I’m new here and don’t know what to put in my profile. She/them, living in Aotearoa/New Zealand.
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liv@beehaw.orgto
Politics@beehaw.org•This is the wildest obituary I've \*ever\* read.English
13·2 years agoYes, it was quite good. They didn’t really cover all his genocide crimes. I guess it would take a book.
liv@beehaw.orgto
Politics@beehaw.org•This is the wildest obituary I've \*ever\* read.English
8·2 years agoMe too.
I’m sorry. Just wanted to give you a virtual hug if you’d like one.
Ugh, yours sounds even worse than ours.
We just elected a centre-right party that needed to go into coalition with our most right-wing party, who are libertarians, and our most populist party. They finally formed yesterday and now we have a government that is going to destroy the environment and decimate social services.
liv@beehaw.orgto
Technology@beehaw.org•Hundreds of OpenAI staff tell board to resign or they'll quitEnglish
30·2 years agoRemarkably, the letter’s signees include Ilya Sutskever, the company’s chief scientist and a member of its board, who has been blamed for coordinating the boardroom coup against Altman in the first place.
I am so confused.
liv@beehaw.orgto
Chat@beehaw.org•Americans are explaining why they don't say 'you're welcome' in customer service settings after foreigners complained that 'mmhmm' comes off as rudeEnglish
13·2 years agoI was a bit offended by tourists doing that mmhmm thing until I found out that it’s considered polite in the US.
I was interpreting it as “yes I know you are thankful to me, and so you should be! By the way, I’m an oaf.”
liv@beehaw.orgto
Chat@beehaw.org•Americans are explaining why they don't say 'you're welcome' in customer service settings after foreigners complained that 'mmhmm' comes off as rudeEnglish
4·2 years ago“c’est moi,” meaning, “it’s me who thanks you.”
Ah so that’s what that means. I thought I was mishearing. That’s pretty close to what I was brought up with, “it’s my pleasure” (meaning it’s me who is pleased to be helping).
The informal/vernacular in my country (NZ) is “sweet as” which puzzles most visitors, or sometimes “it’s all good”.
That’s such a cool idea!
That sounds hard.
Do you meditate at all?.Sometimes it can help reset the critical inner voice.
That’s so cool that you’re doing NaNoWriMo! I’ve always felt too daunted by lack of plot. Let us know how it goes!
liv@beehaw.orgto
Technology@beehaw.org•Google Announces to Delete Inactive Accounts, All You Need to KnowEnglish
2·2 years agoAh that explains it. Thanks!
liv@beehaw.orgto
Technology@beehaw.org•Google Announces to Delete Inactive Accounts, All You Need to KnowEnglish
11·2 years agoI thought they had already done it. I got the notification months ago.
liv@beehaw.orgto
Technology@beehaw.org•Elon Musk railed against shadow bans—now he’s using them on his criticsEnglish
10·2 years agoI’ve never used twitter in my life, still have a vague interest in what Musk is doing to it though.
liv@beehaw.orgto
Science@beehaw.org•Six newly discovered beetle species include one with bottle-opener shaped genitaliaEnglish
9·2 years agoAnother way of looking at it is bottle openers look remarkably similar to beetle genitalia.
I think the beetles were here first.
liv@beehaw.orgto
Technology@beehaw.org•Elon Musk railed against shadow bans—now he’s using them on his criticsEnglish
16·2 years agoThat tracks.
Pretty sure Elon Musk railed against bots on twitter despite having been proven to have used bots on twitter to manipulate opinion himself.
liv@beehaw.orgto
Science@beehaw.org•Cats have nearly 300 facial expressions, including a 'play face' they share with humansEnglish
4·2 years agoThat would make sense. The cats in my life have always seemed super expressive to me but I was infatuated with our family cat pretty much from birth.
liv@beehaw.orgto
Science@beehaw.org•Cats have nearly 300 facial expressions, including a 'play face' they share with humansEnglish
8·2 years agoI knew it!! When I was a kid I was told cats don’t have facial expressions but they so do!
Thanks so much, I understand the hypothesis now!!
And that article does show how it could map onto humans. For some reason I had been under the impression that early hominids did not necessarily have the females-as-strangers setup.
It’s interesting to compare with elephants, who are matriarchal. The “Alice” of an asian elephant herd will often stop having kids (though, she biologically still can) so her daughters can have some, even though unlike Charlotte, her daughters are related to her so theoreticly it’s more of a Bob/Daniel situation.
I feel like the stupidest person in the world because I still don’t see the difference between Bob and Alice and now I also don’t understand this part
If Daniel has a child, Bob won’t have a new child, to avoid starving his grandchild.
How does Bob do this? Why doesn’t he just menopause too? If menopause ensures more descendant survival wouldn’t they both do it?
Why doesn’t Alice just die?
The troupe still have to find enough food for her, how is that an evolutionary advantage to keep a non breeding member around?
If something happens to Charlotte now the troupe cannot reproduce unless they go out and find a new female, but if something happens to Daniel then Bob can still reproduce with Charlotte. What is the advantage in that asymetry?
Edit: I was puzzling over the Charlotte factor. Is it more that somewhere along the line the Charlottes of this world were killing the non-menopausal Alices? Because that kind of would make sense.
Thank you so much for taking the time to try to explain it by the way. If you don’t feel like answering my latest round of questions that’s okay!

Article about an AI that aims to give treatment suggestions to doctors, with some alarming results.