peadith
peadith t1_jeghif1 wrote
Reply to comment by GodAndGaming123 in AI Investing Future: How Artificial Intelligence is Transforming the Investment Landscape by GodAndGaming123
Seems like it could be capable of forcing legitimate investment.
peadith t1_jegg2fk wrote
Reply to comment by AcademicGravy in Heat Pumps could supply 20% of building heating by 2030. Supercritical CO2 heat pump sales in Japan have now reached a total of 8.5 million units. by DisasterousGiraffe
It would be a practical physical condition of operation, not jargon. What is the low side pressure of these systems when running?
peadith t1_jeffk6c wrote
Reply to comment by wwarnout in Heat Pumps could supply 20% of building heating by 2030. Supercritical CO2 heat pump sales in Japan have now reached a total of 8.5 million units. by DisasterousGiraffe
At a minimum, Way higher static pressure.
peadith t1_jeek036 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Meta wants EU users to apply for permission to opt out of data collection - Instead of a yes/no consent, Meta users will fill out a form and include justification. by speckz
If you do not consent but log on anyway you'd be a new kind of what used to be called "disturbed individual".
peadith t1_jeb3x61 wrote
Reply to comment by Hashtagworried in Here’s What Happened When ChatGPT Wrote to Elected Politicians - Cornell researchers used artificial intelligence to write advocacy emails to state legislators. The responses don’t bode well for democracy in the age of A.I. by speckz
The mildly staffer-edited form letter is old as time. Interestingly, it's easy to tell when you get one.
peadith t1_jeanzmt wrote
Reply to Here’s What Happened When ChatGPT Wrote to Elected Politicians - Cornell researchers used artificial intelligence to write advocacy emails to state legislators. The responses don’t bode well for democracy in the age of A.I. by speckz
Ha! Legislators have been using the lowest budget form of AI to respond to constituents for decades. If anything this just levels the field.
peadith t1_jdnlq3j wrote
If you don't like efficiency what good are you?
peadith t1_jdmurx1 wrote
Reply to comment by SomeoneSomewhere1984 in Who do you think will be the winners and losers of the coming AI revolution? by tshirtguy2000
I agree with what you say about celebrity billionaireism but it's already starting to look like billionaires are going to find out first about how much they're really worth and the followers will have to find something more significant to worship.
peadith t1_jdmnpr2 wrote
Reply to comment by cookingboy in U.S. and China wage war beneath the waves - over internet cables by Global_Informant
I don't think African nations are really all that interested in Chinese politics. I'm sure they're looking closely at the development promised. As you well described, they know how it's been worked in the past.
peadith t1_jdmm9kl wrote
Reply to comment by Kiizmod0 in What happens if it turns out that being human is not that difficult to duplicate in a machine? What if we're just ... well ... copyable? by RamaSchneider
That's just something we compliment ourselves with because we don't really know how we work.
peadith t1_jdml67v wrote
Reply to comment by LigerXT5 in Will ChatGPT Kill the Student Essay? - Universities Aren’t Ready for the Answer AI is here to stay. It’s up to educators to articulate why writing still matters by CWang
The student still has to decide whether they approve the submission no matter how it's generated. They could easily learn something new in the process. Or get busted for talking gibberish or about something they clearly don't understand.
peadith t1_jdmfnd6 wrote
Reply to comment by cookingboy in U.S. and China wage war beneath the waves - over internet cables by Global_Informant
The networking infrastructure is undoubtedly beneficial but I wonder about the ecological quality of the mining and extraction business going in. Is China really trying to improve Africa or just move their dirty stuff to a poorer place. Will it all get maintained and will China make sure everyone gets paid as promised? That remains to be seen.
peadith t1_jd93sba wrote
Reply to comment by purplenelly in Women are less likely to buy electric vehicles than men. Here’s what’s holding them back. by filosoful
Car culture and the associated technology has had an undeniable male history. Maybe that will change as loud noises and smoking flaming exhaust fades from it and actual overall performance becomes a more reasonable and accessible aspect.
peadith t1_jcz84ue wrote
It's probably more important to realize no one has ever tried to make those.
peadith t1_jcw5idc wrote
Lay off the caffeine and nicotine and you won't have such poor circulation in your fingers. The IR diodes are kinda new and cool but otherwise this is another plugged in gadget.
peadith t1_jcra6jf wrote
Like a dream wherein you suddenly realize your lover only has taint and then you wake up an hour early. Can happen to anyone.
peadith t1_jcps5sy wrote
Reply to comment by squeevey in Qualcomm Is Poised to Dominate EVs Before Apple Gets a Chance by OutlandishnessOk2452
You know what would be funny is if the Chinese came out with a simple and cheap plain old electric vehicle without all this digital bull shit and it wipes the market.
peadith t1_jcpqq0b wrote
Reply to comment by squeevey in Qualcomm Is Poised to Dominate EVs Before Apple Gets a Chance by OutlandishnessOk2452
If they're going to put the billboards on the windshield I think I really will go for a horse and carriage. Do the Amish take lare-comers?
peadith t1_jbyhbzh wrote
Reply to comment by Taxoro in ChatGPT or similar AI as a confidant for teenagers by demauroy
Lots people think this thing is still a command line joke greeter. Yer in fer a sprize.
peadith t1_jacw340 wrote
Reply to comment by DropApprehensive3079 in Racial stereotypes vary in digital interactions: Study shows racial stereotypes of Black AI can lead to more positive outcomes in negotiations by universityofga
Ha! I don't know. The people doing this must have a difficult job and I'm sure they don't know what they're doing.
peadith t1_jacqkch wrote
Reply to comment by gonzo8927 in Racial stereotypes vary in digital interactions: Study shows racial stereotypes of Black AI can lead to more positive outcomes in negotiations by universityofga
Putting race or culture in AI could be useful as test cases for analysis I suppose but it seems like a dead end either for itself or humans, at least east as we know it. Very early times and far to go.
peadith t1_jacl39q wrote
Reply to Racial stereotypes vary in digital interactions: Study shows racial stereotypes of Black AI can lead to more positive outcomes in negotiations by universityofga
Attempts to anthropomorphize this stuff just shows how early into it we are. There's no point to putting the human in it. It needs to be put in humans. Unless you want to accept redundancy.
peadith t1_jaae2mx wrote
Reply to comment by New-Shop-7539 in The world should be governed by people with intellectual thought and people should listen by New-Shop-7539
That's what I'm saying. The only in-roads I can give you on this is of course you may not use coersion or force yet people must recognize and reject their own character flaws. If that doesn't happen we stall out.
peadith t1_jaa9q6w wrote
Reply to comment by New-Shop-7539 in The world should be governed by people with intellectual thought and people should listen by New-Shop-7539
That's the thing. There's no reason to associate a paradigm shift with a cleansing by massive death and destruction, but here we are.
peadith t1_jegmi5j wrote
Reply to comment by GodAndGaming123 in AI Investing Future: How Artificial Intelligence is Transforming the Investment Landscape by GodAndGaming123
Yeah, that kind of stuff. Maybe you even believe in what the company is doing and are in it for the long ride instead of yanking your money in and out trying to game the whole thing.