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lemmy - Link to source
usualsuspect191

This is my first exposure to this idea and it's quite compelling. Couple that with the perceived tone being argumentative instead of inquisitive or ignorant and that's a recipe for disaster.

The fact the algorithms only care about engagement, positive or negative, means rage bait takes over too so that doesn't help the perception that a question is actually an attack.

in reply to usualsuspect191

I first heard about it due to my buddy (a high school English teacher) complaining about how his incoming students were incredibly far behind in basic reading comprehension skills. We ended up having a pretty long talk about it, and he mentioned that all of his colleagues have noticed the same thing.

I did some digging, and discovered that language teachers everywhere have basically been lamenting the fact that the upcoming generation just straight up doesn’t know how to interpret media when it falls outside of their personal algorithms. I ended up talking with another buddy of mine (a writer for a magazine) and he mentioned that they have started needing to change the way they write, because people have simply lost the ability to comprehend what they read. Skimming the first one or two paragraphs is the new norm, even for in-depth news articles. So they have to load as much content into the early paragraphs as possible.


Unknown parent

lemmy - Link to source
ReakDuck
Damn this sucks
in reply to ComradeSharkfucker

This seems completely foreign to me.
My boss summons me for a one-on-one if it's getting late in the year and I haven't taken all my PTO yet.
If I collect too much of it, or too much overtime, without using it, I can get written up.
Sometimes it's not easy either, with 42 days of PTO a year (plus unlimited sick days).
in reply to Piemanding

Yes, if it comes out that lots of employees didn't take their PTO, the company gets in legal trouble.
Which means the bosses get in trouble.
in reply to superkret

I just posted this in a different thread but I had a similar problem, except that my company doesn’t give a shit. Use it or lose it, I don’t get paid for it.

Anyway, had too much so I started taking every Wednesday off. No long time off means I don’t feel like my work stacks up while I’m out, and I get a ton of shit done during the week when everyone else is at work.


in reply to ComradeSharkfucker

As one Australian war criminal once said

"Shoot straight you bastards! Don't make a mess of yourselves!"




Venezuela: What Room for Maneuver Does María Corina Machado Have? (Resumen)




An Open Source Mirrorless Camera You’d Want To Use


in reply to schizoidman

no reason for our stuff to be proprietary. i hope this goes well.
This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to schizoidman

Now I need two things:
1. Wait until it becomes available.
2. Get my Zenit Helios lens cleaned in the inside and reassembly it correectly from my attempt at trying to get into it to clean it myself.








A bright comet will be visible in northern skies soon. How to see it.


Where to look for C/2023 A3 in the night sky


For observers in the Northern Hemisphere, comet C/2023 A3 can be found in the constellation Sextans and will rise one hour before the sun, according to Astronomy.com.

The comet will be best viewed in mid-October, rising up from the western horizon and be visible in the southwestern sky at nightfall, weather permitting. That will likely be its best and brightest appearance until it starts to fade from view by Nov. 7, according to SkyandTelescope.com.

in reply to m3t00🌎

Comet C/2023 A3's coma is about 2.8 feet in diameter and the tail measures about 16.9 feet in length.

Its closest approach to Earth will be on Oct. 11 or 12, according to BBC Sky at Night. It will still be about 44 million miles away.


It's so tiny! I'm surprised we can see something that small from such a far distance.

For observers in the Northern Hemisphere, comet C/2023 A3 can be found in the constellation Sextans and will rise one hour before the sun, according to Astronomy.com.

The comet will be visible in the Northern Hemisphere in the evening, just after sunset, when it is low in the southwestern sky.


I'm confused. Is the best time to see it just before sunrise or just after sunset??



Gone


This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to terminhell

I for one, salute their life long war against weed one blunt at a time.






Inside Western media’s reporting on Gaza




Devs gaining little (if anything) from AI coding assistants


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

For devops, it's amazing. We use many tools that we are not experts in, and it's incredible to get ready to use code examples how to configure them for various scenarios.

I save many hours every week using open Ai latest models.

in reply to 1984

I used it for GUI code as well, I hate frontend work so that saves me quite some time getting all the forms together with a few prompts.


Zionist Think Tank Publishes Blueprint for Resistance Victory (Al Mayadeen -- @kitklarenberg on Twitter)





The problem is systemic: understanding the #OccupyParliament movement in Kenya (Review of African Politcal Economy)