mwguy

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[–] mwguy 4 points 5 days ago

This is the sort of outcome that comes when you hire people who were, "racist before either was cool."

[–] mwguy 42 points 5 days ago (4 children)

Remember when Microsoft said Windows 10 would be the last Windows? I 'member.

3
.500 Baby (self.minnesotatwins)
 

7 Game win streak too!

 

New multi-tenant db mode to consider.

[–] mwguy 1 points 1 month ago

At this moment maybe. But they had, in leave time, more autonomy than Puerto Rico.

[–] mwguy 0 points 1 month ago

Hamas has zero tanks, zero airplanes, zero competence. I'm pretty sure they'd lose a war to a number of New World Cartels. That's not really a real comparison.

[–] mwguy -2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Gaza has had autonomy for 20 years.

[–] mwguy 4 points 1 month ago

You committed to paying?

[–] mwguy 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

How does this differ from Ubuntu's Authd?

[–] mwguy 2 points 1 month ago

As a former employee of Cerner, and customer of Oracle; I am entirely unsuprised by this development.

[–] mwguy 2 points 1 month ago

Yes. Some Americans listen to Radiohead.

[–] mwguy 2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Well not nobody. Turns out there are some Nazis. /s

[–] mwguy 2 points 3 months ago

Visa free travel to Tahiti as part of the EU would be cool.

[–] mwguy 2 points 3 months ago

When the Ottomans Ruled the area Gaza was primarily a resort town.

 

I tried to make an AI summary of the article but it somehow thought that Biden beat Trump in 2024 so I'm throwing that away.

This is part 1 of a ongoing 3 part series looking at the Harris campaign. Mostly based on her campaign management's recent podcast appearance(s) and statistics from the election results.

 

AI Summary thing I've been expirimenting with:


This article is a nuanced exploration of how internal polls and campaign dynamics are reported by journalists, particularly on social media platforms like Twitter. The author proposes a categorization system for levels of access to information:

  1. Level 3.1: Journalists reporting on internal polls or campaign mood without citing numbers directly.
  2. Level 3.2: Well-connected elites (e.g., politicians, strategists, donors) sharing internal polls or campaign sources within the media.
  3. Level 3.3: Random individuals on Twitter claiming to have seen internal polls.

The article highlights the potential for misinformation and spin at each level:

• Level 3.1: Journalists may repeat spin or uncritically pass along information from campaign sources, as seen in the Axios report mentioned in the article. • Level 3.2: Well-connected elites might share unverified or biased information, often without realizing it's not accurate or might be used to manipulate public opinion.

The author emphasizes that:

  1. Data beats vibes: Even if internal polls are not publicly available, data-driven reporting can provide a more objective picture of the campaign.
  2. Journalists should be cautious: Reporters should verify information, especially when it comes from well-connected elites or unverified sources.
  3. The feedback loop: As misinformation spreads through social media and elite networks, it can create a self-reinforcing narrative that becomes detached from reality.

The article also highlights the importance of critical thinking and skepticism in evaluating internal polls and campaign dynamics. By distinguishing between Level 3.1 reporting (which might be informative) and Levels 3.2 and 3.3 (where misinformation or spin is more likely to occur), readers can better navigate the complexities of electoral politics and media coverage.

 

Uuid4's Baby!

 

Title is hyperbole. Essentially the answer is maybe but most likely not. Has a discussion about potential poll error in the context of precision vs. accuracy. Notes that the model assumes accuracy but not precision.

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