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2 yr. ago

  • I think it depends on where you are in your timezone if you prefer DST or standard time. But most people seem to not like changing the clock. It just turns into a fight if we should stay on DST or standard time year round.

    Of those 62% that indicated they would like to get rid of the practice of changing the clocks entirely, exactly half of them prefer the option of later sunrises and sunsets, as in year-round daylight-saving time, compared with 31% preferring year-round standard time.

    https://www.businessinsider.com/daylight-saving-time-polling-shows-americans-utterly-divided-2023-3

  • If we abolish DST, I think we should tweak some of our timezones. With dst, where I'm at the sun is currently rising before 5. If we kept standard time, it would be up before 4. Sun rise at 3 something and sunset at 7 something is really out of whack with how most people want sun allocated to their day.

  • Don't worry. You likely wouldn't remember even if you were taught. 5280 feet/mile is just not worth the brain space. Neither is 8 pints/gallon. I don't think you would convert between the two often enough to make it useful information to just know.

    And I do have to look up those prefixes for the less used ones. It's exa then peta or peta then exa and what's bigger than them? What's smaller than nano? I don't remember because it rarely comes up. But I'm in tech, so it's starting to more.

  • He was not found guilty of an attempted fascist takeover. This is the falsified business records case. It's the most trivial case against him. Going after the jurors who convicted him in this case is going to be chilling on the juries for the cases that matter so much more.

  • I couldn't give it up. My baby bump group and parents of multiples group are too valuable a resource. The general parenting sub on lemmy isn't active, much less such niche things. The main alternative to them is Facebook groups, which I'm even less inclined to deal with than reddit.

  • Ah. I hadn't really considered preprints or workshops. If I just count the ones that seem to be published in journals or conferences, it's 28. Still prolific. But reasonable in a 10-15 person lab.

  • I'm not questioning his contributions to the field. Just being on that many papers. It just seemed like such a crazy amount of publishing.

    Though deep learning has been on fire the last couple years. And the list posted included a lot of preprints and workshops, which I hadn't really considered.

  • I've been in academia. My field required a "significant intellectual contribution" to the research and the writing, so no putting your name on papers if you just supplied space/material/budget. You can get an acknowledgement for that, not an authorship credit.

  • Does 80 technical papers in 2.5 years seem kind of off to anyone else? That's more than a paper every 2 weeks. Is there really time for meaningful research if you're publishing that often? Is he advising a lot of students? If that's the case, is he providing the attention generally needed for each one? Is his field just super different than mine?

  • But if you truly believe in the religion, what does that change?

    Like I can absolutely abhor some of the things people have done in the name of medicine and often are still doing, but that doesn't mean I'm going to stop going to doctors when I'm sick. Because I fundamentally believe in medical science and that I'm more likely to die without them. If you are raised catholic, there's a good chance you fundamentally believe your eternal life is better if you continue to follow the religion. Sure, I probably have more proof, but their belief is just as strong.

  • Primary to tertiary? Does that mean it includes what college students through grad school spend themselves? Because that would shift perception of this a lot.

    Edit: The original data does include public funding and private funding:

    Every year, governments, private companies, students and their families make decisions about the financial resources invested in education.

    They do break it out, but I can't tell if the graphic is using the total or just the public funding.

    So this graphic might just be: Americans spend a stupid amount on college.