Saik0Shinigami

joined 2 years ago
[–] Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com 2 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Simply using AI isn't an issue... Allowing it to take over in a way that accelerates the removal of the knowledge from our pools of knowledge is a problem. Allowing companies to use AI as a direct replacement of actual medical professionals will remove knowledge from society. We already know that we can't use AI to fuel more AI learning... the models implode. In order to continue learning more from medicine, we need to keep pushing for human learning and understanding.

Funny that you agree with me and apparently see useful discussion to have here... but downvote me even though the comment certainly added to the discussion.

Oh, and next time don't put words into someone's mouth, very much a bad faith action that harms meaningful discussion. I never said we should ban it or never use it. A better answer would be to legislate that doctors must still oversee, or must be the approving authority. That AI can never have a final say in someone's care and that research must never be sourced from AI sources. All I said, is that if we continue what we're doing and rely on AI in any meaningful capacity, we will run into problems. Especially in the context of the comment I responded to which opined upon corporation controlled AI.

FFS... they can't even run a vending machine. https://www.anthropic.com/research/project-vend-1

Oh.. and actually I would consider the 85% that it gets to be pretty poor considering that the AI was likely trained on the full breadth of NEJM information. Doctors don't have that ability to retain and train on 100% of all knowledge of the NEJM, so mistaking things makes sense for them. It doesn't make sense for something that was trained on NEJM data to screw up on an NEJM case.

My stance is the same for all AI. I'll use it to generate basic code for me. I'll never run that without review. Or to jumpstart research into a topic... and validate the information presented with outside direct sources.

TL;DR: Tool is good... Source is bad.

[–] Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com 7 points 4 days ago (2 children)

And the risk is that if we rely on AI in any meaningful capacity, it will eventually erode away the expertise who would be knowledgeable enough to detect the problems that the future AI may create/ignore. This assumes even best case where AI isn't being specifically tampered with.

802.11a was 5ghz, 802.11b was 2.4ghz. Both developed at the same time.

802.11g was 2.4ghz and extended b since 2.4 took off faster than 5ghz in the market.

Since g, n onwards has been used across both bands.

Since 802.11ax we now have 6ghz.

[–] Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com 7 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Citizenship is already required to vote in state [...] elections.

This is incorrect. The law you think you're referencing by this is only applicable to Federal positions. Several states explicitly allow non-citizen voting in local elections. Many have no laws on the books at all addressing it. Only 15 states explicitly prohibit non-citizen voting for local positions.

https://ballotpedia.org/Laws_permitting_noncitizens_to_vote_in_the_United_States

This fact alone should mandate that the federal level maintains their own registrations. The State and Federal levels have different applicable voter rolls because the state doesn't have the same requirements as the federal elections.

[–] Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

The m50 is a full face mask....

Plus your original claim was that razor bumps would negatively impact the fit, not short length beards. You’re moving the goalposts.

No it wasn't... but you go ahead and keep lying to yourself. You can scroll up and read it for yourself.

And to preempt an argument… “there’s no study that says beards/razor bumps interfere with gas masks”… There are. Most of them say minimal beards/hair is fine (less than 1/16th of an inch) to get a mask seal, where 1/8 can already lead to issues. But it’s understudied. The risk of getting it wrong is people’s lives.

Note that the quoted section is not "me" saying it, but a response to that general topic/discussion.

But we've already discussed this ad nauseam, so you can stop following me around now.

Yeah it wasn't an OSHA study that I was referencing...

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29283316

With military articles like https://taskandpurpose.com/news/military-beards-break-gas-mask-seal/ stating

The 2018 study showed that facial hair negatively influences the fit factor for half-face negative-pressure respirators as the hair gets longer and more dense. However, beard-wearers can still “achieve adequate fit factor scores even with substantial facial hair in the face seal area,” the study authors wrote. In fact, 98% of the study participants who had an eighth-inch of beard passed the fit test. Those results are encouraging because the respirators used in the study are pretty close to the M-50 gas masks used in the military today in terms of material and fit, Ritchie said.

So 2 out of 100 people using masks that are relatively similar to the military M50 would be at risk at 1/8th inch beard. Which is not a whole lot of hair... Like 3-4 days of growth (for me). 1/16 or less seemed to be 100% rates... But the big caveat here is that the fit-test doesn't adequately capture the rigor and activity that one might do in the military... So it seems logical that much more leakage will happen at every level.

But OSHA, ANSI, every branch of the DoD, and every study (though minimal) agrees with the fact that beard hair in of itself is a no go.

Example navy document... https://www.med.navy.mil/Portals/62/Documents/NMFA/NMCPHC/root/Industrial%20Hygiene/RESPIRATOR-SPECIAL-PROBLEMS.pdf?ver=Ng19UESJUtWmwvoHSABW-w%3D%3D There's a fun graph on table 2.

[–] Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com 0 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Eh one person being crazy isn't personal... I get there's crazies out there.

It's all good... Just wild that someone can in one breath claim there's reading comprehension issues then in the next sentence quote the regulation that proves them wrong thinking they're right...

It's scary that people like them are touching chemicals (according to them). Literally just now...

OSHA doesn’t care as long as it does not impede function of the seal.

Then quotes "respirators shall not be worn when facial hair comes between the sealing surface of the facepiece and the face" and completely misses the fact that ANY amount of hair would come between the sealing surface and the face... This is the inside of the mask, the red is the areas that touch/seal against your face... The entire chin/cheek area would be touching hair.

I'm actually just disappointed in myself that it took me so long to realize that the discussion just wasn't going to go anywhere...

It's funny because Canada ALSO looked into the same stuff... and apparently came to the same conclusion that something else has to be used to get a sufficient seal. But Noooo! I must be wrong!

https://youtube.com/watch?v=bpNKS-W0xDQ

Their answer was to just add an entire fucking hood to create a snug fit around the neck... Not sure I'm a fan of that... But even in this video some of those beards are pretty short.

[–] Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com 1 points 1 week ago (5 children)

At this point we're getting nowhere... When you say shit like "With chemical weapons?"... Yes we're talking about literal war... where soldiers are the ones following these policies. This is literally the primary place chemical weapons are used as far as all of known recorded history.

OSHA, ANSI, all branches of DOD and the study agree with me... You can argue whatever you want, I'm disengaging.

OSHA paragraph (g)(1) of 29 CFR 1910.134 ANSI Z88.10

You basically admitted to breaking OSHA rules though. So congrats!

[–] Saik0Shinigami@lemmy.saik0.com 6 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29283316/ from 2018 says there's problems with even really short lengths of beard...

But you're correct in that I don't have any evidence that the military found or validated the same findings internally. I think it's more likely than not though.

Edit: Actually I do have some minor proof that they know there's issues... But it's covered in the same "it's really understudied" caveat that I put in the post itself. Not worth really discussing IMO.

Edit2: I'd even disbelieve that Trump knows enough about the military to find out that they could use this to be frank...

Lmfao. You're complaining about downvotes when people use them correctly. Remember downvotes are supposed to be used to measure how relevant/useful a topic is to a conversation. Unfortunately your feelings about specific service members, or the group as a whole is irrelevant to the discussion about the grooming rules of the military.

Just remember, you think everyone else needs to get a life... You came to this post knowing that you dislike the military specifically to spew random hatred at people who didn't even interact with you.

 

So there's a fantastic site called chronolists.com... It's a bit incomplete from the dataset perspective, seems to be missing the "latest" releases (the 2022 Fantastics Beasts for example), and is limited to very particular "universes".

Is there an *arr that does this?

Automatically grab the items you have and populate playlists like "Stargate - Chronological", "Stargate - Airdate", etc...

And as items are added to your library that were missing in the "universe" it fills in the playlists. Playlistarr?

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