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qsi

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European sunscreens are safer than American (2024)

ms.now
140 points·by qsi·29 giorni fa·92 comments

You Can't Park at 0.1c

samirvarma.substack.com
2 points·by qsi·2 mesi fa·0 comments

Pilots Shut Off Both Engines Before China Eastern 737 Crash

viewfromthewing.com
11 points·by qsi·2 mesi fa·12 comments

False claims in a widely-cited paper

statmodeling.stat.columbia.edu
341 points·by qsi·4 mesi fa·169 comments

I don't know how you get here from “predict the next word”

grumpy-economist.com
168 points·by qsi·4 mesi fa·260 comments

Elsevier shuts down its finance journal citation cartel

chrisbrunet.com
561 points·by qsi·5 mesi fa·108 comments

Inside OpenAI's Decision to Kill the AI Model That People Loved Too Much

wsj.com
3 points·by qsi·5 mesi fa·0 comments

Volvo Will Make You Safer with Only a Font

motortrend.com
3 points·by qsi·6 mesi fa·1 comments

HSBC unleashes another "qombie": a zombie claim of quantum advantage that isn't

scottaaronson.blog
1 points·by qsi·9 mesi fa·0 comments

Participation in Phase I Clinical Pharmaceutical Research

astralcodexten.com
2 points·by qsi·10 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

qsi
·mese scorso·discuss
Apollo 1. Three astronauts died.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_1
qsi
·2 mesi fa·discuss
No, the answer to the Urus (an SUV) is the Purosangue (also an SUV) which has been out for a while and looks somewhat decent. The Luce is an answer to a question nobody asked, probably along the lines of "How to destroy a famed brand's heritage?"
qsi
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Ah I see...

Apparently they're aiming to produce about 2500-3000 Luces (Luci?) a year, and they're building about 14,000 cars total annually. So not too many in keeping with their scarcity strategy. That has worked great for them so far, but I doubt they can replicate it with the Luce.
qsi
·2 mesi fa·discuss
No.

The way I'd phrase your last sentence would be: "It's NOT a Ferrari."

That's the whole problem. If you told me this is the latest Chinese luxury EV, I'd shrug my shoulders, say "hm, not bad" and "not for me," and move on.

For a Ferrari however it's horrendous.
qsi
·2 mesi fa·discuss
The Tesla Model S Plaid has similar horsepower (1020 vs 1035), more torque (1050 lb ft vs 730), faster 0-60 (2.1 vs 2.4s), higher top speed (200 vs 193 mph), more range (358 vs 280 mi).

For roughly 17% of the price.

And it looks the same.

What an abomination!

(You can probably find similar Chinese EVs that also outperform similarly.)
qsi
·2 mesi fa·discuss
The first Ferrari I don't want to drive. Or even see. Can I have the Men in Black memory erasure thingy please? I want to unknow this.
qsi
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I don't think it is because of the business aspect; Boeing in any investigation won't have leverage as the investigations are run by the local equivalents on the NTSB. To the extent there is any leverage, it's the NTSB that might have it, but it would be informal. The Chinese government is stonewalling this because they deem it politically inconvenient/embarrassing that they had a pilot suicide/murder take place. For instance see also https://admiralcloudberg.medium.com/the-crash-of-egyptair-fl... for the story of EgyptAir 990.
qsi
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Here in Singapore the terminals work well! The latency has definitely gone down. Ironically the Japanese McDonald's website loads faster than the Singapore one... so they've got some work to do.
qsi
·3 mesi fa·discuss
As others have said, this is something that should have been communicated very clearly. The reason for using Backblaze is to have my data backed up, and not to worry about it. You say so yourself on your website.

Could you also provide an exhaustive list of items that are NOT being backed up, e.g. the .git folder? I can't find any reference to that anywhere on your website or in the app. What else is not being backed up? I know about the exclusion list in the app, which I have adjusted to suit my requirements, but you need to be clear, explicit and upfront about what you are not backing up. This is critical information.
qsi
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Just checked the Backblaze website where you can find the following page https://www.backblaze.com/computer-backup/docs/supported-bac... which says:

This article answers the question, "What does Backblaze back up?" Backblaze backs up all of your data across all of the user profiles that are on your computer as soon as you install the client.

Backblaze believes that you do not need to worry whether you selected all of the files that you care about, put any files in a different location on your computer, or added new files that may not be included in your online backup. Therefore, Backblaze automatically selects all of your data.


This is at best flat out wrong, at worst a blatant lie. But this was what I thought I was buying and paying for. Turns out you do have to worry!

Don't lie about other stuff you don't back up. Very disappointed in Backblaze.
qsi
·3 mesi fa·discuss
This is very well put, and echoes my sentiments! I had installed Backblaze on my own home machine many, many years ago, and it has saved my bacon a few times. Since then I've also installed it on any family members' machines that required backup and recommended it to friends. And I've been happy to pay for the service.

The deal was that Backblaze backs things up and I don't have to worry about it. Learning that it does not back things up is a punch to the gut. I am familiar with the exclusions and I have a look at that list to make I'm not missing anything from my backups. I had always thought the exclusions list was exhaustive.

Excluding other files and folders without telling me about it breaks the deal. Dropbox is important to several of the users I installed it for. Ignoring .git folders is another one that affects me and I had not known about. Ouch.

I will now have to look for alternatives. It has to be easy to install, run seamlessly on non-technical users' machines and be reliable.

I find it hard to be think of a worse breach of trust for a backup service than not to back up files!
qsi
·3 mesi fa·discuss
It is not entirely clear to me from reading TFA, but infer from its description and other comments here that Photo only works with RAW input files. Is this correct? Or can I use it on JPEGs?
qsi
·4 mesi fa·discuss
I did, thanks for the suggestion.
qsi
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Ooops, sorry... I cannot edit the URL in the submission. I should have checked.
qsi
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Moving from floppy disk to hard disk was pretty big for me. :)
qsi
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Maybe because it quotes (at length) AI-generated output?
qsi
·4 mesi fa·discuss
The article as written is entirely consistent with John Cochrane's style. I have been reading him off and on over the years so I think I have a decent baseline for comparison. It doesn't smell of AI to me.

If anything, even the included quotes from Refine don't smell much of typical AI, but maybe I am less discerning there. I did notice the em-dashes though!
qsi
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Well, I was in a rush writing that. I omitted the fact that not only did he publish his own papers bypassing peer review, he also set up a citation mill with a number of other Elsevier journals and was apparently involved in other shady business. It's detailed in the article... There is a personal component to it, but that's a very minor part of the article which documents the various misdeeds.
qsi
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Elsevier editor published his own papers in the Elsevier journal bypassing peer review.
qsi
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Heh. I grew up writing C code and had real trouble adapting to Matlab's 1-based indexing. Much later I tried Python and was constantly confused by 0-based indexing.

I don't think one is better than the other but my mind is currently wired to see indexing with base 1.

Then there's Option Base 1 in VBA if you don't like the default behavior. Perfect for creating subtle off-by-one bugs.