What have you been eating, drinking, and cooking?
What food and drinks have you been enjoying (or not enjoying) recently? Have you cooked or created anything interesting? Tell us about it!
What food and drinks have you been enjoying (or not enjoying) recently? Have you cooked or created anything interesting? Tell us about it!
This is a recurring post to discuss programming or other technical projects that we've been working on. Tell us about one of your recent projects, either at work or personal projects. What's interesting about it? Are you having trouble with anything?
Next week we will be discussing the City We Became. Our next book discussion after that will be at the end of January.
I've organized this schedule so that longer books are followed by shorter ones. I look forward to reading with you.
Last week in January : Kim Stanley Robinson Ministry for the Future,
Last week in February: Trevor Noah Born a Crime,
Last week in March: Dan Simmons Hyperion,
Last week in April: Adrian Tchaikovsky Elder Race,
Last week in May: Victor LaValle a People's Future of the United States,
Last week in June: T Kingfisher A House with Good Bones,
Last week in July: James McBride the Heaven and Earth grocery Store,
Last week in August: Cats Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut
Last week in September: Ted Chiang Stories of Your Life and Others
Congratulations to McLaren! First Constructors' Championship win since 1998!
Great drives by Sainz and especially Leclerc. Starting from P19 and ending P3 is beyond impressive.
Hamilton came alive this race, ending P4. End of an era. I'm sure he'd've liked a podium to end his time with Mercedes, but still a hell of a drive, moving up 12 places from the start.
Felt bad for some of the guys who were or may have been in their last race: Bottas, Lawson, Colapinto, and Perez all DNF'd unceremoniously.
With that, the season is officialy over. I, for one, am glad. It's been a long season. For US folks, enjoy sleeping in on the weekends again for a few months. Looking ahead, 2025 pre-season testing is in Bahrain, Feb. 26-28, with the first race of the season in Melbourne a couple weeks later. See you all next year!
Next race:
Australian Grand Prix
Albert Park Grand Prix Circuit (Melbourne)
Sunday, March 16, 2025
Pos | No | Driver | Car | Laps | Time/retired | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4 | Lando Norris | McLaren Mercedes | 58 | 1:26:33.291 | 25 |
2 | 55 | Carlos Sainz | Ferrari | 58 | +5.832s | 18 |
3 | 16 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 58 | +31.928s | 15 |
4 | 44 | Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 58 | +36.483s | 12 |
5 | 63 | George Russell | Mercedes | 58 | +37.538s | 10 |
6 | 1 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT | 58 | +49.847s | 8 |
7 | 10 | Pierre Gasly | Alpine Renault | 58 | +72.560s | 6 |
8 | 27 | Nico Hulkenberg | Haas Ferrari | 58 | +75.554s | 4 |
9 | 14 | Fernando Alonso | Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes | 58 | +82.373s | 2 |
10 | 81 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren Mercedes | 58 | +83.821s | 1 |
11 | 23 | Alexander Albon | Williams Mercedes | 57 | +1 lap | 0 |
12 | 22 | Yuki Tsunoda | RB Honda RBPT | 57 | +1 lap | 0 |
13 | 24 | Zhou Guanyu | Kick Sauber Ferrari | 57 | +1 lap | 0 |
14 | 18 | Lance Stroll | Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes | 57 | +1 lap | 0 |
15 | 61 | Jack Doohan | Alpine Renault | 57 | +1 lap | 0 |
16 | 20 | Kevin Magnussen | Haas Ferrari | 57 | +1 lap | 0 |
17 | 30 | Liam Lawson | RB Honda RBPT | 55 | DNF | 0 |
NC | 77 | Valtteri Bottas | Kick Sauber Ferrari | 30 | DNF | 0 |
NC | 43 | Franco Colapinto | Williams Mercedes | 26 | DNF | 0 |
NC | 11 | Sergio Perez | Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT | 0 | DNF | 0 |
Fastest Lap: Kevin Magnussen (no extra point awarded)
Source: F1.com
Pos | Driver | Nationality | Car | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Max Verstappen | NED | Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT | 437 |
2 | Lando Norris | GBR | McLaren Mercedes | 374 |
3 | Charles Leclerc | MON | Ferrari | 356 |
4 | Oscar Piastri | AUS | McLaren Mercedes | 292 |
5 | Carlos Sainz | ESP | Ferrari | 290 |
6 | George Russell | GBR | Mercedes | 245 |
7 | Lewis Hamilton | GBR | Mercedes | 223 |
8 | Sergio Perez | MEX | Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT | 152 |
9 | Fernando Alonso | ESP | Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes | 70 |
10 | Pierre Gasly | FRA | Alpine Renault | 42 |
11 | Nico Hulkenberg | GER | Haas Ferrari | 41 |
12 | Yuki Tsunoda | JPN | RB Honda RBPT | 30 |
13 | Lance Stroll | CAN | Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes | 24 |
14 | Esteban Ocon | FRA | Alpine Renault | 23 |
15 | Kevin Magnussen | DEN | Haas Ferrari | 16 |
16 | Alexander Albon | THA | Williams Mercedes | 12 |
17 | Daniel Ricciardo | AUS | RB Honda RBPT | 12 |
18 | Oliver Bearman | GBR | Haas Ferrari | 7 |
19 | Franco Colapinto | ARG | Williams Mercedes | 5 |
20 | Zhou Guanyu | CHN | Kick Sauber Ferrari | 4 |
21 | Liam Lawson | NZL | RB Honda RBPT | 4 |
22 | Valtteri Bottas | FIN | Kick Sauber Ferrari | 0 |
23 | Logan Sargeant | USA | Williams Mercedes | 0 |
24 | Jack Doohan | AUS | Alpine Renault | 0 |
Source: F1.com
Pos | Team | Pts |
---|---|---|
1 | McLaren Mercedes | 666 |
2 | Ferrari | 652 |
3 | Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT | 589 |
4 | Mercedes | 468 |
5 | Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes | 94 |
6 | Alpine Renault | 65 |
7 | Haas Ferrari | 58 |
8 | RB Honda RBPT | 46 |
9 | Williams Mercedes | 17 |
10 | Kick Sauber Ferrari | 4 |
Source: F1.com
Find yourself watching tons of great videos on [insert chosen video sharing platform], but also find yourself reluctant to flood the Tildes front page with them? Then this thread is for you.
It could be one quirky video that you feel deserves some eyeballs on it, or perhaps you've got a curated list of videos that you'd love to talk us through...
Share some of the best video content you've watched this past week/fortnight with us!
Please post your solutions in your own top-level comment. Here's a template you can copy-paste into your comment to format it nicely, with the code collapsed by default inside an expandable section with syntax highlighting (you can replace python
with any of the "short names" listed in this page of supported languages):
<details>
<summary>Part 1</summary>
```python
Your code here.
```
</details>
Good things come from the pursuit of legacy, by calling it a delusion I don't mean to paint it as a fundamentally bad thing.
To establish some context, I'm putting aside supernatural rewards and punishments like valhalla and hell.
Legacy for the purposes of this post is having an impact that outlives you. People remembering your name. A lot of people claim it as a significant motivation and, I suspect, a lot more people are motivated by it without openly admitting it.
The obvious reason being that it's an antidote to mortality or, at the core, impermanence. Chaos. It's a fear that motivates us all more than we probably admit because most people avoid thinking and talking about more often than they don't. It's the unnamed void that's always there at the edges, creeping in and reminding us every once in a while that it could all end any time. That nothing lasts.
Legacy, or the eternal rewards I'm leaving out of the conversation, is a big shiny counterpoint to impermanence. You might even call it a psychological coping mechanism. We all need them sometimes and a key part of their operation is that they're not entirely rational.
And legacy is pretty irrational. No matter what we do we'll die, and then everyone who knew us will die. Not long after, in the scope of time, everyone who remembers us will die. If we're Einstein then maybe people love and remember us for a few extra centuries before we become a rarely visited piece of ancient history. At some point even Einstein will be forgotten.
So legacy isn't actually an antidote to impermanence, it just feels like it if you don't think about it too much. You can't make a mark on history big enough to last forever in any meaningful sense. Which leaves its impact on the lives we're living. Does it make them better? When people wear t-shirts with Einstein and hearts on them does it echo back through time and give the still living Einstein a tingle? Does he get better orgasms, smoother skin, deeper relationships? I don't think he does.
He probably gets a sense of satisfaction and fulfillment from knowing that he's moved the needle. That he's leaving the world better than he found it. That's worth a lot, but it's not really about legacy, it's about impact. Something which is available to everyone all the time.
I bring this up because periodically I see legacy contextualized as almost a virtue. Something noble to strive for. To me it's a false idol, like fame, celebrity or wealth worship. It comes with a partially broken set of values.
Whereas values that arise from prioritizing the lives we're living and the people we're living them with seem to me to be a lot healthier and more fulfilling. And I think, in a bigger sense, more conducive to a healthy society. If more people are investing their identities and energy in values that give them a meaningful return without needing to achieve a particular level of historical impact, they'll suck less. If legacy is the goal, and you need to step on people, or neglect relationships, or put off mental health in order to get there, it's very easy to rationalize doing it. And if we hold the people who do those things up as ideals, we're tacitly telling society that it's something they should be pursuing too.
To put it one way, and digress a little, we'd probably have a lot less self involved billionaires if we didn't put them on pedastals and talk about them all the time. As things stand it's no wonder that so many children grow up believing that achieving wealth or fame is the best way to get attention. It absolutely is. Whether we love or hate it, we can't shut up about it.
Of course talking about wealth and fame brings in a bunch of factors that aren't necessarily about legacy, and I don't want to turn this into an essay about everything that's wrong with culture. But I do think that all of the above are part of a sort of package of self defeating values that we all (mostly unintentionally) play a part in perpetuating.
I don't expect we're going to stop doing that any time soon but I think at some point, between here and a future where we're not constantly flirting with annihilating ourselves, we're going to need to.
The Skibidi Wonderland
Imagine a world with skibidi rizz
Where the rivers run with flowberry fizz
Every tree has a W gyat
Everyone is ruled under Kai Cenat
Everything, even the hills looksmax
Criminals will have to pay a fanum tax
Every December we celebrate Rizzmas
Where we get candy and gifts from St. Grimace
From the screen to the ring to the pen to the king
Every October we celebrate Hawktuahween
Everyone follows the sigma grindset
Everyone thinks with the sigma mindset
The skibidi sky has a rizzy aurora
All citizens have skibidi aura
Can you imagine a world where all is rizzy?
Can you think of a world where all is skibidi?
Can you fathom a world where all cheese is drippy?
'Cause I yearn for a world where I can hit the griddy
The earth, once scarred by shadow’s hand,
Now trembles soft, a waking land.
From soil soaked with roots that bled,
New shoots arise where death had fed.
The storm has passed, its howling stilled,
The air now warm, the silence filled.
With whispers light, the seeds take hold,
Their leaves like sparks of green and gold.
The soil hums with tender grace,
A pulse of life begins its race.
No longer bound by gloom’s demand,
It rises tall, a fearless stand.
Though remnants of the past remain,
They sing of hope, not loss or pain.
The cycle turns, as it must do—
To bury old, and birth the new.
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
I received an email this morning from the good folks at the WHE entitled: Perplexity AI Partnership to Improve History Education
In it, their CEO Jan van der Crabben, writes:
As the most-visited history encyclopedia globally, World History Encyclopedia is pleased to announce a strategic partnership with Perplexity.ai.
…
As artificial intelligence (AI) tools based on large language models become increasingly accessible to the public, growing concerns have emerged regarding the quality of information provided by these tools. These AI systems are typically developed and trained using publicly available internet information, often without robust verification processes, and frequently generate inaccurate results.
There are also significant concerns about the business models of AI companies, which utilise content developed and meticulously checked by providers like World History Encyclopedia —a non-profit organisation— without obtaining proper consent, without providing compensation, and without offering appropriate attribution.
Perplexity.ai is an AI-powered search and answer engine that combines the capabilities of a search engine with artificial intelligence. Unlike most other AI systems, Perplexity clearly cites its sources, providing users with an easy way to verify the accuracy of its answers.
In alignment with our goal of being a trusted resource of accurate and objective historical information, we are excited about this partnership. It will allow us to develop tools based on the Perplexity API to make the content in World History Encyclopedia easier to find, browse, and access. We aim to develop educational AI tools for history learning in close collaboration with teachers to augment the World History Encyclopedia website for students.
The partnership will also enable World History Encyclopedia to use artificial intelligence to enhance our human review processes more efficiently. This includes improving tasks such as fact-checking and plagiarism detection.
Additionally, Perplexity is the first AI service that allows providers of information like World History Encyclopedia to be compensated fairly for the AI use of that information. We will receive a share of advertising revenue generated on the Perplexity platform whenever Perplexity cites World History Encyclopedia to answer a question.
I have worked with Jan and his staff many times over the last six years and I find them eminently trustworthy and dedicated to education.
What does everyone think of this kind of partnership moving forward? I understand Perplexity might have a slightly different approach that certain folks find promising.
And what kind of content do we think this might be able to generate? I look forward to your comments.
Does anyone have any experience making miniatures? I'm looking to get started and there just seems to be an absolute overload of options for sculpting material: Sculpey, Milliput, Green Stuff, Scultamold... The list seemingly goes on and on. I've seen some great videos by Miscast or Bill Making Stuff, but they can be a little all over the place.
Does anyone have any suggestions or point to any video/written tutorials on getting started?
Thanks!
I do hope one of you thinks of a better title or a more coherent structure for the overall post.
This question was inspired by a comment chain about PFAS in Gore-Tex jackets under a different post here, but it's been a bit of a simmering question for me.
When reading through that thread, my immediate reaction was something along the lines of the following.
Unless you're directing traffic in Seattle or Scotland, wouldn't the amount of time you'd wear the jacket be too little to have meaningful exposure? It's not like you're walking into an oven where the polymers would break down from heat. Further, if it's GoreTex-appropriate weather, you'll near-certainly have additional clothing between your skin and the GoreTex.
I was bored at work today, so I had plenty of time for rumination and introspection. What I found so far is that my instinctive skepticism toward health-conscious rhetoric has these primary sources:
That said, sometimes the health nuts are correct. As it turns out, all the coughing smokers do is a strong sign that smoking is bad for your lungs.
What are some heuristics to sort health tips that get passed around without citation into one of the following buckets?
Circling back to the impact of PFAS in Gore-Tex that inspired today's thinking, my layman's estimate that the effects on the factory workers who make a career out of working with the stuff is a low 2 when following proper safety procedures. Without them, a definite 1. For wearers of the stuff, a solid 3.
One final reason I may have been so fired up on this topic is that I listened to a highlight reel from a Congressional hearing round table on food & pharmaceutical safety last week. During the testimony, I had a nagging feeling that at least half of what they said was true, but the truth percent is below 75, and I had no idea which was which because all claims were presented with the same urgency.
Please post your solutions in your own top-level comment. Here's a template you can copy-paste into your comment to format it nicely, with the code collapsed by default inside an expandable section with syntax highlighting (you can replace python
with any of the "short names" listed in this page of supported languages):
<details>
<summary>Part 1</summary>
```python
Your code here.
```
</details>
This is the place for casual discussion about our pets. Photos are welcome, show us your pet(s) and tell us about them!