@thomasfuchs Personal favorite part: capitalizing “Hussein”, which roughly translates to a diminutive of “good” or “handsome”/“beautiful”
He’s so Islamophobic that he doesn’t even realize he’s complementing Obama
@thomasfuchs Personal favorite part: capitalizing “Hussein”, which roughly translates to a diminutive of “good” or “handsome”/“beautiful”
He’s so Islamophobic that he doesn’t even realize he’s complementing Obama
@thomasfuchs Back in *reality*, mundane training is really where the innovation is. The gold-standard for patient counseling training for doctors is role-play simulations, which is expensive and varies in quality. For the same cost, you can get more hours, additional flexibility and much richer data on learner performance. The flexibility is a really important factor, particularly for practicing doctors doing continuous training.
@thomasfuchs And America wasn’t the only major economy to avoid a recession post-COVID because it’s somehow special — historic migration this decade alleviated a significant indigenous labor shortage, particularly in the low-wage jobs that American companies and their consumers rely on for their food and other goods https://www.fastcompany.com/91091806/immigrant-workers-us-recession-inflation
@thomasfuchs These reps need to just admit their spouse is disgusted by them so they haven’t gotten any in years and leave the rest of us out of their weird historical reenactment
@thomasfuchs Yeehaw!
@thomasfuchs Definitely not a fad, but it’s been massively oversold as a tool. Cost continues to be a principal issue. When the cost is roughly equivalent to a human worker in many seemingly-compelling use cases, businesses will stick with the people.
It doesn’t look like this cost will meaningfully change in the near future either, considering the limiting input is the fully-matured cloud compute market.
@thomasfuchs So they’ve had an official partnership with OpenAI for a few weeks & still don’t have visibility into the content that’s already been consumed by their partner? That doesn’t indicate the necessary oversight or compliance monitoring required for this large of an effort
@thomasfuchs “But they’re disrupting classes, exams and graduation!”
As someone who had their last semester upended by 2020’s events and couldn’t walk due to a positive test, it certainly sucks. It’s also not students that are complaining loudly about it. Instead it’s a bunch of wrinkled misanthropes living in a fanciful misrecollection of their youth
@thomasfuchs “Website?! That’s how THEY track you to know who has supplies and who’s prepared!
I got Frank from Military*R*Us to stock me up with MREs and canned food and just about bought all the .305 ammo this side of the county line. It’s a bit too late for you my friend..”
@thomasfuchs Apple has allowed some wild stuff on their App Store. Used to have a “hidden vault” app with a strange feature to “recover images”. Come to realize during the Pegasus fallout that the feature was *almost certainly* a sandbox escape…
The app is long gone but the bug it used went unpatched for years prior (and may very well still work)
@thomasfuchs
Early Education teaching tools, or
“Adult” toys
@thomasfuchs Easier to blame the foreign product that all the kids have than to admit that the call is coming from inside the house…
@thomasfuchs Sampling bias is b**ch. Evangelists and/or profiteers make a lot of noise, but hardly any skeptics are going to take the time to scream into the void (and even fewer will be algorithmically-promoted). In itself, the format of most social media platforms disincentivizes nuance and constructive critique.
At best, a “like” is the most thought people give to posts they agree with before they get distracted again
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