Surveillance and locks are both imperfect solutions to the trust problem.
I’m not sure an absence of surveillance is what creates “humane trust”. I’m certain we had locks on doors and security guards before the internet.
Aux cables were ubiquitous when cars were rolling speakers. I wouldn’t buy a car without an aux input, I didn’t care how many cds it could hold. Now that cars are rolling screens, I wouldn’t buy a car without screen…
We should probably be aiming for some stress, but not too much. See *Yerkes–Dodson* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yerkes%E2%80%93Dodson_law
You’re right, I had that backwards
Can we put energy in to speed it up? That way a day can be 24 hours exactly instead of 23 hours, 56 minutes, 4 seconds, etc...
I guess only Nixon could go to China? When the US government adopts an employment policy private companies usually follow. Either because they do business with the government and have to comply, or it affects so many…
It is! I've often wanted to search for something that happens in a video instead of just the title, description, and keywords.
It's probably safe to assume that if you're looking for a fork of Firecrawl, you already know what Firecrawl does.
> Karen-like drivers who will eventually start threatening other people to report them, That's an argument for automating the system, taking the biased human actor out of the process.
We’re on the same page. You’re acknowledging that the safety record is just a proxy for safety. That’s what I’m saying too. I would argue that using the number of incidents as a proxy for safety ignores the trend.
So your assesment of how safe the plane is doesn't depend on anything except Boeing's process? For example, you don't care about the number of accidents per operating hours?
If you want to be pedantic, you're conflating 'having a safe record' with 'being safe.' It's just an indicator.
> nobody seems to care? Clearly people care. They are literally checking every bolt for proper torque. When they found a few undertorque bolts it becomes a national news, it gets shared so much it ended up on Hacker…
"end up being" is not enough of a disclaimer for you?
737 Max is going to end up being one of the safest planes to fly in. Every inch of every plane combed over, every engineering decision re-examined, every system and sensor double-checked for redundancy and reliability,…
For me it was an easy choice. First, I was starting to worry about heart health. Second, my mechanical watches could be sold for more than I paid for them.
Who sacks the person who sacks?
> he's naive enough that he thinks that will work in court under the eye of the whole media I mean his publicity tour immediately after FTX went under worked pretty well for a while. He got Kevin O’ Leary to blame CZ in…
Getting electricity out of hydrogen works the same way as getting electricity out of all the sources you mentioned, except your generator now produces zero emissions.
Anybody who needs to run 24/7 and/or can't count on an electric grid could use hydrogen power: A logistics network, an army, public transportation, utility companies, forestry or mining...
Bias as in training? Photographers are trained to pick the most interesting subjects, perspectives, and moments. Waves like this have a clear peak when they stop rising, but before they fall, so there is a natural…
I see, I misunderstood
Wouldn't infinitely spawning web workers do the same thing as a zip bomb? ``` <script> const workerBlob = new Blob([' while (true) { console.log("this is a worker that will never stop") } '], { type:…
Plenty of room for a recursive function with no base case
Surveillance and locks are both imperfect solutions to the trust problem.
I’m not sure an absence of surveillance is what creates “humane trust”. I’m certain we had locks on doors and security guards before the internet.
Aux cables were ubiquitous when cars were rolling speakers. I wouldn’t buy a car without an aux input, I didn’t care how many cds it could hold. Now that cars are rolling screens, I wouldn’t buy a car without screen…
We should probably be aiming for some stress, but not too much. See *Yerkes–Dodson* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yerkes%E2%80%93Dodson_law
You’re right, I had that backwards
Can we put energy in to speed it up? That way a day can be 24 hours exactly instead of 23 hours, 56 minutes, 4 seconds, etc...
I guess only Nixon could go to China? When the US government adopts an employment policy private companies usually follow. Either because they do business with the government and have to comply, or it affects so many…
It is! I've often wanted to search for something that happens in a video instead of just the title, description, and keywords.
It's probably safe to assume that if you're looking for a fork of Firecrawl, you already know what Firecrawl does.
> Karen-like drivers who will eventually start threatening other people to report them, That's an argument for automating the system, taking the biased human actor out of the process.
We’re on the same page. You’re acknowledging that the safety record is just a proxy for safety. That’s what I’m saying too. I would argue that using the number of incidents as a proxy for safety ignores the trend.
So your assesment of how safe the plane is doesn't depend on anything except Boeing's process? For example, you don't care about the number of accidents per operating hours?
If you want to be pedantic, you're conflating 'having a safe record' with 'being safe.' It's just an indicator.
> nobody seems to care? Clearly people care. They are literally checking every bolt for proper torque. When they found a few undertorque bolts it becomes a national news, it gets shared so much it ended up on Hacker…
"end up being" is not enough of a disclaimer for you?
737 Max is going to end up being one of the safest planes to fly in. Every inch of every plane combed over, every engineering decision re-examined, every system and sensor double-checked for redundancy and reliability,…
For me it was an easy choice. First, I was starting to worry about heart health. Second, my mechanical watches could be sold for more than I paid for them.
Who sacks the person who sacks?
> he's naive enough that he thinks that will work in court under the eye of the whole media I mean his publicity tour immediately after FTX went under worked pretty well for a while. He got Kevin O’ Leary to blame CZ in…
Getting electricity out of hydrogen works the same way as getting electricity out of all the sources you mentioned, except your generator now produces zero emissions.
Anybody who needs to run 24/7 and/or can't count on an electric grid could use hydrogen power: A logistics network, an army, public transportation, utility companies, forestry or mining...
Bias as in training? Photographers are trained to pick the most interesting subjects, perspectives, and moments. Waves like this have a clear peak when they stop rising, but before they fall, so there is a natural…
I see, I misunderstood
Wouldn't infinitely spawning web workers do the same thing as a zip bomb? ``` <script> const workerBlob = new Blob([' while (true) { console.log("this is a worker that will never stop") } '], { type:…
Plenty of room for a recursive function with no base case