People say "online is not irl" and while that's not completely true this video is one the starkest examples I've seen of the difference between online social norms vs actual humans. This guy's a prick but his "ahem I simply wish for my rightful discourse (with an audience)" schtick is pure online.
hadn't heard of this book before, but definitely getting it now - thanks for sharing
This is the fundamental paradox of AI: if it's actually helping you, there is no way to know when it is no longer helping you. Put another way: if you can supervise it effectively enough to catch its mistakes, you probably didn't need it in the first place.
I find it striking how in the aftermath of Helene, libraries are providing crucial community services like free wifi while cops are guarding stores with rotting food from potential "looters" instead of serving and protecting people. Worth considering how we spend local funding.
Tell artists you like their work. It’s how they stay filled with life-giving art mucous.
i'm so combo-brained when it comes to my Greasefang deck that i see other successful lists running a bunch of obviously good cards like Bitter Triumph and Fatal Push and think "no. wrong"
that's surprising! you're so good with complex perspective, i almost assumed that you used grid paper to help. your cluttered compositions in restaurants and rooms and city streets are so, SO good
this looks great! do you always draw on grids by default?
fucking right? i try to accept linguistic drift, and they probably just mean "he's clean-shaven and has a hairless chest" but i don't think i'm ready to swallow "twink" as a descriptor for a guy whose shoulders are five heads apart and whose upper arm is as thick as the woman standing next to him
hey can i see that slang you're using real quick? yeah i'll totally give it right back, i just wanna see it for a sec