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>Can't help but draw parallels with the covid-19 pandemic

That is very clearly the intent of the article and a fantastic reason to write it off as social media garage and stop reading it.


Crazy how these days even the native Texan palm tree is in trouble.


Record breaking heat last summer killed off a lot of cactus in Arizona.



You can't even define toxicity in an objective and verifiable way, because it's inherently subjective.

Trying to make rules for a machine to behave in a decidedly nontoxic way is a fool's errand, then.

You're also assuming that AI is going to be used to heavily influence people's lives, but there's a good chance that all it's good for is ripping off copyrighted material and generating clipart that's good enough for powerpoint presentations.

AI is probably going to change the world in the way that NFTs did. And self driving cars. And the Alexa.


I hope it never optimizes around this. There are a million ways to organize information and "leaving it all over the fuckin place in case I ever need it" is not an organization method, it's the absence of one.

Then again I do love seeing people have fifteen million tabs open, it helps me set my expectations about what they can handle.


>Then again I do love seeing people have fifteen million tabs open, it helps me set my expectations about what they can handle.

What do you mean by this? Are you implying they can't handle something? Or can? And how did you come to that conclusion?


How come 'Windows represent certain topics' didn't fit the million?


IDK about this guy, maybe just trolling, but when I was hiring I realized you can really tell from indirect information. Name and college name will give you a real strong guess.

It was weird because I was just trying to avoid h1-b applicants since I was told we weren't doing that, but I quickly realized that I was optimizing against indian people and also that taking bias out of the hiring process is a lie that HR tells itself for legal liability reasons.


AFAIK, he is not trolling. Right now, in Academia, there is a very strong movement towards hiring diversity candidates.

For example, some faculty openings are advertised as women or minorities only.

In EU, some have sued and successfully overturned this kind of bias, as it is in principle not legal to discriminate by sex or race.


Yeah, you can’t really filter based on resume without risking legal liability. There are plenty of people who look like they would need a visa sponsorship but don’t necessarily (e.g. spouses of H1B or green card holders)


...or children of Indian immigrants.


About a year ago, I sent out over a hundred resumes, got 3 callbacks, most of which weren't serious, and then there was one job I wrote a cover letter for because I matched everything they were looking for and handily got the job.

So it's both impossible and very very easy.

I think tech hiring is going to be a knife fight for a long time, because we're long past the point where only the thoroughly interested are looking for jobs in this industry, and there's so much money in the field that competition is high enough for people to take "towers of hanoi in optimized big o" interview tests seriously (probably because they cut the candidate field down to a manageable number)

>For those that have gone remote, any specific insights?

Be ready to manage your time, it's very easy to let 15 minutes off for chores turn into blowing off a whole day.


> Be ready to manage your time, it's very easy to let 15 minutes off for chores turn into blowing off a whole day.

Alternatively (and in my opinion, more importantly), manage your 'at work' time. It's very, very easy to let working become your whole self.

Get out of the working space and SEPARATE your working space from your living and thriving space from your working space is absolutely vital to avoid burnout.


Everyone is different. I'd love to be able to work for 5-8 hours per day consistently. I have the opposite problem that you're talking about. I do agree what you say is very important for many people.


> Be ready to manage your time, it's very easy to let 15 minutes off for chores turn into blowing off a whole day.

nice, self discipline like a 12 year old :P


idk about the dartboard analogy, doesn't really explain what the article's talking about.

Honestly what the article's talking about reminds me of that old qbasic game gorillas, where you set angle and force you're throwing with, and then after the throw lands you can use the result to adjust your angle or force accordingly.


Also, never played that game, but I think that might actually a better analogy and captures what I'm trying to say as well


Yeah it's not perfect, the way I have been thinking about it is with each "throw", you learn something new about what you like and what you're good at, and over time you're able to concentrate them closer and closer to the bullseye. This idea has been stewing around in my head for a bit so I'm happy to be getting some feedback on it


The government can do whatever it wants as long as they pass a law and you respect it.


The government has armies so not respecting whatever laws they pass is hard and potentially deadly. In some cases it is worth it, but typically people are better off respecting whatever laws that are put in place.


tell that to the war on drugs. drugs are winning, btw.


Many more drug supporters have died in the war than government agents.


"Hello I'm agent smith from federal agency group, costco said you bought some gold, where is it?"

"lost it"

"Mind if we search your house?"

"i've known you were going to ever since I bought the gold; knock yourself out. Just please don't disturb my antique collection of locked filing cabinets. They're all empty but the keys are in that big pile over there"


You sound overly confident. It's not as if federal agents never had to look for hidden money stashes before...


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