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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)CY
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15
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686
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • didn’t take off until Tesla built a Gigafactory to supply their batteries

    BYD doesn't rely on Tesla to supply their batteries. It's the other way round: BYD started out as a battery company, and Tesla relies on their batteries in Shanghai, Germany, and other factories. Tesla originally used batteries from CATL, another Chinese company, but started switching to BYD a few years ago.

  • "EV winter" is a silly framing. Many Chinese EV companies are on a roll, with BYD just surpassing Tesla in EV shipments in the last quarter. EVs are now mainstream in China and the car markets in other countries won't be far behind. Obviously, Tesla faces more challenges from the fact that it no longer has the market to itself, but competition is a good thing.

  • Pretty bad article, but here are my two cents on the actual answer, as of right now:

    • General chatting: OpenHermes
    • General querying, instruction: Mistral
    • Coding: Deepseek-coder

    These perform similar to or better than ChatGPT 3.5, in some cases comparable to 4.

    For specific niche applications (role playing, nsfw stories, etc), just search on huggingface.co and read the user reviews.

  • Over geologic time, the vast majority of all species that have ever existed have gone extinct. It's not particularly meaningful to try to divine the reasons for the extinction of any one particular species. Obviously, the subtext they are trying to convey here is "these were apes, and climate changes drove them to extinction; we are apes, so won't anthropic climate change drive us to extinction?!1!?" But it doesn't carry over like that.

  • Companies provide healthcare in the vast majority of countries with universal healthcare, including in Europe. Government provision of healthcare is really only a thing in the UK, and the NHS's current struggles show that such a model isn't necessarily faultless in practice.

  • NHS is single-provider, where the government supplies the healthcare directly (e.g., doctors and nurses are NHS employees). Single payer usually refers to systems where the government pays for healthcare, but the healthcare can be supplied by a mix of providers including private sector providers, like in Canada.

    But you're right, single payer isn't the same thing as universal healthcare. In practice, the US system with Obamacare can be regarded as a universal healthcare system. Switzerland, which has a similar public-private model, is generally regarded as having universal healthcare. The only subtlety is that the US system makes it pretty easy to opt out entirely, so some fraction of the population ends up not having healthcare access through some combination of bad luck and bad decision-making.

  • The thing is, individual citizens can't reform the police, or ambulance services, fire brigade, or power utilities, all of which have been gutted by the ANC. All they can do is to pay, out of pocket, for private sector replacements. No one is arguing that this is better than having working public sector versions in the first place, but that's not achievable until the national government gets totally overhauled (if it ever happens).

  • Google allows Brave to run ads, so by using Google you're promoting homophobia... Microsoft allows Brave to run Windows, so by using any Microsoft product you're promoting homophobia...

  • The answer, of course, is that he hopes to pick up Trump supporters in the event of Trump suddenly dropping dead. We can call this the Big Mac route to the Presidency. And it's why DeSantis and Haley are mostly going after each other.

  • Setting up an "independent board" that won't rock the boat is the easiest thing in the world. And in this case, the report was tying itself in knots to avoid saying Gay copied. "Duplicative language" has the same vibes as "enhanced interrogation techniques"...

  • It doesn't rise to the level of plagiarism if you look at it like a lawyer doing everything you can to defend a client.

    If you look at the statements in question in context, even if she had put the quotation marks there, it would have been really weird to have quotations there. For the stuff she was writing about, a scholar would have been expected to write in her own words instead of copying what someone else wrote (with or without quotations). University educators fight a constant battle to get undergrads to understand this principle, and students get disciplined over such practices all the time, and rightly so.

  • The vast majority of undergrad plagiarism, which students are rightfully disciplined for, falls into this type.

    The student copies some text verbatim from a source, changes a few words so that it is not so obvious, then the source is buried somewhere in the references without any indication that text was copied verbatim from it.

    The way to avoid getting tripped up by this is to just avoid copying what other people wrote, and write things entirely in your own words. Undergrads are held to this standard, so a university administrator (let alone a president) cannot to held to a looser standard.

    It's entirely on Gay that she did this, and on most of her papers too.

  • It's shocking that some of those Harvard profs said it doesn't amount to plagiarism. Verbatim copying without attribution is plagiarism. University standards are all very clear about that, and undergrads are routinely disciplined for similar infractions. If the university president gets off the hook, it totally undermines all efforts to instill students with a sense of academic integrity.

    It's too bad that this plays into the hands of right wingers, but at the end of the day the blame lies squarely at the feet of Claudine Gay. She should not have plagiarized.

  • Has he even been formally accused of insurrection?

    Sure: he was formally accused of insurrection in the Colorado case. The judges deliberated, found in favor of the accusations, and disqualified him from the state ballot.

  • Honestly, many of these reforms are urgently needed and long overdue, such as lifting export controls---it's literally insane that a country facing a shortage of foreign exchange would deliberately crimp its own exports. For these parts, Milei has a pretty good justification for issuing an emergency decree.

    The big gamble Milei is taking is to stuff the package with a bunch of lower-priority items that, while arguably needed, are hard to defend as emergency measures. (This is quite similar to what the US government has often done, see e.g. the Inflation Reduction Act.) This increases the risk of the package being voted down, which hasn't happened before with his predecessors' decrees.