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9 votes
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No bull: This Austrian cow has learned to use tools
55 votes -
San Francisco coyote swims to Alcatraz for first time ever
18 votes -
Aliens on a napkin: Fifty years ago today, the birth of '2001' in a polynesian restaurant in New York
11 votes -
A Norwegian rocket launched on 25th January 1995 to study the Northern Lights was mistaken by Russia for an incoming nuclear missile on a direct course to Moscow
10 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
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.
24 votes -
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!
4 votes -
Why America needs fewer bus stops
26 votes -
Weekly US politics news and updates thread - week of January 19
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate...
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate topic, but almost all should be posted in here.
This is an inherently political thread; please try to avoid antagonistic arguments and bickering matches. Comment threads that devolve into unproductive arguments may be removed so that the overall topic is able to continue.
18 votes -
Soen – Primal (2025)
11 votes -
Let's talk orchestrated objective reduction!
My special interest of late has been something called https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orchestrated_objective_reduction the TL;DR is: One of, if not the, most missing piece of quantum mechanics is...
My special interest of late has been something called https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orchestrated_objective_reduction the TL;DR is:
- One of, if not the, most missing piece of quantum mechanics is answering the question "what is measurement"? You've probably heard of things like the double slit experiment which lead to weird things like quantum erasure where one can seemingly cause a photon to retroactively determine which path to take. Spooky stuff! However, these experiments all follow the basic idea of "when something is entangled, it follows probabilistic rules defined by the schrodinger equation, then a 'measurement' happens, and the entanglement 'collapses' and only a single, 'real' value is well defined"
- Roger Penrose, a nobel prize winning physicist, has, since the 1980s been arguing that because entanglement implies that a particle exists in two places at once prior to measure that this places gravitational pressure on the fabric of spacetime in two places at once and that measurement is a gravitational event where spacetime "heals" itself by collapsing the wave form, and making it so the particle is finally only in one place.
Penrose further expanded this, to enormous controversy, that consciousess itself is a measurement event. He wrote a book, "The Emperor's New Mind" then a follow-up "Shadows of the Mind", neither of which I've read, but have had summarized to further develop these arguments. - This was, for lack of a better term, a crackpot theory. There wasn't anything testable or falsifiable so it was brushed aside. Crucially, to the point it gets its own paragraph,
The overwhelming opinion of the physics community, to this day, believes that quantum coherence is not possible in "wet, warm, noisy" environments like the brain.
It is, to this day, believed that, the quantum world is a thing that happens only at extremely small scales, and that's why quantum computers all start with the assumption of cooling the material to near absolute zero with as few additional perturbations as possible. - However, there were 2 findings I find extremely motivating to combat this assertion. First, leaves. Leaves are quantum objects and photosynthesis is too efficient to be explained by classical mechanics alone: https://berkeleysciencereview.com/article/2021/11/30/plants-do-the-wave/ Second, birds. Birds that use the magnetosphere for orientation do so by becoming quantumly coherent with the ions in the magnetophere using a protein in their eyes so they literally see the earth's magnetic field using the blue cones of their eyes https://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/birds-are-real-and-so-is-quantum-physics/
- Enter Stuart Hameroff. Hameroff was a working anesthesiology for some 20 odd years. He read The Emperor's New Mind and reached out to Penrose. He, of course, was very intimately aware of the deep biological processes that make the different between a conscious, aware, thinking human being, and a piece of meat that can be safely operated on. He believed that https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microtubule structures in the neurons were responsible for consciousness.
After further research, they both began to believe that these microtubule structures in human neurons were capable of what others believed were impossible.
Quantum coherence in a wet, warm, noisy environment. - This was still crackpottery until quite literally (IMO) last year. A group of biological researchers showed experimentally that the exact networks of tryptophan microtubule structures in neurons do exhibit super radiance (the same kind of quantum coherence leaves show) https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.jpcb.3c07936
To me, this is the most exciting piece of science I think I've seen in my life. The implication is that human (and other) consciousnesses are literally a byproduct of our ability to maintain and calculate quantum states in a wet, warm, noisy environment. It feels like a genuine push for us to finally move past the age of information, past the age of computation, and into the age of consciousness.
Another aspect of this is I really, deeply, believe that the substrate necessary for AGI is either necessarily biological, or, at the very least, can only be done efficiently in a biological substrate. Notably, a human brain takes 20 watts to exhibit generalized intelligence. No nuclear reactors running data centers, just a Twix bar. This last bit I honestly leave mostly as a point of discussion, because there's an enormous amount of interesting implications and avenues thereof.
What y'all Tildeans make of this? Anyone else been thinking about this kind of stuff?
24 votes -
Why London’s chimney sweeps are enjoying a resurgence
19 votes -
Terra. Invicta.
I controlled Mars, but the Servants, who worship the aliens as gods, had taken Phobos and Deimos. From a previous failed campaign I knew that if I let the Servants gain orbital superiority over...
I controlled Mars, but the Servants, who worship the aliens as gods, had taken Phobos and Deimos. From a previous failed campaign I knew that if I let the Servants gain orbital superiority over Mars, they would shell all of my mines into regolith from low orbit while I watched helplessly. Then, starved of crucial shipbuilding resources, my faction - the Resistance - would wither and die. I’m sure they felt the same fear looking at my fleet. We were both building up our forces as quickly as we could: reinforcements, whether from Earth or the Inner Belt, would take more than a year to arrive, meaning that whoever won the battle for Mars orbit would control the fate of the red planet - and its riches - forever. Or at least until the aliens arrived to wipe us off the map, which amounts to the same thing. Eventually I was able to gain a sliver of a technological lead and force their fleet to battle.
—-
Hooded Horse came out of nowhere a few years ago to become one of the best (IMO) indie game publishers anywhere. I still haven’t been able to figure out whether they’re actually that good or if my tastes and theirs just overlap perfectly, but who cares: they’ve produced hit after hit. Not necessarily critical successes - though almost all of them are rated “overwhelmingly positive” on Steam - but games that just rule. The kind of game that swings for the fences and succeeds in more than it fails.
Terra Invicta is one of those games. Aliens have come to Earth, and you play as one of the secret societies reacting to that news. The first 10-15 hours of a run are spent in what is basically a political thriller simulator - your agents subvert governments, spread propaganda, and initiate coups to try to control as much of the globe as possible. All the while, you devote every resource you can to sprint towards where the actual game begins: space. At that point Terra Invicta turns into an outrageously detailed orbital mechanics simulation. I haven’t actually won yet so I’m not sure what happens after that, but so far it’s awesome.
It’s not for everybody. The game is kind of hostile - it’s obscenely complicated, really doesn’t give you much in the way of tutorials, and in each of my four attempts, thus far, I’ve realized that I made a deadly mistake about 3 hours ago from which there’s no recovery. (Specifically: One time, I concentrated too much of my space infrastructure on Mars, so when the Aliens cracked the planet, I lost everything. Another time, I was so focused on space that when the China-India-EU alliance invaded my America, I was wiped out. Another time, I was so aggressive against the Alien quislings so early that the Aliens left everyone else alone and crushed me.)
But if you’re the kind of person that thinks spreadsheets are fun - if you’re the kind of person whose biggest problem with strategy games is that they’re too easy - TI is the game for you.
20 votes -
J. David Bamberger, Church’s Chicken tycoon who made land conservation his mission, dies at 97
15 votes -
2026 Oscar nomination predictions
Picture One Battle After Another Sinners Hamnet Sentimental Value Marty Supreme Frankenstein Train Dreams Bugonia F1 The Secret Agent Director Paul Thomas Anderson - One Battle After Another Ryan...
Picture
- One Battle After Another
- Sinners
- Hamnet
- Sentimental Value
- Marty Supreme
- Frankenstein
- Train Dreams
- Bugonia
- F1
- The Secret Agent
Director
- Paul Thomas Anderson - One Battle After Another
- Ryan Coogler - Sinners
- Josh Safdie - Marty Supreme
- Joachim Trier - Sentimental Value
- Guillermo del Toro - Frankenstein
Original Screenplay
- Sinners
- Sentimental Value
- Marty Supreme
- Weapons
- The Secret Agent
Adapted Screenplay
- One Battle After Another
- Hamnet
- Bugonia
- Frankenstein
- Train Dreams
Lead Actress
- Jessie Buckley - Hamnet
- Rose Byrne - If I Had Legs I'd Kick You
- Renate Reinsve - Sentimental Value
- Chase Infiniti - One Battle After Another
- Emma Stone - Bugonia
Lead Actor
- Timothee Chalamet - Marty Supreme
- Leonardo DiCaprio - One Battle After Another
- Michael B Jordan - Sinners
- Wagner Moura - The Secret Agent
- Jesse Plemons - Bugonia
Supporting Actress
- Teyana Taylor - One Battle After Another
- Amy Madigan - Weapons
- Odessa A'zion - Marty Supreme
- Wumni Mosaku - Sinners
- Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas - Sentimental Value
Supporting Actor
- Benicio Del Toro - One Battle After Another
- Stellan Skarsgard - Sentimental Value
- Jacob Elordi - Frankenstein
- Sean Penn - One Battle After Another
- Paul Mescal - Hamnet
Casting
- Sinners
- One Battle After Another
- Hamnet
- Marty Supreme
- Frankenstein
Cinematography
- Sinners
- One Battle After Another
- Frankenstein
- Marty Supreme
- Train Dreams
Costume Design
- Frankenstein
- Sinners
- Wicked: For Good
- Hamnet
- Marty Supreme
Film Editing
- One Battle After Another
- Sinners
- Marty Supreme
- F1
- Frankenstein
Makeup and Hairstyling
- Frankenstein
- Wicked: For Good
- Sinners
- The Smashing Machine
- One Battle After Another
Production Design
- Frankenstein
- Wicked: For Good
- Sinners
- Hamnet
- Marty Supreme
Original Score
- Sinners
- One Battle After Another
- Frankenstein
- Marty Supreme
- F1
Original Song
- "Golden" from KPop Demon Hunters
- "I Lied To You" from Sinners
- "The Girl in the Bubble" from Wicked: For Good
- "Dear Me" from Diane Warren: Relentless
- "Drive" from F1
Sound
- F1
- Sinners
- Avatar: Fire and Ash
- One Battle After Another
- Frankenstein
Visual Effects
- Avatar: Fire and Ash
- Frankenstein
- Superman
- F1
- The Lost Bus
Animated Feature
- KPop Demon Hunters
- Zootopia 2
- Arco
- Elio
- Little Amelie or the Character of Rain
Documentary Feature
- The Perfect Neighbor
- 2000 Meters to Andriivka
- The Alabama Solution
- Cover-Up
- Apocalypse in the Tropics
International Film
- The Secret Agent
- Sentimental Value
- It Was Just an Accident
- No Other Choice
- Sirat
10 votes -
‘Marty Supreme’ becomes A24’s highest-grossing film at domestic box office with $80 million
23 votes -
Cory Doctorow | AI companies will fail. We can salvage something from the wreckage.
91 votes -
I recently finished the Cradle series by Will Wight and have post series depression. What shall I read next?
I cannot recall the last time I devoured a series so quickly. I loved Cradle. The characters were so colourful and endearing, the plot was permanently escalating at a pace the resonated perfectly...
I cannot recall the last time I devoured a series so quickly. I loved Cradle. The characters were so colourful and endearing, the plot was permanently escalating at a pace the resonated perfectly with me, and honestly, I found the writing style to be spot on.
And now I've left feeling rather empty... (perhaps rather on point!).
Others who have enjoyed this series, what else did you love?
To give a sample of books I've enjoyed recently: Children of Time, Stormlight Archive, Kingkiller Chonicles, Dungeon Crawler Carl, Red Rising.
23 votes -
Scott A. on Scott A. on Scott A.
25 votes -
Stellan Skarsgård | Closet Picks
8 votes -
Netflix, but for public domain movies
47 votes -
Seizing the shadow fleet - US tanker seizures, Russia's gambit and Ukrainian attacks
6 votes -
No knives, only cook knives
16 votes -
Tove Styrke – Prayer (2026)
5 votes -
Skrillex - Kora EP (2026)
7 votes -
Joachim Trier’s ‘Sentimental Value’ triumphs at European Film Awards
6 votes -
Bad Bunny Super Bowl halftime show | Trailer
14 votes -
Save Point: A game deal roundup for the week of January 18
Add awesome game deals to this topic as they come up over the course of the week! Alternately, ask about a given game deal if you want the community’s opinions: e.g. “What games from this bundle...
Add awesome game deals to this topic as they come up over the course of the week!
Alternately, ask about a given game deal if you want the community’s opinions: e.g. “What games from this bundle are most worth my attention?”
Rules:
- No grey market sales
- No affiliate links
If posting a sale, it is strongly encouraged that you share why you think the available game/games are worthwhile.
All previous Save Point topics
If you don’t want to see threads in this series, add
save pointto your personal tag filters.6 votes -
REPLACED | Release date trailer
15 votes -
EU-US trade deal ‘on hold’ after new Donald Trump tariffs | MP: "The activation of the EU Anti-Coercion Instrument should be explicitly considered"
37 votes -
Second Isar Aerospace Spectrum flight set for 21 to 23 January
9 votes -
2025 was a dumpster fire, so I made it into a model | Light-up flaming dumpster sculpture
17 votes -
Weekly thread for casual chat and photos of pets
This is the place for casual discussion about our pets. Photos are welcome, show us your pet(s) and tell us about them!
5 votes -
So this is 2nd grade subtraction
22 votes -
A faceless hacker stole my therapy notes – Meri-Tuuli was one of 33,000 Vastaamo patients held to ransom in October 2020 by a Finnish hacker
16 votes -
GitHub Space Shooter turns your GitHub contribution graph into a playable space shooter
9 votes -
More than 100 traditional Moravian folk shawls preserved in new digital collection
12 votes -
Poland preparing changes after EU same-sex marriage ruling
14 votes -
Curl will end its bug bounty program by the end of January due to excessive AI generated reports
63 votes -
Updated design for the Nobel Center by David Chipperfield Architects has been revealed – proportions draw cues from the merchant townhouses of 17th-century Stockholm
7 votes -
Why should anyone care about low-level programming?
26 votes -
Why everyone is suddenly in a ‘very Chinese time’ in their lives
35 votes -
China have a new sixty-centimeter dome Terahertz telescope in Antarctica, a two week trek from their station
21 votes -
Tildes Minecraft Weekly
Server host: tildes.nore.gg (Running Java 1.21.11) Verification site: https://tildes.nore.gg BlueMap: https://tildes.nore.gg/map/ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TildesMC Plugins and Data Packs...
Server host:
tildes.nore.gg(Running Java 1.21.11)
Verification site: https://tildes.nore.gg
BlueMap: https://tildes.nore.gg/map/
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TildesMCPlugins and Data Packs
Data Packs:- Terralith - Overworld terrain upgrade
- Nullscape - End terrain upgrade
- Age Lock [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Armor Statues [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Bat Membranes [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Cauldron Concrete [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Cauldron Mud [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Custom Nether Portals [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Husks Drop Sand [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Mini Blocks [Vanilla Tweaks]
- More Mob Heads [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Player Head Drops [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Silence Mobs [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Wandering Trades [Vanilla Tweaks]
Plugins:
- BlueMap - Provides a live 3D rendering of the game world
- Clickable Links - Makes http URLs in chat clickable (only for registered players)
- CoreProtect - Records all block/container/mob changes (Anyone can look up changes with
/co inspect) - DebugStick - Gives the ability to craft debug sticks in survival
- DistantHorizons - Provides distant LOD map data to players running the client mod
- EasyArmorStands - GUI for editing armor stands
- Hexnicks - Enables Tildes usernames to be displayed
- hsrails - Allows for 4x speed rail travel
- LuckPerms - Locks down unregistered users
- Otherside - Fix for mob farms involving Nether portals
- Rapid Leaf Decay - Increases the speed of leaf decay by 10x
- WorldEdit - Used for occasional admin stuff
- WorldGuard - Prevents unregistered users from changing anything in the world
The server operates on a soft whitelist. Anyone can log in and walk around, but you need a Tildes account to gain build access.
We recommend you install our mod web-chat so that you can chat while in your web browser. It turns the server into an old-school chat room.
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34 votes -
Cotts & Ravine 12 deck mix back 2 back (electro hard dance hardstyle drumstep hardcore) (2013)
5 votes -
Prior Lake woman arrested with bag of drugs labeled ‘Definitely not a bag full of drugs’
25 votes -
Star Trek: Starfleet Academy S01E01 - "Kids These Days"
12 votes -
Anyone here a LISP/schemer?
LISP and schemes have always, from a distance appeared to be the best way to write code. I even started my own language that has languished for the past couple years, and it's taken on a...
LISP and schemes have always, from a distance appeared to be the best way to write code. I even started my own language that has languished for the past couple years, and it's taken on a pseudo-likeness to (scheme)-like languages by accident.
This brings me to my questions -
- How did you start?
- Does anyone here do systems-level scheme/lisp? what do you program in for that?
My why on learning lisp/scheme-like languages, and if anyone knows Chez.
I find the idea of CLI-inspired languages as one of the best possible ways of writing a language, and lisp is very nearly exactly that, it's just how my mind thinks about code, in a procedural/functional/modular way. This is one of the reasons I adore programming in Odin, as it's a modern systems-level procedural language, but it is not a scheme/lisp-like language. I should note, I abhor working with REPLs, but I can learn to live with it.
Corollary, as I am sure the audience for this is even smaller, ignore if you haven't a clue - but I am incredibly interested in Chez, for the performance metrics, the systems design, and the whole lot - yet there aren't any real resources other than the manual to learn. As I am not a native schemer, it's almost alien, and a bit hard to get right into and make something useful. Does anyone know of any good resources for this?
13 votes -
What's the benefit of avoiding the debugger?
19 votes -
San Francisco to make childcare free for families earning up to $230,000
18 votes