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hnal943

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hnal943
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I think new norms will develop around this behavior - it's rude to show someone else your AI output, and I think long term that will be broadly recognized.
hnal943
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I think the point was you can't evaluate their campaign promises because they never governed. Here's what happened instead....
hnal943
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
[flagged]
hnal943
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
This is a fantastic intro to the article I wanted to read, which was Sean's advice on how to best leverage this trait.
hnal943
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
But that's Ron. He's a Portland Gen X Socialist. Irony and cynicism are the only things he knows.
hnal943
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
This is addressed in the article. The company is unlikely to change as a result of your feedback.
hnal943
·7 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Rich people would consider being soft and cynical as virtuous? There's no way to read the quote in a positive manner.
hnal943
·10 tahun yang lalu·discuss
reminds me of what Donald Knuth had to say about academic specialization in Things a Computer Scientist Rarely Talks About:

  There might be some light on the horizon, however.  I predict that in the not too distant
  future, people in acamedmic life are going to define themselves not by one specialty
  area, but by two sub-specialties that belong to two rather different main specialties.
  This means that we'll have a web of interests, in which each person will serve as a
  bridge between different parts of the overall structure.  You can see that this is much
  better than having a tree hierarchy that branches out further and further, with nobody
  able to talk to the people on other sub-branches.  We'll have people that each belong to
  two areas, in two different parts of the overall structure.  Then we'll be able to have
  some hope of coping with new knowledge as it comes along.