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  1. The Monsters Know What They’re Doing, , more info

    Cerberus Tactics
    For some reason, Mythic Odysseys of Theros’s inclusion of “cerberi” as a genus of monstrosities hits me as being particularly goofy, as if Van Richten’s Guide to Ravenloft had included a listing for “draculas.” The post Cerberus Tactics appeared first on The Monsters Know What They’re Doing.
    By Keith Ammann, 49 words
  2. The Boston Diaries - Captain Napalm, , more info

    I am Socrates
    I tried reading this with an open mind, but then I came across this: This is a very easy fix. If I paste the error back into the LLM it will correct it. Though in this case, as I’m reading the code, it’s quite clear to me that I can just delete the line myself, so I do. Via Lobsters, How I program with LLMs My initial reaction to this …
    528 words
  3. Hardly Baked 2 - my drivel blog, , more info

    Bee Sides
    Songs about bees, or from the perspective of a beeIt's wonderful to be aliveTo be a bee in this beehiveIt's tough as nails, it's smooth as silkIt's milk and honey, without milkI work with flowers, it's my workFrom this, there's no way that I can shirkNo-no-no-no-no, there is no complex philosophyIt's just because I'm a beeUnlike the skunk, I do not smellBut I have a thing and it stings like …
    By SIMON REYNOLDS, 1,272 words
  4. Gödel's Lost Letter and P=NP, , more info

    2025-01-07 19:18
    new theory
    By rjlipton, 2 words
  5. Plenge Gen @rplenge, , more info

    AI Unleashed: Transforming Drug Discovery from Theory to Practice
    When I last wrote about AI on this blog three years ago, I spoke of it being a tool with the potential to transform scientific discovery, but the application I described was primarily theoretical. For AI to be a meaningful tool in R&D, I argued, we needed better sources of “truth” – better data sets that AI tools could query and learn from over time – and technology capable of …
    By Robert Plenge, 224 words
  6. Polytechnic — Blog, , more info

    HTML Is Actually a Programming Language
    When haters deny HTML’s status as a programming language, they’re showing they don’t understand what a language really is. Language is not instructing an interlocutor what to do in a way that leaves no room for other interpretations; it is better and richer than that. Like human language, HTML is conversational. It is remarkably adept at adapting to context. It can take a different shape on any machine, from a …
    By Garrett Coakley, 182 words
  7. dammIT | A rantbox, , more info

    Ubik, Ships, Discworlds oh my
    Normally I don't write book reviews, because I do not have much to add to the thousands of reviews already out there, and would rather spend my time in the next book than typing words about what I just read. Still. Recently I finally was able to break my dry spell of reading and enjoyed a collection of books that have some themes in common yet are very different in …
    By Michiel Scholten, 1,137 words
  8. FIRE v London, , more info

    Dec ’24 – 2024 in review
    And we’re off, into 2025. Before we get too far, it’s time to take stock (pardon the pun) of 2024. I’ll follow the 7 point approach I’ve used for the last few years, starting with the wider market context. Q1 How did markets do? December saw falls across most asset classes – arguably reverting to the mean after the November gyrations caused by the Trump election win. The Australian dollar …
    By FIRE v London, 2,398 words
  9. Data Colada, , more info

    [122] Arresting Flexibility: A QJE field experiment on police behavior with about 40 outcome variables
    A forthcoming paper in the Quarterly Journal of Economics (QJE), "A Cognitive View of Policing" (htm), reports results from a field experiment showing that teaching police officers to "consider different ways of interpreting situations they encounter" led to "reductions in use of force, [and] discretionary arrests" (abstract). In this post I explain why, having spent... The post [122] Arresting Flexibility: A QJE field experiment on police behavior with about 40 …
    By Uri Simonsohn, 92 words
  10. Minimalist Baker - Simple Recipes That Make You Feel Good, , more info

    Creamy Vegan White Bean Chili
    We love a classic (tomato-based) chili, but a CREAMY chili? It’s hard to say no to! Mix up your chili rotation with this creamy vegan white bean chili with spicy green chiles, sweet corn, and nutrient-packed spinach or kale. It’s a cozy, subtly spiced, nourishing meal that comes together in just 30 minutes. Let us show you how it’s done! This EASY vegan white bean chili starts with a simple …
    By Dana @ Minimalist Baker, 96 words
  11. Ben Crowder — Blog, , more info

    Booknotes 3.27
    Nonfiction The Dark Queens: The Bloody Rivalry That Forged the Medieval World, by Shelley Puhak, published 2022. It’s about Brunhild and Fredegund in the late 500s and all the crazy and frequently violent political machinations throughout their rise to power. Quite good. I really liked it, even if the going felt slower at times because of the less familiar names. I hadn’t realized the royal name Louis (Louis XIV etc., …
    By Ben Crowder, 249 words
  12. Annoying Technology, , more info

    Manuel was annoyed
    I wish Slack would spend half as much time on improving core functionality as they do on these obnoxious, enterprise-grade notifications for features I don’t need. This one is particularly dumb: It’s from a Slack workspace with exactly two users – me included. All our communication there happens in channels.
    By Manuel, 53 words
  13. Paul's page, , more info

    VictoriaLogs on NixOS
    Searching for VictoriaLogs on search.nixos.org gave me no results, so I ran victorialogs from Docker. But at some point I did search for victorialogs on nixpkgs and realized that the binary is built with victoriametrics.
    38 words
  14. Holdfast Projects ~ Rod McLaren, , more info

    Carbon emissions of AI
    7 January 2025 - working notes AI is here to stay. And AI is famously compute-intensive, which means it’s energy-intensive, which means its carbon emissions are a worry. I think the emissions are likely to come from initial training of the model, running the model (inference), data centre stuff (mostly energy use), and lifecycle emissions associated with hardware production and disposal. What’s being done to measure and reduce the emissions? …
    728 words
  15. Not One-Off Britishisms, , more info

    “Pub-crawl”
    Back to H.L. Mencken and his book The American Language, he says in Supplement One (1945) that one of the Britishisms “that deserve American adoption” is “‘pub-crawl’ (a tour of saloons).” I’m pretty sure my readers don’t need that definition, so familiar has the phrase become on this side of the Atlantic. But it definitely had British origins. It sprang from more more specific sorts of alcoholic “crawls.” The OED‘s …
    By Ben Yagoda, 474 words