Basically thinking with a clear head. The idea is that people sometimes do stupid things when they’re horny, whether to impress a girl or to get off or whatever, so “post nut” you’ve “gained a sense of clarity”
Basically thinking with a clear head. The idea is that people sometimes do stupid things when they’re horny, whether to impress a girl or to get off or whatever, so “post nut” you’ve “gained a sense of clarity”


Fair, I was trying to add context on why there is a penalty. Should have made that more clear.


You pay income taxes when you withdraw (meaning withdrawals are treated as income). However, 401ks also have the benefit of not being taxed while they grow. So you can contribute money pre-tax and don’t pay taxes while the money grows.


Honestly, I don’t even think hardware has progressed enough to warrant a new generation. It doesn’t feel like much even uses the current consoles to the full extent.


Right now I have a console to play those games, but don’t know what I’ll do when the next “generation” comes out.


This is how RFK is waging his war on autism.
The Windows 12 rumors were due to bad reporting from PC World that it seems AI news articles ran with (I believe an Ai mistranslation was the original issue, but at the very least a translation issue). They added an editor’s note to the original [article] (https://www.pcworld.com/article/3068331/windows-12-rumors-features-pricing-everything-we-know-so-far.html)
But chrome, edge, and safari aren’t open source to my knowledge and they make up almost the entire market. Sure chromium is open source, but that’s not the entire browser. Not to mention, it’s basically Internet Explorer all over again, but with Google behind the reigns.
Looking at android, we get a glimpse of what Google is willing to do to “open source” to keep control.


Thanks for providing the actual numbers.
I think one of the more concerning things is, what if you think the answer is in the documents you provided but they actually aren’t. What you think is a low error rate could actually be a high error rate.


Just for context, this is the error rate when the right answer is provided to the LLM in a document. This means that even when the answer is being handed to the LLM they fail at the rates provided in the article/paper.
Most people interacting with LLMs aren’t asking questions against documents, or the answer can not be directly inferred from the documents (asking the LLM to think about the materials in the documents).
That means in most situations the error rate for the average user will be significantly higher.


I don’t think you understand what a monopoly is.


While I don’t think this should ever pass, I think a huge issue is we’re too close to the election to be changing how voting works. People could vote in the primaries and then not have the documents to vote in the actual election. Something like this would need to be phased in over time, just think about how long Real IDs took to implement.


That’s a fair call out. My comment about systemic issues was to address the fact that it’s somewhat unfair to compare apples and oranges. So when I said the economy was doing well under Biden, I meant in regards to the current systems in place in the US.
That being said, the economy is generally measured in how productive the country is. If the economy is doing good, then generally we have lots of people producing lots of things. That doesn’t mean we’re producing the right things though, as that comes down more to policy and public sentiment/behavior.


Under Biden wages were growing faster than inflation, inflation was coming down, unemployment wasnt growing, stockmarket/business were doing well. Meaning things were doing okay and had the potential to do even better.
Also, a lot of the points you made aren’t directly tied to the economy and are systemic to the country. No matter how good the economy is doing, privatized Healthcare is going to cause issues.


Coming out of the pandemic the US had one of the best looking economies. If he had done nothing he could have taken all the credit. Instead he decided to shoot himself and the country in the foot.


Yeah, we’re well past the initial attack. I’m not sure why anyone would think the ship would be safe to return to an Iranian port. It seems kinda silly to think the US would wait until the ship was rearmed before engaging.
Is there something I’m missing?


I’m pretty sure that’s part of being a designated reporter.
However, that’s not a uniquely parent-child policy and it’s really about the parents behavior. I’m not sure I would consider those the same thing.
Some legislation that is slightly similar is that college students need to sign waivers to allow their parents to access their grades. But that’s because in college students are adults and therefore parents don’t have inate rights to that information.


While my gut says this isnt a great decision, I can’t think of another scenario where teachers/school are restricted in sharing information like this. I know sometimes teachers are designated reporters (have to report), but not aware of anything being restricted.
Is there some legal precedent for what California wanted to do?


Did he send her because he was afraid he’d be attacked if he went?
Because it’s a simple e-reader, people should still be able to add books and use the device regardless of store support. They also warn you’ll brick the device if you do a factory reset.
I thought you could manually add books to kindle, but maybe that isn’t the case based on the article.