Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | tkfoss's commentslogin

I imagine world like savannas -- don't tease the lions, avoid packs of hyenas and you ll be mostly fine.


95,95,95,{depends on the country, from 30 to 100}


I read it as small compared to total population affected by the block


But that’s not the case either. A large attack or scrape generates far more traffic than legitimate users.


Work with few engines and you ll hear most of problems right away


I haven't seen a single convincing example yet, do you mind sharing some?


Not necessarily "convincing" but the "ma-AH" aka "come here/how to speak cat" video is very cute! https://old.reddit.com/r/fixedbytheduet/comments/1os4uid/hav...

I tried it on my cat and it worked although she may have just come over to investigate why I was making weird noises at her!

The rest of the original guy's "how to speak cat" series is also fun.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qyc7Krs0Fi8


https://cclab.ucsd.edu/pet-cognition-communication/

Check out their research. It's very solid - there are all sorts of conditioned response tricks to see on social media, but the UCSD research has recorded examples of multiple pets using the same untrained behavior where they string together 2 or more words to indicate a new idea. Not only are the pets talking, but there are emergent and convergent abilities being documented that demonstrates a common mode of cognition that arises from the underlying cognitive capacity of these animals, across species.

There's a great example of a dog on youtube where it used "squeaky car" to point out a firetruck with the sirens going. There are examples of dogs "laughing" at farts, calling out smells, telling owners about injuries or burrs stuck in paws, discomfort or pain in a leg or stomach or ear, and so forth. They indicate affection, anger, impatience, happiness, fear, confusion. They identify group membership - stranger, family, neighbor, friend, human, animal, dog, etc.

Video examples on YouTube are ubiquitous at this point - take a look at the training methods, the way vocabulary is modeled and taught, and then go in with a skeptical perspective. For those owners that follow the teaching methodology validated by the UCSD research, they're providing their animals with a legitimate skillset that empowers the pet with language understanding, the ability to communicate and creatively produce novel and complex ideas.

This shouldn't be too surprising - based on neuroscience research, it looks like the engine of human cognition is the mammalian neocortex. Lions, tigers, and bears (and dogs, cats, whales, primates, and nearly all mammals) are likely able to use language, given the apparatus and training to do so. Humans have a unique capacity for complex vocalization and extremely sophisticated culture, allowing rapid uptake of language skills. Given the opportunity, it looks likely that nearly all mammals will have some facility with language, simply because the neocortex function is so powerful and plastic.


I’ve seen some BilliSpeaks videos that absolutely convince me cats have more language capabilities than previously thought.

When you say “convincing” what are you looking for? Do you think these youtubers are just using editing tricks and traps to convince a gullible internet? Genuinely curious.


I assume they need convincing in the way it proves pets can communicate complex language or it is just the owner interpreting whatever they want


> pets can communicate complex language

Who was even trying to push this narrative in the first place?


the first comment: "complex constructions and grammar"


Cats don't talk in complex ways to owners. Listen to what a male cat vocalizing while trying to woo a female cat. They have something to say and a means to say it. They don't need that kind of communication for reminding the food dispenser what time it is.


That's exactly my thought, it is no different than teaching my dog a trick for treats


> a single convincing example

On which particular thesis?


> No space in there to make it easy to drop in a totally different engine with just a few hookups.

It's not about the space, but rather standards and engineering. Old flip phone was as busy around the battery as is modern smartphone. It's hard to change a dying battery if its glued in behind a solid case, no matter the device.


It is about space, laptops don't really have the same luxury as PC.

Currently the trendy ultra small PC cases are going in the same direction with tightly coupled components, not in the connector spec, but dimensional fits.


> It is about space, laptops don't really have the same luxury as PC.

Whats the difference, really? If your laptop CPU and RAM are socketed you can replace/upgrade. If mobos and peripherals were standardized you'd see macs with thinkpad keyboards, and thinkpads with mac internals.


Just bought one last week, sadly not many options left for 2.5" SSDs


I've been reduced to buying samsung 970 evos. The supply of DRAM supporting SATA SSDs has really dried up.


I don't know what kind of bubble you live in but it's wild reading this as someone who replaced parts of _literally all the things you listed_.

Just this month:

- Wifes friends laptop: installed new NVME and upgraded with additional 2.5 SSD, had to get SATA cable from china since no one else had it - Replaced fuel hose on my old e34, need to replace fuel pump on the diesel before end of the year, replaced tires (summer to winter) - Replaced charging flex cable on my Poco X3 smartphone - Changed the door gasket on the office fridge

Last month I replaced peltier element in wifes makeup fridge, this summer a starting cap in the office fan, last year old caps in vintage amplifier I got cheap.

My father threw out almost new fridge few years back due to ripped gasket, wife almost got rid of the makeup fridge when the cooling element went out, her friend started looking for new laptop because "old" one had "boot device missing". If you don't care to fix/upgrade or don't know how, then yes, everything is a black box.

"Industry" is f-ing us over and people with your attitude are encouraging it.

r/buildapc has 2.9M weekly viewers for a reason.


I'm not surprised at all. This is not new - Jan 2019 https://image-sensors-world.blogspot.com/2019/01/1550nm-lida...

Just look at the comments of article you posted, with sock puppet accounts being actively hostile towards anyone asking questions.


Interesting approach


It comes from the "intelligence is a form of compression" hypothesis that has been floating around in the ML space. Also, with a good compression algorithm it is a fairly direct measure of entropy, which is quite well correlated with what a developer might consider code size and/or complexity.


I'm familiar with the concept[1], but I'm unsure if it's a good showcase of code complexity. I've tested some internal microservices I'm deeply familiar with and found no correlation...

[1] for the past ~15 years actually, got introduced to the concept through works of mr. Hutter, after becoming aware of his Prize, and I'm dabbling in compression to this day (right now trying to improve on Bellard's nncp)


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: