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23 votes
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How Christianity took over pagan Scandinavia
4 votes -
Is pop culture a form of "model collapse?"
Disclaimer: I do not like LLMs. I am not going to fight you on if you say LLMs are shit. One of the things I find interesting about conversations on LLMs is when have a critique about them, and...
Disclaimer: I do not like LLMs. I am not going to fight you on if you say LLMs are shit.
One of the things I find interesting about conversations on LLMs is when have a critique about them, and someone says, "Well, it's no different than people." People are only as good as their training data, people misremember / misspeak / make mistakes all the time, people will listen to you and affirm you as you think terrible things. My thought is that not being reliably consistent is a verifiable issue for automation. Still, I think it's excellent food for thought.
I was looking for new music venues the other day. I happened upon several, and as I looked at their menu and layout, it occurred to me that I had eaten there before. Not there, but in my city, and in others. The Stylish-Expensive-Small-Plates-Record-Bar was an international phenomenon. And more than that, I couldn't help but shake that it was a perversion of the original, alluring concept-- to be in a somewhat secretive record bar in Tokyo where you'll be glared into the ground if you speak over the music.
It's not a bad idea. And what's wrong with evoking a good idea, especially if the similarity is just unintentional? Isn't it helpful to be able to signal to people that you're like-that-thing instead of having to explain to people how you're different? Still, the idea of going just made me assume it'd be not simply like something I had experienced before, but played out and "fake." We're not in Tokyo, and people do talk over the music. And even if they didn't, they have silverware and such clanging. It makes me wonder if this permutation is a lossy estimation of the original concept, just chewed up, spat out, slurped, regurgitated, and expensively funded.
other forms of conceptual perversion:
- Matters of Body Image - is it a sort of collapse when we go from wanting 'conventional beauty' to frankensteining features onto ourselves? Think fox eye surgeries, buccal fat removal, etc. Rather than wanting to be conventionally attractive, we aim for the related concept of looking like people who are famous.
- (still thinking)
15 votes -
The world’s most-visited museum shuts down, in response to mass tourism
55 votes -
These catchy old songs aren't as think as you drunk they are
9 votes -
Why Koreans ask what year you were born
28 votes -
Former Indianapolis 500 champion Marcus Ericsson hails from Sweden but calls Indianapolis home. Here are his top local recommendations ahead of the Indy 500.
7 votes -
Former employees, community members allege AbleGamers founder fostered abuse behind closed doors
10 votes -
The root of happiness isn't considered to lie in extravagance or materialism in Helsinki. Here, it's about things that are both smaller and more profound.
9 votes -
Is consumerism the biggest religion?
7 votes -
The betrayal of Limited Run Games: What they don't want you to see
10 votes -
Paradox Interactive's return-to-office policy may be driving employees away from the studio
25 votes -
YouTube at 20: From ‘Lazy Sunday’ to ‘Hot Ones’
5 votes -
Tokyo Game Life: Moai in Japanese games (podcast)
14 votes -
With new flight routes, it's easier than ever to immerse yourself in the adventurous, natural wonder of Greenland
7 votes -
Finland's bid to win Europe's start-up crown – country has spawned twelve unicorn businesses (firms worth a billion dollars or more) like Oura, Supercell, Rovio, and Wolt
16 votes -
What is one of the coolest museums you've visited?
Curious to know what museums people have visited that really left them thinking, "this was worth it" (time, money, whatever "worth it" means to you). I will start. Minneapolis, MN Mill City Museum...
Curious to know what museums people have visited that really left them thinking, "this was worth it" (time, money, whatever "worth it" means to you).
I will start.
Minneapolis, MN
Mill City MuseumThis museum really shocked me with its breadth and depth! The location and setting are really cool as well. It has parts of the ruins of the historical building, integrated with some beautiful architecture of the new building.
The museum aims to explain how the grain industry was established and blew up in the Midwest, and what special role it had in shaping Minnesota. It goes all the way back to discussing WWII up to the advent of convenience foods like Betty Crocker and Pillsbury. There is even a Betty Crocker test kitchen in museum, complete with all the smells pumped into the air.
The displays are cool and I think are kid friendly, while also not boring the shit out of adults. My favorite part of the museum is the elevator, I truly believe it's one of the coolest displays(?) I've seen in a museum before, but I don't want to give away anymore, lest I make anyone's expectations too high and spoil it lol.
48 votes -
Young Chinese reimagine the last goodbye - new, personalised funerals in China struggle to break through culture
4 votes -
New images reveal extent of looting at Sudan’s national museum as rooms stripped of treasures
14 votes -
Framing Godland
3 votes -
Swedish far-right extremists pull in boys online and use bodybuilding and fight clubs to further their white supremacist agenda
20 votes -
“Critic” is a four-letter word. – Roger Ebert
23 votes -
A new wave of positive-impact experiences in northern Finland is finally allowing the Sámi to benefit from the tourism boom
8 votes -
Inside Brazil's Belo Horizonte’s food scene (Anthony Bourdain)
10 votes -
Race to save lives and ancient artefacts in South Korea as wildfires rage
8 votes -
Review: Cræft, by Alexander Langlands
4 votes -
What do you like about your job?
I'm currently in the process of job shopping and, while it feels like all my friends are happy to tell me why I shouldn't work where they do, I do enjoy hearing from people that are satisfied with...
I'm currently in the process of job shopping and, while it feels like all my friends are happy to tell me why I shouldn't work where they do, I do enjoy hearing from people that are satisfied with their line of work.
I personally like that my current work gives me free reign of the warehouse we operate in, if we met our metrics we could hold a game of poker in the back without too much fuss. What are some qualities in your work that make you a happier employee?
30 votes -
Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI by Yuval Noah Harari
3 votes -
Secret Ink - South Korea's underground tattoo scene: The women defying the law | BBC 100 Women
14 votes -
Holotypic Occlupanids - How the internet invented bread clip science
14 votes -
Trying cocktails from the USSR
10 votes -
LA races to save a vital piece of history – Ernest A. Batchelder tiles found amid wildfire ash
6 votes -
Housed in a renovated Art Nouveau post office building in Trondheim, PoMo – which sees improving gender representation in art as a key mission – is now open
8 votes -
Resigning as Asahi Linux project lead
38 votes -
Ask Tildes: Job security - does it exist, how to deal with lack of, how to process being fired / unemployment
Posting for a friend My company just acquired another company, and there is restructuring. A good work friend was let go today with no warning. She had been talking about the upcoming office...
Posting for a friend
My company just acquired another company, and there is restructuring. A good work friend was let go today with no warning. She had been talking about the upcoming office gathering next month, and in the afternoon I got the notice to cut off her security access. I haven't spoken to her yet, her phone has been turned off. I'm still in the office processing this....this....sudden and unacceptable throwing away of a human being. I don't care what they say about how this is necessary for success and how the rest of us are safe and whatever. It doesn't make me feel better even if they tell me she'd been failing PIP or whatever (not what they said but just an example). How are we supposed to live in a society where money absolutely rules everything, where we must pay crazy amounts of money to live close to work, often making 25-30+ year mortgage commitments, when the company has no such commitments to us?
How do you cope with job security?
I have a lot of angry words and cynicism but that's probably not helpful for my friend right now.
49 votes -
There's more to Iceland than Reykjavík – this more remote part of the island offers visitors a deep dive into its fascinating history and authentic culture
7 votes -
Chainsaw
11 votes -
Two hundred UK companies sign up for permanent four-day working week
32 votes -
Feminists facing resistance in China find the funny side of things
13 votes -
What's the secret to Denmark's happy work-life balance?
18 votes -
Bad Apple but it's 6,500 regexes that I search for in vim
32 votes -
100 Slaps: The breaking news the games industry ignored in 2024
9 votes -
Contempt culture and its currency
36 votes -
Stellar Blade: The fake outrage
24 votes -
Your boss is probably spying on you: New data on workplace surveillance
38 votes -
Underrated ways to change the world
41 votes -
Bladee's party lifestyle almost ended in disaster. Now, after a spell working in a shampoo factory, Sweden's dark teen icon is back with a furious and euphoric new sound.
13 votes -
Work life balance in a startup
I was just looking at a job posting. It's fully remote, good pay, and almost a perfect match to my skill set. It's got a somewhat humanitarian aspect to its mission even if there are also profit...
I was just looking at a job posting. It's fully remote, good pay, and almost a perfect match to my skill set. It's got a somewhat humanitarian aspect to its mission even if there are also profit motive aspects.
I looked at glass door, and the overwhelming majority of the reviews are, "it's not a bad place to work, but it doesn't have good work life balance." Or "expect startup culture hours".
If you want to see the job posting, DM me and I'm happy to share, but I don't want to publish a public link when I might apply for it.
My question for Tildes is, what experience do you have just saying no to overtime / forcing management to prioritize by just telling them you can't do everything / etc? Is this workable if your work is good and you make an effective contribution in a 40-50 hour week? What are your success or failure stories? Strategies you used for vetting the team / manager? Other things I should be thinking about?
Thanks as usual for any thoughts.
15 votes -
What is your favorite museum?
Inspired by a recent conversation I had with a fellow museum lover: what is your favorite museum or favorite museums? Why? Curious to learn about some really interesting and unique places that...
Inspired by a recent conversation I had with a fellow museum lover: what is your favorite museum or favorite museums? Why? Curious to learn about some really interesting and unique places that other users might have been to.
33 votes -
The world's most feminist city – how Umeå in Sweden became an idyll for women
7 votes