conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-09-02 09:16 pm

Does anybody have an explanatory link?

So, responses here are not terribly helpful.

The OP is specifically confused about the use of the prhase "such as" in the highlighted sentence. I said that this is not wrong, it's just formal and old-fashioned, but like most Americans I've had very little formal education in English grammar and with google I still can't find either the words to define it or a few well-placed citations by prestigious authors.
arlie: (Default)
arlie ([personal profile] arlie) wrote2025-09-01 08:48 am

Proton AI (LLM)

This morning I received an official email from Proton, announcing that they'd released a privacy-conscious AI. They presumably mean a large language model (LLM) chatbot. It's available only via apps, which they've only produced for iOS and Android - not Windows, MacOS, and Linux. There's a free version, and a for-pay upgrade. It's apparently being discussed, semi-officially, on X and Reddit - so that's where to share any feedback. (I don't have accounts on either one.)

I'd much prefer they put their effort elsewhere. Their calendar app is missing obvious features - such as a search. Failing that, it would have been nice if they'd made this available on devices with real keyboards; then I might have considered playing around with it - though never trusting any answer I can't competently judge.

I am, however, happy to report that the for pay chatbot mode does not appear to be automatically included in the otherwise fairly comprehensive package I pay for, so presumably won't be "justifying" a price increase.

p.s. they've named their AI, presumably because they see no harm in confusing people into imagining chatbots are people. They call it "Lumo".

And to be fair, there's probably a fair amount of demand for such a feature. I'm merely not one of those demanding it.

p.p.s. Their getting started guide informs me that Lumo is indeed an LLM chat bot, though it doesn't use that term. It does a decent job of reminding people of chatbot limitations, particularly in terms of accuracy. It also informs me that Lumo is available via a web interface. https://lumo.proton.me/guest
siderea: (Default)
Siderea ([personal profile] siderea) wrote2025-08-31 11:57 pm
Entry tags:

Vance is Worse [pols, US, Ω, Patreon]

Canonical link: https://siderea.dreamwidth.org/1882100.html



0.

With all the eager discussion of the possibility of Trump dying in office, I am in the delicate and unfortunate position of not actually being in favor of it.

Don't get me wrong. I, too, would enjoy to seeing something very bad happen to Trump. What I'd best like is him getting his just deserts – ideally being arrested, indicted, tried, found guilty, sentenced, having appealed, the appeal failing, appealing again, having that appeal fail, petitioning the POTUS for clemency and it not being granted, him being duly executed by the state as the traitor to the Republic and the Constitution he was proven to be. I'm not generally a big fan of capital punishment, but I am in fact willing to make exceptions; he seems to think he's an exception to a lot of things, and here I would agree with him.

But that's not going to happen, not in this time-line, and it's probably for the best that it doesn't.

Perhaps he will simply keel over dead, and I confess I will take at least a little bitter satisfaction in it.

And it's certainly not that I don't wish us all to be spared even another moment of this Trump presidency. Of course I do.

Alas, as much as I hate to crush the pleasant fantasy of us being redeemed by the deus ex machina of artheriosclerosis finally doing its job and carrying off our oppressor: Vance is worse. Much, much worse.




1.

It's perhaps understandable that you would not realize this.... Read more [6,770 Words] )

This post brought to you by the 219 readers who funded my writing it – thank you all so much! You can see who they are at my Patreon page. If you're not one of them, and would be willing to chip in so I can write more things like this, please do so there.

Please leave comments on the Comment Catcher comment, instead of the main body of the post – unless you are commenting to get a copy of the post sent to you in email through the notification system, then go ahead and comment on it directly. Thanks!
conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-09-01 06:04 pm

So, the title said something about the Argonaughts or maybe the Hugonuts?

Me, using correct spelling: Those are two entirely different groups of people. Is there any way you can narrow this down even a little?

Them, repeating the wrong spelling: Nope, absolutely not!

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conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-08-31 10:29 pm

So, I've now created a DW feed

for [syndicated profile] chopwood_carrywater_feed. I thought that getting it in my email and on my reading page would help prompt me to call (or email, listen, I have limits) my congresscritters.

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siderea: (Default)
Siderea ([personal profile] siderea) wrote2025-08-30 04:20 am
Entry tags:

This one will be [curr ev]

Current rumors engulfing Bluesky have me recalling an old Communist-era Russian joke:

Every day, a man walks to a news stand and pays for a copy of Pravda, unfolds it, looks at the front page, and throws it in the trash. Every day he does this, for months, until finally the news seller asks the man, "So what is it you are looking for on the front page every day?"

"I'm checking for an obituary."

"Comrade, the obituaries aren't on the front page."

"Oh, this one will be."
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
rydra_wong ([personal profile] rydra_wong) wrote2025-08-29 05:53 pm
Entry tags:

… so I’m playing Dark Souls

That is a thing that is happening.

My standard joke here is that any game involving reflexes and coordination is going to be an excruciating experience of innumerable repeated failures for me, so I might as well play one where that's the point. This is only partly a joke.

Necessary context for anyone who has not met me IRL: I am dyspraxic as fuck. I was in my late twenties at least, possibly thirties, before I could catch an object being gently thrown to me across a short distance. My coordination, reflexes and ability to react to multiple inputs in real-time are so bad that I can't drive (or cycle on the road) because it would be OBVIOUSLY WILDLY DANGEROUS for me to even try (people would die). I have to buy special shatterproof crockery because otherwise my plate turnover is so high.

It was only with climbing that I learned that I can actually acquire motor skills, some of them, slowly, if I have unlimited time to practice them on my own terms.

Further necessary context: I'd been looking wistfully at the Soulsbornes for ages -- having seen videos such as Jonny Sims's Bloodborne streams -- as something that I'd probably love if I only had any coordination or ability at all to cope with having to react to multiple rapid inputs in real-time.

One of my climber friends has argued that Soulslike games are basically the same as working on a hard boulder project: you fail and fail and fail and fail and that's the process, each time you try to learn a bit more or try something new, and gradually you make progress, and eventually, hopefully, you don't fail.

And that's a process that I fucking love, and that works very well for my brain. Perverse stubbornness is my jam.

But when I look at something like Bloodborne -- the combat exchange is over before I can even track who's where and what's happened.

So I was thinking grumpily/wistfully and in secret about how what I really wanted was not an "easy mode," but a Soulsborne game that I could adjust the speed on (maybe set it all to 20-30% slower!), just so I could get my foot in the door, just so I could begin to maybe try.

And I watched more videos of other games, and somewhere along the way I watched people figuring out and/or being coached on how to get through the fight with the Asylum Demon at the end of the tutorial* in Dark Souls 1.

(I also read that Dark Souls 1 has the slowest and, in some people's eyes, "clunkiest" combat of the Souls games — not necessarily the easiest, but more tactical, less fast-twitch.)

And I thought, "... huh, I wonder, if I really worked at it, maybe I could beat the Asylum Demon? That would be kind of cool."

To be clear: I bought the game with the goal of seeing if I could beat the tutorial.

Cut for length )
sabotabby: (doom doom doom)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-08-29 07:22 am
Entry tags:

podcast friday

I am once again behind on everything (not just podcasts) so have the latest Maintenance Phase, "Seed Oils." I mostly missed the right-wing hysteria over seed oils, but Aubrey and Michael do a good job explaining it for normies who have real problems.

It's also a notable episode because it has a great quote from Andrew Tate of all people: "I can tell you losers have never had real enemies. You're afraid of sunflowers." I wish this wasn't an Andrew Tate quote because "I can tell you've never had a real enemy" is a phrase I would like to incorporate into my regular vocabulary.

There's something vaguely occult horror about one of the big driving engines of politics being people who are afraid to die, and think that if they just eat the right thing, death will never come for them. All the time setting up a situation in which people can't be vaccinated against deadly and preventable diseases. All these people obsessing over sunflowers while their kids are dying of measles, they repeatedly infect themselves with covid, and they've given up on FDA measures to control the amount of sawdust in their bread.
ioplokon: purple cloth (Default)
ioplokon ([personal profile] ioplokon) wrote2025-08-28 09:43 am

Bringing the debates of the day to YOU.

Quebec's newspapers are not perfect. But one thing I do like is that a lot of their opinion pieces are genuinely that. For example, a month or so ago, they had a back-and-forth between two columnists about whether hope was a blessing or an evil.

Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 15


Hope is:

View Answers

a gift to humanity to compensate for the world's evils
11 (73.3%)

the last of the evils, creeping tardily out of the box
5 (33.3%)

conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-08-30 06:54 am

Standards for signing up with ICE are so low

maybe it makes sense to undermine them from within? Oh, where's the sabotage manual when I want it?

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conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-08-29 07:41 pm

Let's just pretend I posted this on International Left-hander's Day

Poll #33546 Left handers unite!
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 41


Which are you?

View Answers

Sinister
14 (34.1%)

Gauche
27 (65.9%)



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frandroid: "Level 5 vegan" button, after the Simpsons quote (vegan)
frandroid ([personal profile] frandroid) wrote2025-08-28 12:06 am
Entry tags:

okara vegan cheese update #2

Remember my last update, where the okara culture burst out of its container? It turns out that happened because the okara had been contaminated with other bacteria. So I'm on attempt #2 right now, made with fresh okara straight from getting boiled/pasteurized in the soymilk maker, and it's time it's not gassing out like crazy. We'll see in a couple days what it tastes/looks like...
conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-08-28 07:32 pm

DW and Bluesky (and probably others)

are now going to block Mississippi IP addresses.

Link to DW explanation

Link to Tedium post on Bluesky

So, yay, piracy and VPNs all the way?

(I fucking hate this timeline, have I said that lately?)
radiantfracture: Small painting of Penguin book (Books post)
radiantfracture ([personal profile] radiantfracture) wrote2025-08-27 10:23 am

Wednesday Reads the Side Catalogue

My recent reading features two short works by Tamsyn Muir, author of the Locked Tomb series.

I liked both of these books a lot: they seemed to me to feature Muir's strengths without some of the excesses of the Tomb books.

(I am aware that these excesses are precisely the source of delight for fans. I appreciate the meticulous artistry of the series; it's just that the particular qualities of deferral, substitution, and abrasion that are the formal and tonal preoccupation of these books, and that Muir wields so expertly and so persistently, are just not quite my tempo.)

The first book was Muir's 2022 novella, Princess Floralinda and the Forty-Flight Tower.

This is a revisionist princess-in-the-tower story, so the pleasure comes not from a surprise twist but from seeing how the genre is executed. Very well, I thought.

(That said, there were two or three times I did exclaim out loud, "oh no!" etc. So it's not twistless.)

I liked it enough that when it was done I felt wistful about not being with the characters any more.

(Not in a sentimental way. Or yes, in a sentimental way, but not in a cute way. Or yes cute, but not cozy. Difficult and heartbroken and ridiculous. That way.)

ETA: I mean to say that genre-wise Princess Floralinda is solidly with Beagle's The Last Unicorn and Goldman's The Princess Bride as an anachronistic and self-reflexive take on the genre.

The second was a long short story, or maybe novelette? called Undercover, blurbed thus (in part): "A fresh-faced newcomer arrives in an isolated, gang-run town and soon finds herself taking a job nobody else wants: bodyguard to a ghoul. Not just your average mindless, half-rotted shuffler, though. Lucille is a dancer who can still put on her own lipstick and whose shows are half burlesque, half gladiator match."

What's more, I think it is better that that sounds.

[personal profile] sabotabby, I felt like you might enjoy both of these. Like you might start out thinking "Why did Frac think I would like this?" but then fairly rapidly think "OH" instead.

Anyway, that appears to be most of Muir's non-tomb catalogue, which is too bad. I wish there were more.

§rf§
sabotabby: (books!)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-08-27 06:41 am
Entry tags:

Reading Wednesday

Just finished; Nothing, my life has been clown shoes lately.

Currently reading: Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism by Sarah Wynn-Williams. This is so horrifying. Obviously, the genocide and destruction of the political process is the most horrifying thing about it, but the neat thing about evil is that it's fractal, and the interpersonal stuff is much more visceral. Like Joel Kaplan sexually harassing Sarah shortly after she's almost died in childbirth (because, yeah, you can be one of the top people at Facebook at the height of its success and almost die in childbirth. America!). Or the weird obsession Sheryl Sandberg has with getting women to nap with their heads in her lap on her private jet. These people are so creepy and awful, and nightmarish as you think Mark Zuckerberg is, this memoir depicts him as much worse than that.

Which isn't to say that Sarah is great—she paints herself as a naïve idealist, but the scale of awful at this company is such that after a certain point, you kind of roll your eyes every time she notices that it's bad. But that's storytelling for you. Highly recommended.
conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-08-27 02:51 pm

Wanton and dissipation

Them: If you’re familiar with the meanings of wanton and dissipation, could you please describe them in a way that will help me never confuse them with other words or forget their meaning?

Me: Oh, there is no way the comments to this post are going to be helpful.

And I was half right! I was just about the only person to give the asked-for definition of "dissipation". As predicted, everybody else used the science sense rather than the moral decay sense. What surprised me is that they also all defined the word "wanton" in terms of violence rather than sexual promiscuity.

Anyway, I said myself that dissipation (meaning debauchery) is an old-fashioned term and that I'm not quite sure how I even know that one off the top of my head, but then the next day I was re-reading Ancillary Justice and there it is, right in the first few chapters. Seivarden is in a bad state due to her dissipated lifestyle, and that's the word used to describe it. Huh. (But I think I already knew that word before I read the book for the first time.)

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conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-08-25 12:02 am

I have so many dishes to wash

And I have so little interest in washing them.

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Read more... )
conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-08-24 11:57 pm

August by Dorothy Parker

When my eyes are weeds,
And my lips are petals, spinning
Down the wind that has beginning
Where the crumpled beeches start
In a fringe of salty reeds;
When my arms are elder-bushes,
And the rangy lilac pushes
Upward, upward through my heart;

Summer, do your worst!
Light your tinsel moon, and call on
Your performing stars to fall on
Headlong through your paper sky;
Nevermore shall I be cursed
By a flushed and amorous slattern,
With her dusty laces’ pattern
Trailing, as she straggles by.


******


Link