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  • Saying a black person is "well spoken" is such a common slight in the US, as if it should be surprising somehow that they're not all speaking Jive or Hip-hop or whatever. If people insult African-Americans like that what hope do Liberians have?

  • Really, you think all existing uses of data centers stopped now that there's AI in the mix? There may be specific facilities under construction that are intended primarily or solely for AI use, but all the existing demand is still there.

  • For example, there's this class that military helicopter pilots take as part of training for surviving water landings.

    This is nothing remotely like the scenario OP is talking about.

  • If they've read enough about the subject then they'll realize that they're not drowning. You don't drown simply from being in water, the actions required to let you float with your face in the air is almost trivial. Knowing what those actions are is enough to get you to the "okay, now how do I go somewhere?" Step.

  • The point of this post is to ask whether reading about techniques is enough to "at least, be able to swim enough to reach the steep end and save themselves from drowning."

    And yes, yes it is. It's not going to make you a good swimmer but it will certainly allow you to accomplish that.

  • Someone who is able to walk around and control their breathing already has those prerequisite motor skills.

  • Yeah, this is more of a camp. A camp where they can concentrate a specific sub-population of people into.

    Don't know if there's a specific word for that.

  • All these "absolutely not" responses are silly, IMO. I speak as someone who's quite a good swimmer. Practical experience is important to get good, certainly. But if your main objective is simply to not sink and to have a basic ability to propel yourself, I think that's stuff you can manage quite easily starting from pure book learning. The "not sink" part is key, because that will give you the time to actually experience what it's like moving around in the water and clarify what that book learning told you.

    You probably don't need 6 months of study, at that point your time would be better spent finding an actual pool. The sorts of basics I'm talking about here that would be useful is stuff like how to float with your face in the air so you can breathe, and once you've got that part down how to efficiently kick your legs to propel you rather than just flailing around uselessly. Learn those key tidbits, drill on just that, and then if you find yourself unexpectedly tossed in water you'll know what to do to not die and get yourself back to the edge.

  • Reading will nevertheless help. It's not going to give you perfect form on your breast stroke, but that's not what OP is going for here. He wants to not die if he suddenly finds himself in deep water. There's plenty of benefit from reading about how to go about not dying under those sorts of circumstances.

  • PJM has lost more than 5.6 net gigawatts in the last decade as power plants shut faster than new ones enter service, according to a PJM presentation filed with regulators this year. PJM added about 5 gigawatts of power-generating capacity in 2024, fewer than smaller grids in California and Texas. Meanwhile, data center demand is surging. By 2030, PJM expects 32 gigawatts of increased demand on its system, with all but two of those gigawatts coming from data centers.

    So this is a combination of utter mismanagement by the power companies, combined with growth in data center demand. Data centers are not purely AI. And I would expect that if PJM continues to be a basket case with exceptionally high prices those data centers will move elsewhere, or at least not get set up so more in those locations. Data centers generally don't have to be located in specific places, by their nature. AI-specific ones in particular since the bandwidth required is a lot smaller than their processing power.

  • The image's caption:

    Bret Adee, one of the largest US beekeepers, has 55,000 hives used to pollinate crops. As monoculture farming spreads, bees have to be moved across the country, especially for almonds, blueberries and cherries. He lost 75% of his bees over the past year. Photograph: K Brinson/New York Times/Redux/eyevine

    A quick Google search reveals that his operation, Adee Honey Farms, is in South Dakota. here's another article on this subject with a different photograph of the same place. Their web page doesn't have many photos of the field in question, but there's a couple.

    This is not an AI image.

  • Depending on your child's age and your bond you could also simply get rid of the child.

  • Yeah. I consider Trump the "blow everything up" candidate, he got a lot of support from people who were just so generically desperate that they wanted to vote for whoever seemed like they were going to majorly change something, somehow. It almost didn't matter what Trump did as long as he smashed the existing order while doing it.

  • I'm not trying to argue for or against this position. As I said all I'm doing is explaining a misrepresentation of the position that people are holding, namely that "a machine that can't think straight will do it for us."

  • I don't see what it's going to conclude that we haven't already.

    Well, that's the point of trying to build ASI. To have it think of things that we haven't been able to think of.

    I really, really, can't picture a scenario where we actually listen.

    Of course not, you're not an ASI.

  • Nobody's expecting a "machine that can't think straight" to do it. Some people are hoping that a more competent machine will be developed.

  • Geoengineering is a field dedicated to exactly that - mitigating climate change by modifying solar input and so forth.

    Basically, the Republicans have been shooting the environment and now want to ban tourniquets and sutures.

  • Or newer ones either, apparently. Every single review lies within that December to February timeframe.

    I went over to an Amazon listing for this same kind of trap and the average of 786 reviews is 4.4 stars out of 5. There's much more variety in the 1-star reviews over there, too.