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Trees?


All house and senate GOP members voted "no" on ACA. Obamacare is a lot of things, but a "GOP healthcare plan" isn't one of those things.


Strangely it actually was based on the GOPs 'Romneycare' that was promoted by The Heritage Foundation.


Qft. Many of the provisions in ACA are direct GOP asks from the bipartisan negotiations around it... before the party decided to unanimously vote against it at the 11th hour.


This is exactly what I was referring to. And I pointed that out to contrast with something more leftist, like government single payer.


The author lists Starlink at 100mb/s down but I'm consistently getting around 400mb/s these days with the high performance dish and a commitment of gigabit speeds next year. He's got options.


Starlink would have be double natted and I couldn't run my server cluster nor my vpn. And it would have high latency.


FedEx


Which is particularly effective in this day and age when many businesses don’t handle a lot of incoming physics mail —- send a FedEx to a particular individual at a particular location and it is not like they have a ‘mailroom’ that handles this routinely, it is a non-routine event that somebody shows up at the front desk to deliver something and inherently memorable.


Important legal documents are shipped via FedEx every day. Can’t just ignore it like you ignore regular mail.


Teslas always want the road to be as bright as possible for their self driving tech to work well.


Many spammers will strip the +xxxx out of the emails anyway to not reveal the source of their data so it doesn't matter too much really.


Airlines would pay them all personally if they were permitted.


Looks like they restored service.


The solar flares in the 11-year cycle are at their peak activity.

There will be random outages for any space based equipment for awhile. =3


Solar flares are not anywhere near their peak. The NOAA indicates the peak activity was actually in August 2024 with a total of ~245 "flux units". Activity for this month is predicted to be only around 167 units, so almost a full third down from the peak. Total numbers of sunspots is also down dramatically from their peak in August 2024.

See the graphs of https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/solar-cycle-progression for more info.


Indeed, we can't know the maxima for sure until passing through the entire peak prediction model period. The expectation of sun spot frequency and intensity only alluded to the average behavior rather than what we have partially observed in cycle 25 so far. Have fun =3

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cycle_25


Because the supply of academics have outpaced demand.


I’d say that it is precisely because of superficial demand by bureaucracy that academic output has become superficial.

The demand for novel knowledge is always high. It is the supply that is short.

That’s why we hang around on HN hoping for something novel of true interest. You get a good find every once in a long while.


Yep I prompt my AI to do that too.


I tried but chatGPT either makes too many mistakes making me look stupid or completely ignore my prompt.


I asked Gemini flash for a 200-word paragraph on a random topic, which most people would confidently classify as LLM-generated. It produced a verbose, big-worded, third-person slop about the concept of time that IMO fulfilled my prompt (although a phillosopher firnd of mine would be a strong contestant).

> The concept of "time" is a multifaceted and complex topic that has captivated philosophers, physicists, and everyday individuals for centuries. From a scientific perspective, time can be understood as the fourth dimension of spacetime, inextricably linked with the three spatial dimensions. This notion, introduced by Einstein's theory of relativity, posits that the flow of time is not constant but can be influenced by gravity and velocity. In a more quotidian context, time is a framework for organizing events and measuring duration, allowing for the structuring of daily life and historical records. It is a fundamental element in every human endeavor, from a scheduled meeting to the progression of a civilization. The subjective experience of time, however, is a fascinating aspect, as it can feel as if it is speeding up or slowing down depending on our emotional state or the nature of our activities. This divergence between objective and subjective time highlights its elusive and deeply personal character.

I asked it to add three spelling mistakes, then to make it so most people would confidently classiffy it as human writing, and it changed to first-person and small words.

> Time is a super weird concept when you really think about it, right? It's like, one minute you're just chillin', and the next, a whole day's gone by. They say it's the fourth dimention, which is a wild idea on its own, but honestly, it feels more personal than that. Your experiance of time can totally change depending on what you're doing. A boring meeting can feel like it lasts forever, while a fun night with friends flies by in a flash. That huge diverence between how we feel time and how it actually works is what makes it so fascinating and kind of confusing all at once.

It has the three misspellings, and if the topic was more casual, It could fool me indeed. Maybe I should have asked for spelling mistakes commonly made by Spanish speakers.


I can hear the TTS reading of the second one in my head. The earnestness just borders on saccharine.


> one minute you're just chillin',

How do you do, fellow kids?


> but honestly, it feels more personal than that.

And there’s the giveaway.


The example you posted for "human writing" confirms my experience that this just makes the AI sound like a stoner-bro.


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