A_Light_Spark
A_Light_Spark t1_j944lr9 wrote
Reply to comment by Lampshader in "The longest-lived micrometer than can be bought." J.T. Slocomb micrometers and stand, all fully restored by myself. Each mic is between 70-120 years old, and they're all still accurate. by ExHempKnight
By moving I mean parts that are constantly getting wear and tear during operation or even standby. Like a cog in a clock or a piston in an engine.
A_Light_Spark t1_j92p8d4 wrote
Reply to "The longest-lived micrometer than can be bought." J.T. Slocomb micrometers and stand, all fully restored by myself. Each mic is between 70-120 years old, and they're all still accurate. by ExHempKnight
Of course they are buy it for life.
They:
- are made of metal
- don't go under stress, i.e. heat/torque/compression
- are not used outside
- have no moving mechanism
- have no electrical components
A_Light_Spark t1_j87y33l wrote
Reply to comment by starfries in [P] Introducing arxivGPT: chrome extension that summarizes arxived research papers using chatGPT by _sshin_
True that it's a review, but even reviews tend to draw conclusions, thus the reason for meta analysis.
But yeah, I also prefer to see the results first, no matter how boring.
A_Light_Spark t1_j8792en wrote
Reply to comment by Trakeen in [P] Introducing arxivGPT: chrome extension that summarizes arxived research papers using chatGPT by _sshin_
They did find some correlations. This type of meta analysis is not uncommon nowadays but few avoid answering the question as much as this paper.
A_Light_Spark t1_j85faln wrote
Reply to comment by bbygodzilla in Wedding Planner in Ukraine War Has Adapted to Curfews, Blackouts, the determination to keep on living and to be happy is so heartwarming. by TheHuanWhoKnocks
Love, or human primal instinct.
Remember the baby boomer generation? When our lives are under threat, we flock to procreate.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12179705/
We'll find out if it's really love in like 5 years by studying divorce rate.
A_Light_Spark t1_j85cy4f wrote
Reply to comment by Trakeen in [P] Introducing arxivGPT: chrome extension that summarizes arxived research papers using chatGPT by _sshin_
Case in point:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3530294/
The title and the abstract are almost disjointed. I come across papers like regularly like maybe 15% of the time?
A_Light_Spark t1_j8564n5 wrote
Reply to comment by import_social-wit in [P] Introducing arxivGPT: chrome extension that summarizes arxived research papers using chatGPT by _sshin_
Climax my ass, I'm trying to learn, not to cum
A_Light_Spark t1_j854o19 wrote
Reply to comment by Trakeen in [P] Introducing arxivGPT: chrome extension that summarizes arxived research papers using chatGPT by _sshin_
Depends on the paper/authors. Sometimes they reallllyyy try to not tell you what they found or how they found it until you get to the method and conclusion.
A_Light_Spark t1_j7hg6bo wrote
Reply to Cinnamon Helps Boost Learning and Memory by BlitzOrion
Paywalled. Anyone got a link to the paper?
A_Light_Spark t1_j5n8w5t wrote
Now if we can train them to eat PFAS then it'd be great.
A_Light_Spark t1_iw9i2uo wrote
A_Light_Spark t1_ivif060 wrote
Reply to comment by Rich_Acanthisitta_70 in Genomic analysis of 3-6,000 year old watermelon seeds finds the fruit likely had bitter pulp and greenish-white flesh, and may have been consumed primarily for its seeds by bobstonite
All you did was refer to some tabloid website and then you call what they say as "facts". Really now? I just showed you modern day varieties of two plants that people actively harvest and consume on a daily basis, but apparently I'm spreading false information? Instead of typing up a word salad, why don't you give me some actual examples?
A_Light_Spark t1_iviad2f wrote
Reply to comment by Rich_Acanthisitta_70 in Genomic analysis of 3-6,000 year old watermelon seeds finds the fruit likely had bitter pulp and greenish-white flesh, and may have been consumed primarily for its seeds by bobstonite
The first pic is not a good one because that also what unripe watermelons looks now.
Also the eggplant one is bad. Indian eggplants still look very similar: https://specialtyproduce.com/produce/Indian_Eggplant_9087.php
And even for the american species, they look like an egg when young, thus the name.
And then there are also italian and thai eggplants to say the least, not to mention all the heirloom ones:
https://www.motherearthnews.com/organic-gardening/heirloom-eggplant-varieties-zewz1308zpit/
A_Light_Spark t1_iu19j4b wrote
Dropsy that you?
A_Light_Spark t1_jeaim48 wrote
Reply to comment by saintshing in [R] LLaMA-Adapter: Efficient Fine-tuning of Language Models with Zero-init Attention by floppy_llama
The real vip is in the comments again. TIL about rwkv!
Now I just need to read up on it and see if it can do sequence classification...