invalidusernamelol

joined 5 years ago
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My local one always has a Dunkle, a Heffe, and a Swartzbier on tap. Kinda sucks is military themed, but the bartender loves China and is super chill so it's a wash

[–] invalidusernamelol@hexbear.net 18 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Out here the best breweries to authentic German style beer or cider. Everyone else has forgettable variations of the same citra recipe.

[–] invalidusernamelol@hexbear.net 14 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Seems like the cities closest to large ranching operations have the highest concentrations of H1N1, so almost certainly has something to do with the ranches or slaughterhouses.

[–] invalidusernamelol@hexbear.net 28 points 2 years ago (1 children)

It's probably just some loose balloons. Some event with high winds unmoored them and the brought their ballast with them

200bit numbers only require like 10 registers. X86-64 has 16 general purpose registers so doing operations with 200 digit numbers should hypothetically only require 20 loads and 10 multiplies. So a well written bit of code could do it in under 100 ops (probably under 50). So assuming this LLM implementation is running on a big server, it's probably doing the same calculation, less accurately, with some exponentially larger amount of operations.

More likely that some generated code will end up in some library that handles timing operations for rail switching and it will cause an accident and America will ban trains as a result

It's more a whirlwind or cyclone of grief. Another extenuating factor is where you are in your life, like if you already have personal stressors or you have to immediately start taking administrative action because of the death your brain will just ignore the sadness for a while. Then it will slowly start creeping in in waves for months or years.

I've lost my little brother and my father both suddenly (drug overdose and suicide). I know exactly the feeling you're talking about. With my father I had an immediate breakdown because I found out during a time I was just trying to contact him and someone else answered saying he shot himself. Then 2 months of nothing and even 8 years later I still occasionally just feel like the floor drops out from under me.

With my brother I was on the phone with police who had been called to his house for a welfare check, they couldn't find him so I got a bunch of people to start calling around and trying to find him in jails, hospitals or friends houses. Then I just get a call saying they found his body in a closet on the porch.

Again immediate breakdown, then nothing, then laughter and anger for days, morbid jokes. Had to drive halfway across the country to get his affairs in order. The whole time it was just business and trying to figure out what happened. Now 8 months out, it just comes seemingly at random. I'll be driving and see something I think he would find funny and get that immediate reaction to call him then it hits.

The human brain is really good at compartmentalizing grief, but it's always there and will manifest in weird ways.

[–] invalidusernamelol@hexbear.net 14 points 2 years ago (2 children)

That's actually not the point of the video, he actually talks about the fringes of the illusion and how you can tell that the designers put care into it while also finding that exact point where the illusion breaks down.

Like the Skyrim one where he follows all the streams to their source and finds tons of believable well placed lakes and mountain streams then finally hits the edge where there's a magical outflow that goes down two paths (to give the player 2 upstream paths to get to that location)

Appalachia is good too, Asheville/Brevard are right in the mountains and like 10 minutes from Pisgah Forest, DuPont Forest, the AT, the Mountain to Sea, and Art Loeb.

All those trails are more forest heavy and the traversal isn't that bad. I know people who will just go out for a week and come back.

[–] invalidusernamelol@hexbear.net 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Oh no, I believe you. I know how that bourgeois feminist wave in the 20s started as a reaction to more revolutionary feminist movements coming out of the socialist nations. I also see how United Fruit could have utilized the advertising wave started by Freud's brother (in Nazi Germany then America) to bolster support for the silent genocide on grounds of making American women's lives easier or something.

Would love to read the essay if you can find it.

[–] invalidusernamelol@hexbear.net 17 points 2 years ago (3 children)

There's a whole essay in here somewhere about how bourgeois feminism was co-opted by capitalism from its very outset, how women became a target demographic for smoking, the colour green, why you have to add eggs into box cake mix, and the Guatemalan coup of Jacobo Arbenz and the Cuban revolution. Oh and Nazis and Sigmund Freud too, of course.

I want this as a tagline just for the immediate transition from putting eggs in cake mix to the Guatemalan coup. I got whiplash lol

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