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I always counted 50 minutes from midtown to JFK, taking the E train to Jamaica station and the air train.

But I think GP's point is that it could be done in 20 minutes. The A train is a subway, it's nowhere near the speed of the Heathrow Express.


This looks like a feature.

Not sure why somebody thought it was a good idea. There probably was a use case at some point where it seemed smart to allow for things like this. Maybe it’s for CI, but I really can’t think of why.

But I really doubt this could be a bug. I mean why would patch even need to read the commit message if it wasn’t to scan it for diff?


In France turquoise is historically called “bleu turquoise”, so French people would definitely categorize the in-between as blue.

We can't rule out a new innovation that makes frontier models more relevant than deepseek in 6 months. Things evolve so fast.

Equally you can't rule out innovation that makes deepseek more relevant than American models

We can because the reality is that America has led in AI since the beginning and has had the best frontier models. It's not like some other country held the top spot for any given period of time. No one in Europe or China. I'd give it the benefit of the doubt if there was precedent. But the only logical position to take is the lead is widening and while most AI's will go over some threshold where it is good enough for most people, the actual frontier will remain firmly in American soil.

> the reality is that America has led in AI since the beginning and has had the best frontier models

The USA has the biggest, but there lies their disadvantage

In the USA building bigger, better frontier models has been bigger data centres, more chips, more energy.

China has had to think, hard. Be cunning and make what they have do more

This is a pattern repeated in many domains all through the last hundred years.


Being the front runner doesn’t automatically make you the best, that’s such an American way of thinking lol.

i predict you are going to have a very hard rest of your life, trying to cope with reality or reconcile what you see with what you "think"

tant pis


Sounds like someone reinvented mindfulness

They made instructions for mindfulness direct and unambiguous which is great.

I’d subtract a wall and substitute the breathe.

But a wall would probably do just fine as well.


also known as the html file.

The original point is to use crowd wisdom. Crowds seem better than single individuals to predict outcomes of certain types of events.

I think this is visible in sports betting markets. Unless all games are rigged, games outcomes are fairly random events, and betting markets are pretty good at assessing the probabilities of a team winning. Same thing happens in finance. Option markets are really good at assessing the probabilities of asset movements.

The thing though is that these markets are only good in predicting recurring events like game results or financial asset movements. They are good _overall_, as in, if you take 100,000 sport games, the bettings odds are going to be overall in line with what actually happens.

Hence some people deduced that crowds with skin in the game were wise in predicting random stuff. And what happened then is that some of them thought this kind of predictive power could apply to any kind of event, and then predictive markets were created, with the idea that crowds could magically come up with odds for anything, and that would be fairly correct. But what works for recurring events don't hold for single events like Maduro's capture or the end of the Iran war. So the odds in these market is only the result of influence and insider information.

The result is that the odds are generally completely off, unless there is insider information. That's kind of what happened in the 2008 financial crisis. The bets there were on loans defaulting. These events are rare enough that it's impossible to assess their probability easily. And so banks relied on rating agencies (influence), to price the odds of these events happening. Rating agencies were wrong on a lot of these bets, meaning all the bets were placed at very very wrong prices, resulting in the crisis we saw.

The weird outcome of it all, is that those prediction markets have become insider information detectors. That's how they caught the guy. Whoever is winning big on these markets is necessarily cheating.

But I guess the main takeaway for me is that society is in such a state that a lot of people actually bet big on these things. Probably a combination of being fed dreams of fortune since childhood and the american dream not delivering. It's all very sad.


Why would Polymarket not operate under US laws? It's based in New York, and has already been fined by the CFTC. It's all in the wikipedia page.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymarket


I don't know the exact legality of it all, but Polymarket wasn't operating in the US up until recently. Even though they are now, they maintain two separate markets. One that is somewhat regulated in the USA and a blockchain based market outside the US. For most of its existence it has very much been offering things that were illegal in the US even though they are based in NY.

I think there is a market for cars as well.

15 years ago, Dacia used to make stripped sedans that sold for as cheap as 7.5k euros. It was a wild success. Now, they've pivoted to making modern cars, still on the cheap side, but the cheapest now is a compact car that sells for 13k.

The only reason is that those modern cars have higher margins and there is no competition for cheap cars. So why make cheap cars to kill the market of higher margins ones?

The free market, if it works at all, should produce companies like wheelfront that caters to that share of the population.


To me it's obvious that acetaminophen and ibuprofen do not target the same kind of problems. I am not a woman, but my wife says acetaminophen does not work on menstrual pain for instance.

I take acetaminophen for fever, and those kind of full-body diffuse ill-feeling.

I take ibuprofen for localized intense pain.

I take aspirin for headaches and sore muscles.


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