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UK Asks People to Delete Emails In Order to Save Water During Drought

The part of data centers using to much water is apparently old emails.

UK Asks People to Delete Emails In Order to Save Water During Drought

As Britain experiences one of its worst droughts in decades, its leaders suggest people get rid of old data to reduce stress on data centers.

404 Media

What I’m on about? I think the english term is “damning with faint praise”. If this is the best that can be done, which I am arguing, there isn’t much use to it.

The latest one is an outlier, in that it doesn’t have a voice over, so it isn’t a radio play. Most of the other ones I have seen has a voice track that tells the story. They are also more dreamlike which matches the prediction of what kind of story can be told from one of the comment threads here (from one of the pivot videos about VEO).

The latest one (and the only one to gone viral) is actually interesting in that he is trying to tell a visual story, but with the medium he has chosen he can’t have a novel character as protagonist really, or dialogue, which is why it is limited to a very simple story.

I’m interested in why it is so limited, because I think that tells a lot of the limitations of the technology as such.

Not a sneer, but I recently saw Ari K’s AI generated video of Trump in his golden ballroom. It’s quite good, here is the channel: https://m.youtube.com/@AriKuschnir

Looking at his other videos, he is a talented story teller. Most videos are about two minutes, has numerous short shots of a few seconds and a voice over or music connecting the shots. So presumably he generates the shots, splice them together and puts the soundtrack over the it. Most of the short stories are dreamlike. To the extent it has characters it’s famous people (getting their comeuppance), so even though they look a bit different in each shot, it’s easy to keep track.

I think it’s interesting because by doing what can be done with the tools, it illustrates the limitations. In the hands of a good story teller you essentially get an illustration for a short radio play (and the radio play needs to be recorded separately, and you can’t show actors talking). Because of the bubble and investor bux, it can right now be done on a shoe string budget.

But that’s all! Are illustrated radio plays replacing feature films? No, so this remains a niche use case. And once the investor bux dries up, potentially an expensive one. Not something to build a billion dollar industry on.

Before you continue to YouTube

The most well documented genocide while it is happening. First livestreamed genocide. If you can’t see this genocide happening, then you could never see a genocide until afterwards.

Of course they can’t figure out what is going on, using their own eyes is not in the interest of the oligarchs they serve.

Joining the war on teen pregnancies on the side of teen pregnancies to bring back the ideal past of - check notes - the 1990ies in the US.

(At least a cursory look points toward teen pregnancies in the US peeking some time in the 1990ies.)

Most medical careers work well internationally, in principle. Something to keep in mind is that language proficiency may be a stated or unstated prerequisite for employment, in particular if you have contact with patients. If you work with the machines (lab technician, etc) the language may be of less importance. Or at least, so I have heard. Relevance depends on your country of choice and your pre-existing language skills, of course.

To bad attempt number one didn’t work well. Better luck with attempt number two.

general-purpose simulators which simulate conversations that agents, oracles, genies, or tools might have

Good formulation, but in the spirit of the article I would say “might have had”. Being per definition trained on existing material they can produce likely imitations of conversations that already exists. One would suppose the value of a conversation between oracles and geniuses would be to produce something new, on effect text that is more than the statistically likely output.

Good article, thanks for linking it.

Historians like to use “state capacity” as a term for what a state is capable of doing. The government leader might want to build a great bridge, and might order it done, but depending on which state in which era it might not be a thing that is possible to execute.

I didn’t think we would see a powerful state like the US so willfully destroy its state capacity (except for violence), but here we are and “everybody who knows how to access the money got fired”

I hadn’t read HPRick and Morty, so thanks for that!

Lots of gems about wizard fascism. I liked this part:

“It means, oh golly oh gee, that uh, one day science will discover space travel and cryogenics and then we’ll all be, uh, immortal space gods with our own private stars, Professor!”

Harry hated how inarticulate he sometimes sounded outside of his own internal monologues, which were much more elaborate. One of these days he would have to sit down and write down his internal monologues in a coherent sequence.

For those that (like me) is out of the loop and don’t get it, Wikipedia comes to the rescue:

In one of the advertisements that was particularly controversial, Sweeney says that “genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality, and even eye color. My jeans [or genes] are blue”. Another voice then declares “Sydney Sweeney has great jeans”.