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tigen
·il y a 2 mois·discuss
It seems to be a rather brilliant piece of marketing to put that phrase in the title. It raises curiosity in a way that a generic "make friends" does not. (The "win" is a subtle move also.)

Once the readers are drawn in, whether from base or nobler instincts, the book can try to influence its readers into being nice.

Only trouble is that it may push away those who are "already nice" enough to feel bad about manipulating people.
tigen
·il y a 4 mois·discuss
If you like this stuff, have a look at the Vikings and their logistical problems.

https://www.quora.com/While-at-the-sea-what-did-Vikings-do-f...
tigen
·il y a 4 mois·discuss
This ought to help with that. https://thephd.dev/c2y-the-defer-technical-specification-its...
tigen
·il y a 4 mois·discuss
Do we really need to see your every half-baked thought on here though? It's okay not to post or to set a high bar for yourself.

Frankly, even without AI, most communities get degraded as they become more popular and the stream of comments becomes overwhelming. Like there are over 1000 comments on this story and let's be honest, most of it isn't adding value. A great many of them are repeats of other posts, so the person didn't read other people's comments either.

The solutions seem to boil down to making the karma system more draconian. Like instead of focused more on downvoting garbage and upvoting gems, the slush of "mid" posts has to be dealt with somehow. Not sure if rate-limiting accounts would make a noticeable difference. Ironically, perhaps AI is also a solution to the issue, since obviously it can, for example, know all the other comments and could potentially assign some value score in the overall context.

I probably wouldn't post this here post either but I'm hitting reply because of the topic at hand...
tigen
·il y a 4 mois·discuss
In-class essays impossible? Pencil to paper?
tigen
·il y a 8 mois·discuss
[flagged]
tigen
·il y a 11 mois·discuss
It works great with my kids sometimes. Asking a series of questions about some kid-level science topic for instance. They get to direct it to exactly what they want to know, and you can see they are more actively engaged than watching some youtube video or whatever.

I'm sure it helps that it's not getting outside of well-established facts, and is asking for facts and not novel design tasks.

I'm not sure but it also seems to adopt a more intimate tone of voice as they get deeper into a topic, very cozy. The voice itself is tuned to the conversational context. It probably infers that this is kid stuff too.