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Curious: how do you exactly detect an AI-generated comment?

A case when security through obscurity is perfectly justified.

Minor nitpick: you meant "lose", not "loose". It's a common mistake that I see around, and I think it might be useful for you to know :)

I dabble in correcting other people’s spelling on occasion (can’t help it). Somewhat frustratingly, the usual reaction is “language evolves” and “everyone uses it this way” and “if it is understood, it does not matter how you wrote it”.

I agree with the argument that language evolves.

Still, "loose" is confusing because it makes me think for one second of the actual word "loose", so it breaks the cadence of reading (and thus it is not really "understood"). If the word "loose" didn't exist, I would have no problem with people misspelling "lose" in this way and eventually becoming mainstream.


I don't agree with those a lot. At some age, ones use of language stops/slows evolving I suppose.

Well only to a point, I don't think there's been any significant or formal "we spell this existing word like this now" in a very long time.

The only way English language really evolves now is by the addition / invention / adoption of a new word or added meaning to existing words, like yeet, influencer, youtuber, incel, looksmaxxer and simp. And a lot of them are meme words not actually used in normal parlance. Others are the wider adoption of subculture specific words and expressions, like AAVE getting adopted by teenagers / young adults.


Corrected

Reminds me of Token Ring vs Ethernet. Token Ring was arguably superior, but Ethernet was cheaper to license, and over time more investment went into Ethernet and eventually Ethernet won.

Love the attitude!! Well done, and good luck with all this. I sent you an email offering help, if any is needed/welcome.

> Just shows I'm the Dropbox commentator.

Ha! This made me smile :)


> Or are you thinking more of interesting fields of research in astronomy?

This, primarily.


Xenobiology is a field of research in the study of the universe- lots of biology, speculative chemistry, and instrumentation design for detecting trace signatures and furious debate about whether observed signature imply life .. or something else.

Building a SKA radio telescope network has many challenges, not the least being increased noise from the LEO shell.

TBH there's a long long list of 'interesting' parts to the modern study of everything "out there", the greater question is what kinds of things do you find interesting?

Eg: Maggie Aderin found her way in via Engineering and then applied work on satellites and telescopes .. but is that really "astronomy" or just watchmaking for astronomers?

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/profiles/3trm0Y2037DNmqMyjm...

Either way, there's still a tonne of research that goes into the gadget building side of things, this goes hand in hand with those that theorise about black holes eating out the centres of galaxies, the cosmic background, on so on.


For a regular little "What's up in Astronomy?", Dr. Becky's YouTube channel isn't bad:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYNbYGl89UUowy8oXkipC-Q


> (b) Kubernetes is much less inefficient than running software on bare-metal (energy or cost.)

You surely meant "much less efficient than"


I did, thanks for the correction.

There also seems to be confusion about what I meant by "bare-metal." I wasn't intending to refer to the server ownership model, but rather the deployment model where you deploy software directly onto an operating system.


> nuking the cluster, booted up a single VM with debian, enabled the firewall and used Kamal to deploy the app with docker.

Absolutely brilliant. Love it.


Yes, but we could install different tools and measuring instruments and make it worthwhile.

> I know what you’re thinking. You’re hoping that we’ll use phrases such as “we’re excited,” “this is just the beginning,” and “AI is changing everything”. While all those things are true, I’ll try to avoid them and instead make this announcement a little more personal.

Refreshing. I am so tired of the usual PR-approved phrases that you read in every announcement.

Other than that, I agree with other comments: not sure what Git's problem is, and what they are supposed to solve. Star Wars' "it's a trap" vibes.


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