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That's me, I wrote it.

If you are genuinely interested in the history of the region, the saddest part is that it's not 'sensationalized' as you put it, but the opposite--it's incredibly well-documented. Even released CIA documents confirm the coup and other actions. I don't see much disagreement between Wikipedia and what I wrote.

And Iranians, like Americans, differ in their opinions of government. There are nearly 100 million Iranians in country (and many more outside).

And of course if you read what I wrote, it's fairly clear why many Iranians didn't want a religious nationalist government, and many left over the past decades. Many of them didn't want the Shah or his Israel-trained brutal secret police, either, and many more didn't want the country's economy sold wholesale to the West (as it was).


In all likelihood the same thing would be happening if the Iranian government wasn’t a religious or nationalist government.

To be clear: the DoD/federal government cannot 'ban' active military from attending these schools; they can only refuse to fund their attendance. This is of course another episode of performative theater.

I guess they can try to claim it's an order making them open to court-martial if they're attending?

Since Linux is a kernel, not an operating system, it's unaffected by this law.

Hendrix and Mayer created a great sound, but I've always thought the most incredible thing about Jimi Hendrix was: he only played the guitar about 11 years. TOTAL. He picked it up around age 15, and died age 27.

That's wild to think about, I've been playing the guitar longer than that yet his are heights I'm unlikely to reach. He was such an innovative guitarist.

He played 24/24 tho, there's stories about that in his military service he was always on the guitar

It's incredible what people were able to accomplish with their free time before smartphones

In general complete devotion to the craft by constantly practicing like it is a habit and not just when inspiration strikes is essential.

One could argue this lack of devotion predates even the smartphone. Heck, I remember getting a Nintendo Entertainment System in the late '80s and then not going out biking or playing basketball as a result.


Ironically these days you might have a better chance making a living from playing video games compared to any physical activity.

???

Hendrix was a working musician who paid his dues on the chitlin' circuit with artists like The Isley Brothers, Little Richard, Ike & Tina Turner, and Sam Cooke before making it on his own. AFAIK those are pretty high-pressure assignments, and count as real work...


Just humans, living in the moment, not a phone in sight.

In tech, no ethics survive first contact with the money.

You can skip the "in tech" part.

Ah, The Computer Always Wins looks great. She loves puzzles, etc.

"Then it professionalised."

Yeah. It's not that it wasn't 'professionalized' back in the day, it's that everything has changed--the attitude, the people involved, the kinds of businesses there are, the philosophy. There was a...mystery about it, a feeling like you were entering a different world and that world was a place where you were close the the machine and...I just can't describe it. It was more visceral.

I made my first BASIC program in the late 70s on a Decwriter, which was basically a wide-carriage printer with a keyboard, attached via acoustic modem to a time-sharing system. And it was the best thing ever.


In fact, the weight of evidence from recent large and well-controlled studies, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses of both observational studies and randomized controlled trials indicates that full-fat dairy products, particularly yogurt and cheese, do not exert the detrimental effects on insulin sensitivity, blood lipid profile, and blood pressure as previously predicted on the basis of their sodium and saturated fat contents; they do not increase cardiometabolic disease risk and may in fact protect against cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.


Valid points about money, but they’re primarily talking about calorie restriction and how metabolic adaptation eventually leads to weight loss stopping, because metabolism adapts to less energy and you can’t just keep ‘eating less’. If you’re familiar with the low carb community, this is what’s famously called the ‘Biggest Loser’ problem, referring to the TV show and how contestants lost a lot of weight through extreme calorie restriction—but their metabolism eventually slowed down and they couldn’t eat less, so—nearly everyone gained it all back.


> they couldn’t eat less

If they are gaining weight, why can't they eat less?


metabolic slowing with increased calorie restriction means that eventually the body adapts to the point where youd be consuming too few calories to function and still barely losing any weight


Yes but they already lost weight. What I didn't understand is how the body decides to store fat, ie gain weight back, rather than function properly.


There's a lot of info about this online, but here's a quick TL;DR example: https://www.health.harvard.edu/diet-and-weight-loss/lessons-...

What most people don't understand is that weight loss and health is about a lot more than 'calories in/calories out', despite what we've been told for decades.


I'm surprised how few seem to understand this; AI is the ultimate 'net' to capture and exploit consumers. AI was never about improving civilization; it was always about money. This is the only thing 'inevitable' about AI.


>AI was never about improving civilization; it was always about money.

Why not both? It has diagnosed patients who were unsolved by humans. And it was cheaper than doctors.


Why not mow a lawn with a sledgehammer? It removed grass that was overgrown. And it was cheaper than a lawnmower.


Your analogy doesn't work.

This patient saw 6 doctors over 2 years and they all misdiagnosed them. They were taking incredibly strong medication for the wrong diagnosis.

GPT3 in 30 seconds gave 10 diagnosis and a doctor looked up the ones they didn't know. Saw one that fit, did the confirmation test, and the patient got the surgery needed.

Cheaper and better.


The doctor did the diagnosis using the language model as a tool then. Impressive, but I think it’s false to imply GPT did the diagnosing.


The doctor had never heard of the diagnosis prior. It was outside this doctors scope.

Like a heart doctor figured out a skeletal abnormality.

This happened with GPT3 and they were an early adopter. The patient would have gotten this in 2026 easily.


Any chance you can link to the reference I can read further about this?


Not a great analogy. I've had a far better experience with Claude for simple medical questions than googling or waiting for a response from a doctor. For example, last night I had a panic attack triggered by chugging a protein shake that was expired/gone bad. It was too late for any friends to be awake.

Talking with Claude was incredibly helpful. It gave concrete suggestions for managing the anxiety in the moment and explained what was likely happening with my body and nervous system. It was the correct tool for the job.


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