Readit News logoReadit News
kanbara commented on Why the global elite gave up on spelling and grammar   wsj.com/lifestyle/jeffrey... · Posted by u/matthieu_bl
kanbara · 4 days ago
people aren’t saying “aks” to make a public statement against you for whatever reason. they’re saying it because that’s how they learned to speak and the dialect of speakers who they were surrounded with.

yeah, people code switch, but i have come across many many people who just say things differently from the majority pronunciation. they’re not misunderstood and they can communicate just fine (see nucular vs nuclear). that’s just how language works, right

kanbara commented on Swiss e-voting pilot can't count 2,048 ballots after decryption failure   theregister.com/2026/03/1... · Posted by u/jjgreen
ericmay · 4 days ago
Stories like this probably scare some people off from electronic voting but I don't think this is that big of a deal. When we finish voting operations in my area we load the ballots up on someone's personal vehicle and they take them down, securely, to where they need to go. That vehicle could get blown up and those ballots could be gone, though I think we could still get a record of the results.

That being said for the United States, I am in favor of in-person voting requiring proof of citizenship, and making "voting day" a paid national holiday. Not so much for technical or efficiency reasons but for social reasons. I'd argue it should be mandatory but I don't think we should force people to do anything we don't have to force them to do, and I'm not sure we want disinterested people voting anyway.

Exercising democracy, requiring people to put in a minimal amount of thought and effort goes a long way. It should be a celebratory day with cookies and apple pie and free beer for all. Not some cold, AI-riddled, stay in your house and never meet your neighbors, clicking a few buttons to accept the Terms of Democracy process.

I know there's a lot of discussion points around "efficiency" or "cost" or "accessibility" or how difficult it supposedly is to have an ID (which is weird when you look at how other countries run elections) and there are certainly things to discuss there, but by and large I think the continued digitalization and alienation of Americans is a much worse problem that can be addressed with more in-person activities and participation in society. We're losing too many touchpoints with reality.

kanbara · 4 days ago
i don’t think that requiring in-person “ID”-proofed voting and removing mail-in ballots (which is the best part of voting in CA) does anything to bring people back to reality…

Even if it were a holiday, people may not be able to travel or take time off from obligations. There’s no obligation to drive 2 hours to vote, to fly back if you work in another country, or to go get a new birth certificate because Real ID doesn’t prove citizenship even though you provide citizenship documents to it when you get one…

I’ve heard of a lot of takes here about what we should do for voting to make it “more secure” but all of this is actually a solution for a problem we just don’t have.

kanbara commented on It took four years until 2011’s iOS 5 gave everyone an emoji keyboard   unsung.aresluna.org/im-ob... · Posted by u/tobr
esafak · 8 days ago
I think there is a difference: with emojis, only the sender knows the precise meaning. Words have agreed on definitions.
kanbara · 8 days ago
go tell that to genz who use :skullemoji: or koreans who dislike pinching hand emoji, or anyone who knows what a heart, dollar bills, sleepy face or whatever else means.

we make up words all the time, and they are in fact not all "agreed upon" because language changes, like how awesome used to mean "inspiring awe" and "literally" now means "figuratively" and how "google" and "tweet" are words.

emoji change meaning quicker than words, yes, but that's because the were born online and because they are easier to add semantic meaning to. they're pretty neat, to be honest.

even in a corporate setting we use emoji all the time to +1 things, to confirm something, or on video calls to give kudos, and more.

kanbara commented on University of Texas limits on teaching of "unnecessary controversial subjects"   texastribune.org/2026/02/... · Posted by u/bhouston
kanbara · 24 days ago
this is the govt stifling free speech, and fwiw climate is not controversial; climate change is a real and existential threat.

sheltering students who have other (read: conservative) views is anti-knowledge and anti-education.

kanbara commented on The Waymo World Model   waymo.com/blog/2026/02/th... · Posted by u/xnx
smallmancontrov · a month ago
Tesla went nothing-but-nets (making fusion easy) and Chinese LIDAR became cheap around 2023, but monocular depth estimation was spectacularly good by 2021. By the time unit cost and integration effort came down, LIDAR had very little to offer a vision stack that no longer struggled to perceive the 3D world around it.

Also, integration effort went down but it never disappeared. Meanwhile, opportunity cost skyrocketed when vision started working. Which layers would you carve resources away from to make room? How far back would you be willing to send the training + validation schedule to accommodate the change? If you saw your vision-only stack take off and blow past human performance on the march of 9s, would you land the plane just because red paint became available and you wanted to paint it red?

I wouldn't completely discount ego either, but IMO there's more ego in the "LIDAR is necessary" case than the "LIDAR isn't necessary" at this point. FWIW, I used to be an outspoken LIDAR-head before 2021 when monocular depth estimation became a solved problem. It was funny watching everyone around me convert in the opposite direction at around the same time, probably driven by politics. I get it, I hate Elon's politics too, I just try very hard to keep his shitty behavior from influencing my opinions on machine learning.

kanbara · a month ago
depth estimation is but one part of the problem— atmospheric and other conditions which blind optical visible spectrum sensors, lack of ambient (sunlight) and more. lidar simply outperforms (performs at all?) in these conditions. and provides hardware back distance maps, not software calculated estimation
kanbara commented on Tesla ending Models S and X production   cnbc.com/2026/01/28/tesla... · Posted by u/keyboardJones
dzonga · 2 months ago
Tesla has no moat - but one thing I will give to Elon is his incredible strategy in building Tesla

1. Build sports car

2. Use that money to build an affordable car

3. Use that money to build an even more affordable car

4. While doing above, also provide zero emission electric power generation options

he got distracted by side-missions, his personal shitty side

however if you separate the ideas from the person you can see how such a simple strategy was executed successfully

kanbara · 2 months ago
it’s not a difficult strategy to come up with, tbh. tech companies do this sort of thing all the time.
kanbara commented on Android’s desktop interface leaks   9to5google.com/2026/01/27... · Posted by u/thunderbong
modeless · a month ago
They ought to put the status bar at the bottom. All the designers using Macs probably forgot, but Chrome's tab interface was designed for Windows where it could be all the way at the top of the screen. And in general it's more common for desktop apps designed for mouse and keyboard to have frequently accessed UI elements at the top of the window than the bottom. So desktop apps would benefit from being able to use that real estate at the very top of the screen.

This is what you lose when you take a team developing a desktop OS and move it under a team doing a mobile OS.

kanbara · 2 months ago
iOS did exactly this and it’s so much better for usage
kanbara commented on Heathrow scraps liquid container limit   bbc.com/news/articles/c1e... · Posted by u/robotsliketea
jandrewrogers · 2 months ago
This just adds confusion as to the purpose of all this.

The motivation behind the liquid limits is that there are extremely powerful explosives that are stable water-like liquids. Average people have never heard of them because they aren’t in popular lore. There has never been an industrial or military use, solids are simpler. Nonetheless, these explosives are easily accessible to a knowledgeable chemist like me.

These explosives can be detected via infrared spectroscopy but that isn’t going to be happening to liquids in your bag. This reminds me of the chemical swipes done on your bags to detect explosives. Those swipes can only detect a narrow set of explosive chemistries and everyone knows it. Some explosives notoriously popular with terror organizations can’t be detected. Everyone, including the bad guys, knows all of this.

It would be great if governments were more explicit about precisely what all of this theater is intended to prevent.

kanbara · 2 months ago
how does it add confusion?

if normal people don’t know, criminals/terrorists do, and the materials are commonplace but not screened for, then everything about the current approach is wrong.

and when has a plane been brought down by the evil explosives or stable liquids in recent memory?

so the theatre put in place is just that, huh?

kanbara commented on US bars 5 Europeans it says pressured tech firms to censor American viewpoints   apnews.com/article/state-... · Posted by u/c420
kanbara · 3 months ago
"american" viewpoints aka fascism and naziism and the promotion of white supremacist views. it will take so much time to undo this mess.
kanbara commented on Brexit reduced UK GDP by 6-8%, investments by 12-18% [pdf]   nber.org/system/files/wor... · Posted by u/jnord
gedy · 4 months ago
My interpretation was they meant daycares that are pushing social/gender causes to fairly small children
kanbara · 4 months ago
as if straight / white causes in most western nations aren't "pushed" by default.

it's ok to know that gay people exist and that christianity is not the be-all-end-all of cultural practices.

u/kanbara

KarmaCake day501March 10, 2017View Original