Skip to main content



The Real Realm
Liu Kuo-Sung 1999
From: https://x.com/blanc_alba/status/1858225969443811511

-

Arte: Vol des grues vers la lune d'or
by Fujiyama Nobu; Rudi.
From: https://x.com/ClaraOlwen/status/1858242777517109366



I am considering buying a multimeter because idk I guess I'm at the time in my life when people buy multimeters.

I don't know much about them -- is there any point trying to find a good one, or are they fairly consistent / standard?

in reply to Ben Millwood

Actually I should add that I'd recommend getting a clamp meter if you have a car, even though they cost more. It's extremely useful for measuring currents flowing from your car battery when your car is meant to be off (and thus helping to figure out why your battery needed a jumpstart).
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

one of my ambitions in life is to get through adulthood without ever having to learn to drive


I am posting from superstimulus and maybe it will go to bluesky also


Allegedly, the Bluesky connector in Friendica should let you use your Bluesky account from within Superstimulus (go to Settings -> Social Networks). I have a Bluesky account, but I don't really use Bluesky so I don't know how well it works yet. I've enabled "post to Bluesky by default"; fingers crossed!


Senju Hiroshi
Night Performance, 1995
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1857935683240997187/photo/1


Short AXRP with Alan Chan!


Another fun short episode!

Road lines, street lights, and licence plates are examples of infrastructure used to ensure that roads operate smoothly. In this episode, Alan Chan talks about using similar interventions to help avoid bad outcomes from the deployment of AI agents.

YouTube link
Transcript



I've said this and things like it elsewhere, but o1-preview feels qualitatively better than other LLMs to me, in a way that I don't think I experienced even with GPT-4 vs GPT-3. My implicit superintelligence timelines actually grew a bit longer with GPT-4's release, and have grown a bit more in the time since, but using o1-preview has shrunk them again. It's also increased my felt probability that AI systems will be scheme-y in ways that are hard to detect.
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Convenient timing: o1 is now available to all usage tiers in the API, so I believe you can just sign up and start using it.


Senbon Ichou by Mikiko Noji
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1857705164251050362


Cracking Eggs


The best way to crack eggs is the highlander method: beat two eggs against each other. This overly easy method preserves rarely makes a mess, and is tolerant to a lot of different levels of force.

But don't just look on the sunny side: the highlander method has a major flaw. What do you do with the last egg? If you haven't hatched a plan, you may scramble to one of the inferior methods: counter or bowl.

The counter method is the safe option: it consistently produces a small mess, even if your strike is eggsceptional. But if you're ready to leave your shell, the bowl is for gamblers and dreamers: it can produce a mess-free egg if you aim things perfectly, but you'll end up with shell everywhere unless you crack it eggsactly right.



From:
- https://x.com/0zmnds/status/1857570527134859688/photo/1
- https://x.com/0zmnds/status/1857570023830847567/photo/1


Shoda Koho ( 1871-1946 ) Moonlight Sea c. 1930
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1857172152174157921/photo/1

+

Leonard Weisgard
illustration from Look at the Moon (1969)
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1857488438691291585/photo/1



Gotta love the version of cost-effectiveness analysis where you just assume the thing you're doing matters 10,000x as much as things alternative projects do. https://x.com/SpacedOutMatt/status/1857498592732131722


One of the main questions I ask in interviews is basically "we have a data pipeline with goal X and constraints A, B, and C. How would you design it?" Depending on how they do, we'll discuss various tradeoffs, other possible goals/constraints, and so on.

This is based on a real system I designed and have been maintaining for ~5 years, and is also very similar to other systems I've run at previous jobs.

About half the candidates complain that it's not a realistic question.

in reply to Satvik

Is it possible that they mean some other kind of realism? Like, maybe they think it's unrealistic to design a system like this during the course of an interview, or something?
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

I've asked for more specific feedback, and the complaints often come down to "nothing I've done has been like this" and "most of development is web development." That might be true, but we don't have a website/web app, and we're pretty specific about the work involved in both the job description and the phone interview.

(We have had other feedback that's helpful)

Generally, everyone who's done well on this question and joined has been a strong hire, though we've also hired some people who didn't do well that specific question. So I'm pretty sure it's a good question. I'm just a little amused/dismayed at how many people seem to think "realistic" means "web development."

This entry was edited (7 months ago)


Grammar-translation exercises convict you of your sin, but only comprehensible input can bring salvation.
in reply to Daniel Filan

Where of course "sin" means failing to have internalized the full glory of the grammar and vocabulary of the target language.


When I see that the US uses voting machines and takes ages to count votes, my instinct is to support a reform of "just do it like Australia/the UK/other civilized countries", where:
- all ballots are paper
- there's no such thing as provisional ballots
- postal votes have to arrive by end of voting election night
- on election night, ~all votes are counted by hand, observed by scrutineers employed by the candidates
One issue is that this is maybe somewhat of a simplified account of how places count votes (aec.gov.au/voting/counting/). But I also wonder if it's just one of those things the US could not implement if it tried, due to lack of the relevant kind of "state capacity".


I'm currently partway through job application processes at 80,000 Hours and the UK AI Safety Institute. Does anyone have any opinions about those employers?

As someone who is primarily a software engineer and manager / CTO, but not wedded to being those things, if anyone has any other things they think I should apply for or consider doing, let me know? Working independently, unpaid, is also an option.

in reply to Ben Millwood

I think research managing at MATS is kind of fun, applications are technically closed but it's possible they'll continue to consider good candidates. Link to apply here. In my role as a MATS employee I encourage you to apply but make no promises that your application will be considered.


HomeAssistant. Wow. How had I not heard of this before this year?

It's allegedly an open source home automation system, but I keep running into ways that it's actually way better than that. You can connect it to just about anything: Sure, air conditioning and lighting and smart locks and all the other home automation stuff. But also fitbit, mattress coolers, various internet data sources; you can use it to set up a custom ChatGPT-powered Google Home replacement (finally!).

And it's all so polished! Like, yes you need to be a level-1 technical person to set it up, and to use the more advanced features, but the flows are so reasonable and reliable. I'm genuinely kinda shocked.



Basket of Lemons, 1992 - Jose Escofet.
From: https://x.com/MenschOhneMusil/status/1856974702498996385


New short AXRP with Zhijing Jin!


New episode of AXRP with Zhijing Jin - this time, a short one (22 min), offering an overview of her work. Blurb below, links in comments.

Do language models understand the causal structure of the world, or do they merely note correlations? And what happens when you build a big AI society out of them? In this brief episode, recorded at the Bay Area Alignment Workshop, I chat with Zhijing Jin about her research on these questions.

YouTube

Transcript



A theory of how alignment research should work


in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

tbc, in this comment I did basically:
[ul]
[li] foo
[ul] [li] bar [/ul]
[li] baz  
[/ul]


RIP Inkscape


I recently installed Inkscape in order to make anSVGs for a puzzle hunt... and managed to crash it in less than 10 seconds just by somewhat rapidly clicking/dragging around to try to start drawing. Some Googling seems to confirm it's pretty unstable now; seems like it's not really usable anymore.

(I ended up just generating the SVG programmatically using Python shapely + matplotlib, which was better for my purposes anyway)



Seems like there's a good chance we get a 7-2 supreme court in a couple years. As someone who is pretty sympathetic to conservative jurisprudence, this still seems worryingly lopsided. Not sure there's much to be done in practice tho (except think about ways this should affect asset prices?).
in reply to Daniel Filan

Hmmm, Kalshi only gives this outcome a 23% chance. Can't tell if they're mistaken or I am.


Chapters of Familia Romana that are hard, according to me


For background, most chapters are only trying to do one or two 'things'.

Chapter 8:
- all the declensions of quis/quī, hic, is, and ille dropped on you in a single chapter
- in some sense only one 'thing', but that's around 144 forms you've got to remember (4 pronouns x 3 genders x 2 numbers x 6 cases).
- tbh I just went past this and hoped I'd get used to them rather than having to memorize them

Chapter 12:
- the fourth declension
- datives for possession (e.g. "Marcō ūna soror est")
- comparatives
- third declension adjectives
- datives of commanding and obeying

Anyway I'm up to chapter 13 which is less bad, hopefully the density of hard chapters does not increase.

in reply to Daniel Filan

I'm currently on chapter 27 and I have some aversion to re-reading it to do the exercises, because:
- it's just kind of boring (talk about how agriculture works, Julius demanding a tenant farmer pay some money he owes but relenting, Julius nearly punishing a shepherd for letting a sheep get away but then relenting)
- it's also quite long, longer than previous chapters
- it covers the present tense subjunctive which idk is not that hard I think

I'm currently procrastinating by reading the Cambridge Latin Course. But IDK maybe I should just skip the exercises and move on? Or do what I can without re-reading? The next chapter seems pretty cool...



Test of tusky


If I comment on this, will the comment also have the content warning? (which is apparently how these headings are implemented / what they're converted to)


Latin practice day 6


I. Num hominēs quī Berkeleiam incolunt barbarī sunt?
II. Mīlitēs armīs pugnant. Puerī pugnīs pugnant. Quō pugnat mercātor? Quibus pugnant pāstōrēs?
III. Num hominēs quī audiunt AXRP fortiōrēs quam illa quī audiunt The Inside View?
IV. Manūs sunt manūs bracchiī. Digitī sunt manūs manuum. Quae sunt manūs digitōrum?
V. Cūr medicus meus mē crassum esse dīcit?
VI. Potest homō avunculō avunculus esse?

#latinpractice



Susan Noble
‘Autumn Ferns’
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1855887688668524839


Panavise, Panavise
Every clamp holds so sweetly
Squared up right, fastened tight
You hold projects so neatly

Helpful jaw may you roll and yaw
roll and yaw forever
Panavise, Panavise
Bless my workbench forever



Ngl, I still get a little rush when I go to the store and see trading card packs, even for games I've never played.


Something I'm surprised I've never seen before: sacrificial anode toolbox liner. When I went to burning man last year, I brought my toolbox with me. It rained a good chunk of the week, and I needed to use my tools for various things. So of course, when I got back to civilization, some of my tools had rusted slightly. So today I took some copper fabric and wrapped up a couple magnesium rods, and lined the inside of the toolbox with them. Hopefully this will prevent much further rusting!


Apparently workout music also works for getting out of bed and beginning to go to the gym! At least it did for me just then.


Sometimes I'm confused by pro photographers




William H. Hays: Mountain Melody, 2022
linocut
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1854986382957330908/photo/1


I feel like commissioning episode art for AXRP is really causing me to run into the limitations of my imagination. Every episode I want to be like "hey can you draw a robot but it's evil" or "hey can you draw a scientist inspecting a robot".


From: https://x.com/0zmnds/status/1854995056660562070/photo/1


From: https://x.com/0zmnds/status/1854948751812837573/photo/1


From: https://x.com/opancaro/status/1854969896871870644/photo/1


Esa Riippa (Finnish, b. 1947)
Nocturno
From: https://x.com/marysia_cc/status/1854960702504812953/photo/1


People keep telling me I should use descript, but it doesn't run on linux :(