Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | las_balas_tres's comments login

What guard rails could anyone with an unrestrained high IQ possibly have?


A social network with people who's voices could serve as a check against one's internal mental state of the world around them going out of sync with the real one.

There's the old joke about how several different blind men perceive an elephant differently, but that's not too far off from how we perceive the world around us.

Marshall clearly thought things were getting significantly worse towards the end of his life. What if that perception stemmed from a poorly selected input that was never challenged by any other person's perception of reality?

For example; "There is no point to living after 65" - when there's plenty of 65+ year old people who enjoy life and contribute to the world around them. My grandparents contributed significantly to my existence when they were older than 65. If they'd both passed away at 65, my existence would be far poorer for it.

It's important to have people in our lives that help us keep our perception of reality from spinning off into dark versions that don't accurately represent actual reality.


Faith.


That github repo contains the sources. You can also compile tracy by cloning the repo.


I have had tinnitus since I was about 20 and I am now 50. Its always been there until last year when I had a slight reprieve for about 10 seconds. I was sick, the sickest I had been for years. I came down a with bad flu and was on a cocktail of drugs... antibiotics, painkillers etc. So there I was, lying in bed staring out the window when suddenly everything went peaceful and very quite. I then realised that i could no longer hear the ringing in my ears. I was sick but not delirious. Try hard as I could, i couldn't hear the ringing in my ears for about 10 seconds when suddenly as quickly as the ringing appeared, it re-appeared again.


one of my friend noticed that it's gone on MDMA.


So almost like an optical wheatstone bridge ?


Wheatstone bridge > Modifications of the basic bridge: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheatstone_bridge#Modification... :

> Carey Foster bridge, for measuring small resistances; Kelvin bridge, for measuring small four-terminal resistances; Maxwell bridge, and Wien bridge for measuring reactive components; Anderson's bridge, for measuring the self-inductance of the circuit, an advanced form of Maxwell's bridge

Is there a rectifier for gravitational waves, and what would that do?

Diode bridge > Current flow: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diode_bridge#Current_flow

And actually again, electron flow is fluidic:

- "How does electricity find the "Path of Least Resistance"?" (and the other paths) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3gnNpYK3lo

- "Observation of current whirlpools in graphene at room temperature" (2024) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40360684 :

> How are spin currents and vorticity in electron vortices related?

But, back to photons from electrons; like in a wheatstone bridge.

Are photonic fields best described with rays, waves, or as fluids in gravitational vortices like in SPH and SQS and CFD? (Superhydrodynamic, Superfluid Quantum Space, Computational Fluid Dynamics)

Actually, photons do interact with photons; as phonons in matter: "Quantum vortices of strongly interacting photons" (2024) https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adh5315 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40600762

Perhaps there's an even simpler sensor apparatus for this experiment?


My relationship with food seems to mirror yours. You have some good advice on how to deal with it.


What about the book. "How to take a shit in the woods" https://www.amazon.com/How-Shit-Woods-3rd-Environmentally/dp...


Sure... but that machine learning PhD has a vested interest in being optimistically biased in his observations.


100% agree. I have a coding job and although co-pilot comes in handy for auto completing function calls and generating code that would be an obvious progression of what needs to be written, I would never let it generate swaths of code based on some specification or even let it implement a moderately complex method or function because, as I have experienced, what it spits out is absolute garbage.


As far as i know, the earth's crust below and around the impact gets displaced by a fair amount. I think the crust acts like a rubber sheet bouncing backwards and forwards. This most likely contributes toward the displacement of water above.


That reminds me, I remember reading some NASA stuff my dad would bring home talking about simulations of impacts. While there are very few on earth there are vast numbers on the moon and other planets.

I think the forces and energies are so large that the fluid dynamics dominate.


At what distance does the strong force start to level off and become constant ?


Yeah, I was kinda hoping for a plot distance vs force.


Unfortunately this is usually plotted as momentum vs coupling, which, if you wave your hands around the uncertainty principle enough, is sort of the reciprocal of the same thing.

You can find a plot in the preprint: https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.01169


From what i could gather at about 10^(−15) m. Roughly the size of a Hadron.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: