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A place to talk about whatever you want

37.9k Topics 342.6k Posts
  • When you don't know Dick.

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  • I do not get this meme.

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    Doctor PhibesD
    It's an Office Space reference. Milton burns down the building because somebody took his stapler.
  • We Are in Need of Renaissance People

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    KlausK
    @Axtremus said in We Are in Need of Renaissance People: The article lacks analytical rigor. The author should support his claims with statistically significant data rather than mere arguments based on a few exemplars. That's not an issue where statistics is applicable. Sometimes an analytical argument is the best you can get.
  • The Little Lifters

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  • Weird

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    JollyJ
    That's okay. She has him listed on her phone as Bad Choice.
  • DeSantis and Abortion Ballot Measure in Florida

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    taiwan_girlT
    If every "political" ad had to be completely true, there would be no political ad's.
  • If ChatGPT could sputter and point

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    MikM
    @jon-nyc I guess I should learn to have fun with AI.
  • TNCR Prediction for the 2024 US National Election

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    CopperC
    On day 1 Kamala will declare herself dictator for life. Everyone will cackle as she is dragged from the VPOTUS home after losing in a massive landslide for Mr. Trump.
  • Physics, the dead discipline

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    HoraceH
    One entry into his blog mentions Sabine: This Week’s Hype Posted on September 16, 2024 by woit Today’s Washington Post has an opinion piece from Brian Greene, running under the demonstrably false title Decades later, string theory continues its march toward Einstein’s dream. In the piece, the argument of string theory critics is given as: Critics argue that the situation is untenable, noting, “If you can’t test a theory, it’s not scientific.” Adherents counter, “String theory is a work in progress; it’s simply too early to pass judgment.” The critics retort, “Forty years is too early?” To which the adherents respond, “We’re developing what could be the most profound physical theory of all time — you can’t seriously cross your arms, tap your foot and suggest that time’s up.” The problem with the results of forty years of research into string theory is not that progress has been too slow but that it has been dramatically negative. To see this, one can just compare the text of chapter 9 of Greene’s 1999 The Elegant Universe, which has an extensive discussion of prospects for testing string theory by finding superpartners, fractionally charged particles, or cosmic strings. Twenty-five years later, the results of experimental searches are in: no cosmic strings, no fractionally charged particles, and most definitively no evidence of superpartners of any kind from the LHC. The other sorts of predictions advertised in that chapter are based on the idea that string theorists would better understand the theory and be able to make testable predictions about neutrino masses, proton decay, axions or new long range forces, the nature of dark matter, and the value of the cosmological constant. Instead of progress towards any of these, things have gone in the opposite direction: all evidence from better understanding of string theory is that it either naturally predicts things in violent disagreement with experiment (wrong dimension of space time, huge number of new long-range forces, …) or predicts nothing at all. 25 years later, Greene now goes with the latter: The challenge for string theory is that it has yet to produce any definitive, testable predictions. The article goes on to make a different case for string theory: … string theory continues to captivate seasoned researchers and aspiring students alike because of the remarkable progress that has been made in developing its mathematical framework. This progress has yielded provocative insights into long-standing mysteries and introduced radically new ways of describing physical reality. For instance, string theory has provided unmatched insights into the surface of black holes, unraveling puzzles that have consumed some of the greatest minds, including Stephen Hawking. It has offered a novel, though controversial, explanation for the observed speedup of the universe’s expansion, proposing that our universe might be just one of many within a larger reality than conventional science ever imagined. The problem here is that these supposed advances aren’t from advances in string theory. If you follow the link above that justifies “string theory has provided unmatched insights into the surface of black holes”, you’ll find the text: Most physicists have long assumed it would; that was the upshot of string theory, their leading candidate for a unified theory of nature. But the new calculations, though inspired by string theory, stand on their own, with nary a string in sight. Information gets out through the workings of gravity itself — just ordinary gravity with a single layer of quantum effects. The string theory “explanation” for the value of the CC is just the “anthropic” explanation, which besides not really being a scientific explanation, has nothing to do with string theory. The piece ends with something highly speculative and ill-defined (ER=EPR) that has nothing to do with string theory: Roughly, it’s as if particles are tiny black holes, and the entanglement between two of them is nothing but a connecting wormhole. If this realization holds up, we will need to shift our thinking about the unification of physics. We have long sought to bring general relativity and quantum mechanics together through a shotgun wedding, fusing the mathematics of the large and the small to yield a formalism that embraces both. But the duality between Einstein’s two 1935 papers would suggest that quantum mechanics and general relativity are already deeply connected — no need for them to marry — so our challenge will be to fully grasp their intrinsic relationship. Which would mean that Einstein, without realizing it, may have had the key to unification nearly a century ago. Where string theory research is after 40 years is not on a continuing march forward towards “Einstein’s dream”, but in a state of intellectual collapse with no prospects of any connection to the real world, just more hype about vague hopes for something different, something for which there is no actual theory. Update: I recommend checking out Sabine Hossenfelder’s latest youtube piece, which is mostly devoted to the Brian Greene wormhole publicity event stunt discussed earlier here. Near the end of the video, she tells a story that explains a lot about why this kind of thing keeps going on (see here). She had been writing a regular column for Quanta Magazine, but they stopped publishing her after she wrote a column in which she argued that physicists should not be misleading the public by claiming that the “black holes” supposedly on the other side of a duality from a given quantum system were actual physical black holes. What she was warning about in 2019 is an essential part of the wormhole publicity stunt, and of other similar continuing efforts that have been going on for years. One impetus behind this nonsense has always been clear: there’s attention to be gotten, and money to be made. Another factor though is the one Hossenfelder explains here. Press outlets devoted to science want to publish positive news about scientific advances, want nothing to do with authors who explain that this positive news is nothing but hype.
  • Harris V DeDantis

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    CopperC
    @George-K said in Harris V DeDantis: So, why the FEMA meetings with her at the head of the table. Because the real president left us a long time ago.
  • Ghost Guns

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://www.cnn.com/2024/10/08/politics/supreme-court-ghost-guns/index.html The Supreme Court on Tuesday signaled a willingness to uphold a Biden administration regulation on “ghost guns,” mail-order kits that allow people to build untraceable weapons at home and that are turning up at crime scenes with greater frequency. and Several of the court’s conservatives — and all of its liberals — appeared skeptical of the notion that the kits are geared toward a tradition of gunsmithing hobbyists. Chief Justice John Roberts, in particular, brushed off the idea that building the kind of gun kits at issue was equivalent to someone working on a classic car. “Drilling a hole or two, I would think, doesn’t give the same sort of reward that you get from working on your car on the weekends,” Roberts said to the lawyer representing the kit manufacturers. “My understanding is that it’s not terribly difficult for someone to do this.” and At issue is a 1968 law that requires manufacturers and dealers to run background checks, keep sales records and include serial numbers on firearms. The ATF concluded that the law coves the kits, which the agency said can quickly be built into functioning firearms. The rule does not prohibit the sale or possession of the kits but instead requires serial numbers and background checks.
  • Why NC was such a disaster

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/03/climate/north-carolina-homes-helene-building-codes.html Over the past 15 years, North Carolina lawmakers have rejected limits on construction on steep slopes, which might have reduced the number of homes lost to landslides; blocked a rule requiring homes to be elevated above the height of an expected flood; weakened protections for wetlands, increasing the risk of dangerous storm water runoff; and slowed the adoption of updated building codes, making it harder for the state to qualify for federal climate-resilience grants. Those decisions reflect the influence of North Carolina’s home building industry, which has consistently fought rules forcing its members to construct homes to higher, more expensive standards, according to Kim Wooten, an engineer who serves on the North Carolina Building Code Council, the group that sets home building requirements for the state. and in 2009 and 2010, lawmakers from the states mountainous western region wanted statewide rules to restrict construction on slopes with high or moderate risk of landslides. Their legislation failed in the face of pushback from the homebuilding and real estate industries.
  • Harris is going wild

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    JollyJ
    He does get slap-happy...
  • Direct File

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/irs-direct-file-set-to-expand-availability-in-a-dozen-new-states-and-cover-wider-range-of-tax-situations-for-the-2025-tax-filing-season The Internal Revenue Service announced today that Direct File will be available for the 2025 tax filing season in double the number of states than last year’s pilot, and it will cover a wider range of tax situations, greatly expanding the number of taxpayers eligible to use the free e-filing service. and During the pilot last year, Direct File was available in Arizona, California, Florida, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington State and Wyoming. For the 2025 tax filing season, Direct File will also be available in Alaska, Connecticut, Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. and During the pilot last year, Direct File covered limited tax situations, including wage income reported on a W-2 form, Social Security income, unemployment compensation and certain credits and deductions. For the 2025 filing season, Direct File will support 1099’s for interest income greater than $1,500, retirement income and the 1099 for Alaska residents reporting the Alaska Permanent Fund dividend. During the pilot, Direct File supported taxpayers claiming the Earned Income Tax Credit, Child Tax Credit and Credit for Other Dependents. This year, Direct File will also cover taxpayers claiming the Child and Dependent Care Credit, Premium Tax Credit, Credit for the Elderly and Disabled, and Retirement Savings Contribution Credits. In addition to covering taxpayers claiming the standard deduction and deductions for student loan interest and educator expenses, this year, Direct File will support taxpayers claiming deductions for Health Savings Accounts.
  • Give Walz Credit

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    JollyJ
    @LuFins-Dad said in Give Walz Credit: I wonder what size… Most gun owners usually state the caliber. It's going to be a 9, most likely. Wonder if she has the California citizen 10-round or the higher capacity law enforcement mags?
  • Thousands of livers ruined

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    Doctor PhibesD
    I'm actually visiting Scotland later this month with work. I wonder if they sell that at a more affordable price over there?
  • Thousands of lives ruined

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    Doctor PhibesD
    It's an earhole, not a freaking canal or a tube. You wouldn't call his asshole the alimentary canal, would you?
  • Media impartiality

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    89th8
    @wtg said in Media impartiality: https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4920827-60-minutes-trump-cancel/ Man I am so ready for the Trump tantrums to be over. Which of course means he'll win in November.
  • James May plays Beethoven

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    JollyJ
    His Our Man in Japan series was pretty good, too.
  • Back doors

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    JollyJ
    Tariffs will.