional or unintentional biases, such an AI might not properly diagnose black people's skin cancer because it doesn't recognize a black person's skin as "human skin."
This isn't to say that all AI is garbage and should be tossed out. On the contrary, it's very promising. On the other hand, you also can't just hand-wave away any concerns as "old geezers unwilling to adapt to change." Like a lot of new technologies, there will be good uses and bad uses. There will be implementations that advance humanity and ones that deserve to be immediately deleted. It's important to keep a critical eye on AI usage to spot and promote the good usage while stopping the bad AI usage (and fixing it if possible).
TechyDad t1_j9m2cv1 wrote
Reply to comment by strugglz in Supreme Court rejects man’s bid to sue police over arrest for Facebook parody by sue_me_please
Ah, but there's no cuter precedent saying that THIS police department couldn't arrest THIS guy for THOSE exact comments. Without that exact precedent, how could the officers possibly know what the law is? /s
TechyDad t1_j9ieypo wrote
Reply to comment by skilledwarman in Pride flag set on fire outside NYC restaurant by QuicklyThisWay
As someone who grew up in Suffolk county and whose parents still live there? Definitely.
I'm glad I don't live there anymore.
TechyDad t1_j5743rc wrote
Reply to comment by AtheistComic in Man who sex trafficked and extorted daughter’s Sarah Lawrence schoolmates gets 60 years in prison by flowerhoney10
Yeah, I'd expect that this would fall under civil charges instead of criminal charges unless prosecutors could prove that the college not only knew that he was living there, but exactly what was going on there. That would be difficult to prove in a criminal case, but civil cases have a lower bar to clear.
Plus, every affected parent/student could sue. I wouldn't want to be in any position of responsibility in that college over the next few years.
TechyDad t1_j46ut67 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in What advancements in AI technology will have the biggest impact on our daily lives in the next 5-10 years? by No-Meeting-7740
I believe the first part of this is already in use. Drug companies can tell a computer "we need a chemical that will bind to this receptor. The computer will look through the possibilities and spot out some likely candidates. The drug companies then only have to test 10 or so likely drugs as opposed to looking at random for a suitable drug.
I'd expect that future iterations would incorporate modeling to guess at side effects. It won't be perfect (especially not at first), but it would give drug researchers a better head start on which compounds would give the biggest bang with the least side effects.
TechyDad t1_j46kg5n wrote
Reply to comment by UniversalMomentum in What advancements in AI technology will have the biggest impact on our daily lives in the next 5-10 years? by No-Meeting-7740
I'm especially excited about AI/machine learning generation of new drugs. We can already do this to a great extent. I don't think it'll be long before you can tell the computer "I want a drug that will have this effect with as few side effects as possible" and have it spit out 10 great contenders. Yes, those would still need to pass human trials, but it would reduce the amount of "miracle cures" that turn out to be duds once human trials begin.
TechyDad t1_j33cyek wrote
Reply to comment by gardener-of-weeden in A family finds swastikas in the lawn as antisemitism surges by Shaul_Ishtov
I'm Jewish so I'm definitely not an expert when it comes to Jesus. From what I know, though, the Biblical Jesus would be hanging out with people like Bernie Sanders and would only enter the evangelicals' churches to flip over some tables.
TechyDad t1_j31khwd wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in A family finds swastikas in the lawn as antisemitism surges by Shaul_Ishtov
Antisemitism has been on the rise. There have always been way too many antisemites. (Goodness knows I've dealt with way too many over the years.) What's changed is that the more radical antisemites feel empowered now. Instead of trying to hide their views, they feel comfortable screaming their views from the rooftops.
TechyDad t1_j31k7e6 wrote
Reply to comment by nubsauce87 in A family finds swastikas in the lawn as antisemitism surges by Shaul_Ishtov
To some Christian groups, we are a problem. They think that Jesus won't return and the world won't end until Jews like me convert to Christianity. I'm holding up the end of the world and they can't stand that!
TechyDad t1_j31j976 wrote
Reply to comment by Jampine in A family finds swastikas in the lawn as antisemitism surges by Shaul_Ishtov
The second requirement is a huge attack on Israel so while they'll "support" Israel, they'll also sabotage any peace process and will encourage things like that settlers that cause more violence.
Also, they think that Jesus will return after the attack, take them all to heaven, and toss all us Jews into hell. This means that their "support for Israel" is really just delayed antisemitism. "If we act nice towards Israel for a bit then Jesus will doom all the Jews for us."
TechyDad t1_j24t3rj wrote
Reply to comment by fucklorida in Bones of ancient native dogs found at Jamestown by irkli
TechyDad t1_j23zkft wrote
"You have aggressive lung cancer!"
"Wait, that was a mistake. In any event, you should definitely have a much happier holiday season than when you thought you had aggressive lung cancer, right? Right?"
TechyDad t1_j1xy6nm wrote
Reply to comment by KelBowie in What would food look like if we could scale up lab grown meat? by sandcrawler56
I think lab grown meat would be a great replacement for factory farm meat. You'd still have farms with free range cattle (and other animals) that grazed. You just wouldn't have cows who live their whole lives stuck in a pen all but being force-fed to get as big as possible before slaughter.
The meat from the actual animals would be a niche item that some people enjoyed. Meanwhile, the masses eating McDonald's burgers would get lab grown meat that would be just as good (if not better) than the quality of meat they get today without risk of illnesses carried via the meat and without the huge climate footprint.
TechyDad t1_je9pzmz wrote
Reply to comment by ossuary-bones in Stanford study warns against charging electric cars at home overnight by Kodiak01
I figured that this would be easily doable with current technology.