Spzi

joined 2 years ago
[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 6 points 4 months ago

Das ist eher das große Versagen von SPD und Linke. Wenn die es nicht schaffen Arbeiter und Arbeitslose zu überzeugen, ist nicht die Zielgruppe schuld.

Ja, absolut. Wobei ich auch hier anfügen möchte, dass ein Ausschluss gewisser Elemente notwendig ist. Der Marktplatz der Ideen oder Argumente funktioniert nicht so schön wie gedacht, wenn dort manche gar nicht durch bessere Argumente, aber dennoch gewinnen wollen. Funktioniert nicht in der postfaktischen Zeit. Das entbindet Linke (aller Parteien) nicht von ihrer Verantwortung, bessere Argumente zu haben und verständlich zu machen. Aber ganz ohne eine separierende Dominanz verlieren diese auch schnell an Wert, und sind nur noch eine ideologische, gefühlte Wahrheit unter vielen.

klassistisch auf den dummen Pöbel zu schimpfen

Die Klammer war der Versuch genau das hier zu verhindern, aber stimmt schon, war schlecht formuliert. Ein stichwortartiger neuer Versuch:

  • AfD wählen ist dumm, insbesondere für Arbeiter und Arbeitslose
  • Es gibt ziemlich viele dumme Menschen
  • Dass Arbeiter oder -slose allgemein dumme Menschen wären, oder auch nur einen höheren Dummheitsanteil hätten, war nicht gemeint

Besonders mißlungen war glaube ich der Satzbaustein "[nicht] zu nahe treten wollen". Ich meine, dieser besagt, dass Kritikwürdiges vorhanden ist (wie hier z.B. Dummheit), was aber aus Gründen der Höflichkeit nicht angesprochen wird. Und damit waren es einfach die falschen Worte, die eine andere als die gemeinte Idee ausgedrückt haben.

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 30 points 4 months ago

And further proof he's the much better diplomat/politician than those who exclude him.

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago

why bother reporting?

Here are some of the many ways this could be answered:

  • To exercise this core freedom, to not lose it. What comes out of it is a much less important question. The day news outlets remain silent about wrongdoings because they believe nobody cares anyways is going to be one of the darkest days towards the death of democracy.
  • Separation of powers means the Press is not the Legislative, which is not the Judicative. The question seems to assume they were all one, or since the Press lacks the means of the other two, it's mission would be kind of futile. But since these powers are separated, it is irrelevant to the Press wether and what legal actions follow (aside from being stories worth covering in themselves). It's simply not the job of reporting to carry out arrests, and the lack of arrests, even when necessary, does not devalue the reporting. Maybe even on the contrary: It's probably of much more value to society to report about things which aren't already dealt with.
  • It is totally relatable to feel powerless, maybe even getting accustomed to things going south. But I think we should be extra careful how these sentiments are communicated. A necessary prelude to that darkest day from above, is when outlets still report, but are met with nothing but indifferent "water is wet", "can't do anything so why care at all?" comments.
[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 17 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Woah. Fassungslos, wie sehr Arbeiter und Arbeitslose gegen ihre eigenen Interessen gewählt haben. Ohne diesen beiden Gruppen zu nahe treten zu wollen (denn so ist es nicht gemeint), die AfD ist halt schon die Partei der Dummen. Und wenn man bedenkt, dass die Hälfte der Bevölkerung dümmer ist als der Durchschnitt, steckt darin leider eine Menge ~~Wahlvieh~~ politisches Potential.

Ich glaube, um eine wehrhafte Demokratie im digitalen Zeitalter sein zu können, dürfen wir nicht so zimperlich beim Toleranz-Paradoxon sein. Faschisten müssen diskriminiert und eingeschüchtert werden, sonst schwirrt schnell im ganzen Diskurs nur noch deren braunes Zeug herum. Kein Bock auf Nazi-Bar.

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago

Wtf. How I hate muzzle velocity politics. Put those guys in camps, they are a threat to public safety.

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Ja, ich dachte das wäre ein Instrument, "ähnlich" wie Xylophon. Mit der Verwendung in dem Satz da weiß ich auch nicht, was gemeint ist.

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 12 points 4 months ago (9 children)

It seems most people get it, but I don't - Care to explain?

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago

Not sure how 0.00006 helmets per capita is the better figure, but there you go.

Yes, I mean, for Germany, being the 3rd largest economy in the world (only surpassed by the USA and China), it would be a real shame if they were not among the topmost supporters in total. Here, it makes much more sense to use per capita numbers, relate to GDP or whatever. Compared to it's economic potential, Germany is merely #15 in supporting Ukraine with Denmark, Finland, and the Baltics doing at least twice as much.

If you deem the bit about the 0..6 helmets per capita to be false, what's the correct take?

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Remember how it took like two days to overturn 70 years of precedence of “no weapons delivery into crisis regions”?

Oh, thanks. Yeah, now I remember making that jump, too, although it took me more than two days. Wild times.

Hofreiter (Greens) put it quite well ... something like ... not our ideals have changed, but the world has changed, brutally so.

I think you did well in dialing back my comment and adding more context, although I still think there was truth in it.

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 2 points 4 months ago

Truly a shame, but does not lead to your conclusion. If you cannot get the irony about you publicly complaining that you cannot publicly complain much like in Russia, then I'm afraid I cannot help you further.

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 5 points 4 months ago (3 children)

We either stop them and oppose their military spending

You notice that's a luxury exclusive to one side in that conflict? This freedom of speech, even forming a vocal political opposition. There have been people trying to do exactly that in Russia, but they all have died, vanished or gone silent.

If the dictatorship takes over (for example, due to a lack of resistance), you lose these privileges and are then sent to the grinder anyways.

[–] Spzi@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago

Hah, strong reply. 👍

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/5467810

In 1997, a contest began to develop a new encryption algorithm to become the Advanced Encryption Standard. After years of debate, one algorithm was chosen as the AES. But how does AES work? And what makes for a secure encryption algorithm?


Spanning Tree is an educational video series about computer science and mathematics. See more at https://spanningtree.me

To be notified when a new video is released, sign up for the Spanning Tree mailing list at https://spanningtree.substack.com/

Spanning Tree is created by Brian Yu. https://brianyu.me/

Email me at brian@spanningtree.me to suggest a future topic.


  • 0:00 The Contest
  • 1:02 Encryption
  • 3:57 Confusion and Diffusion
  • 5:44 Block Cipher
  • 6:55 KeyExpansion
  • 7:34 AddRoundKey
  • 8:14 Substitution Cipher
  • 8:55 SubBytes
  • 11:30 MixColumns
  • 12:53 ShiftRows
  • 13:21 The Algorithm

Aug 22, 2023

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/5467810

In 1997, a contest began to develop a new encryption algorithm to become the Advanced Encryption Standard. After years of debate, one algorithm was chosen as the AES. But how does AES work? And what makes for a secure encryption algorithm?


Spanning Tree is an educational video series about computer science and mathematics. See more at https://spanningtree.me/

To be notified when a new video is released, sign up for the Spanning Tree mailing list at https://spanningtree.substack.com/

Spanning Tree is created by Brian Yu. https://brianyu.me/

Email me at brian@spanningtree.me to suggest a future topic.


  • 0:00 The Contest
  • 1:02 Encryption
  • 3:57 Confusion and Diffusion
  • 5:44 Block Cipher
  • 6:55 KeyExpansion
  • 7:34 AddRoundKey
  • 8:14 Substitution Cipher
  • 8:55 SubBytes
  • 11:30 MixColumns
  • 12:53 ShiftRows
  • 13:21 The Algorithm

Aug 22, 2023

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/5467810

In 1997, a contest began to develop a new encryption algorithm to become the Advanced Encryption Standard. After years of debate, one algorithm was chosen as the AES. But how does AES work? And what makes for a secure encryption algorithm?


Spanning Tree is an educational video series about computer science and mathematics. See more at https://spanningtree.me

To be notified when a new video is released, sign up for the Spanning Tree mailing list at https://spanningtree.substack.com/

Spanning Tree is created by Brian Yu. https://brianyu.me/

Email me at brian@spanningtree.me to suggest a future topic.


  • 0:00 The Contest
  • 1:02 Encryption
  • 3:57 Confusion and Diffusion
  • 5:44 Block Cipher
  • 6:55 KeyExpansion
  • 7:34 AddRoundKey
  • 8:14 Substitution Cipher
  • 8:55 SubBytes
  • 11:30 MixColumns
  • 12:53 ShiftRows
  • 13:21 The Algorithm

Aug 22, 2023

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/5467810

In 1997, a contest began to develop a new encryption algorithm to become the Advanced Encryption Standard. After years of debate, one algorithm was chosen as the AES. But how does AES work? And what makes for a secure encryption algorithm?


Spanning Tree is an educational video series about computer science and mathematics. See more at https://spanningtree.me/

To be notified when a new video is released, sign up for the Spanning Tree mailing list at https://spanningtree.substack.com/

Spanning Tree is created by Brian Yu. https://brianyu.me/

Email me at brian@spanningtree.me to suggest a future topic.


  • 0:00 The Contest
  • 1:02 Encryption
  • 3:57 Confusion and Diffusion
  • 5:44 Block Cipher
  • 6:55 KeyExpansion
  • 7:34 AddRoundKey
  • 8:14 Substitution Cipher
  • 8:55 SubBytes
  • 11:30 MixColumns
  • 12:53 ShiftRows
  • 13:21 The Algorithm

Aug 22, 2023

 

In 1997, a contest began to develop a new encryption algorithm to become the Advanced Encryption Standard. After years of debate, one algorithm was chosen as the AES. But how does AES work? And what makes for a secure encryption algorithm?


Spanning Tree is an educational video series about computer science and mathematics. See more at https://spanningtree.me

To be notified when a new video is released, sign up for the Spanning Tree mailing list at https://spanningtree.substack.com/

Spanning Tree is created by Brian Yu. https://brianyu.me/

Email me at brian@spanningtree.me to suggest a future topic.


  • 0:00 The Contest
  • 1:02 Encryption
  • 3:57 Confusion and Diffusion
  • 5:44 Block Cipher
  • 6:55 KeyExpansion
  • 7:34 AddRoundKey
  • 8:14 Substitution Cipher
  • 8:55 SubBytes
  • 11:30 MixColumns
  • 12:53 ShiftRows
  • 13:21 The Algorithm

Aug 22, 2023

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/5320372

The strange science experiment that blew a worm’s head off… and blew our minds.

This interview is an episode from /channel/UCz7Gx6wLCiPw3F-AmXUvH8w, our publication about ideas that inspire a life well-lived, created with the /channel/UCMJ6QeJUbCUuhOSYZadF7sA.

Michael Levin, a developmental biologist at Tufts University, challenges conventional notions of intelligence, arguing that it is inherently collective rather than individual.

Levin explains that we are collections of cells, with each cell possessing competencies developed from their evolution from unicellular organisms. This forms a multi-scale competency architecture, where each level, from cells to tissues to organs, is solving problems within their unique spaces.

Levin emphasizes that properly recognizing intelligence, which spans different scales of existence, is vital for understanding life's complexities. And this perspective suggests a radical shift in understanding ourselves and the world around us, acknowledging the cognitive abilities present at every level of our existence.

Read the video transcript ► https://bigthink.com/the-well/intelligence-can-cells-think/?amp%3Butm_medium=video&amp%3Butm_campaign=youtube_description

 

The strange science experiment that blew a worm’s head off… and blew our minds.

This interview is an episode from /channel/UCz7Gx6wLCiPw3F-AmXUvH8w, our publication about ideas that inspire a life well-lived, created with the /channel/UCMJ6QeJUbCUuhOSYZadF7sA.

Michael Levin, a developmental biologist at Tufts University, challenges conventional notions of intelligence, arguing that it is inherently collective rather than individual.

Levin explains that we are collections of cells, with each cell possessing competencies developed from their evolution from unicellular organisms. This forms a multi-scale competency architecture, where each level, from cells to tissues to organs, is solving problems within their unique spaces.

Levin emphasizes that properly recognizing intelligence, which spans different scales of existence, is vital for understanding life's complexities. And this perspective suggests a radical shift in understanding ourselves and the world around us, acknowledging the cognitive abilities present at every level of our existence.

Read the video transcript ► https://bigthink.com/the-well/intelligence-can-cells-think/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=youtube_description

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/4915484

In this video, I talk briefly about a few interesting discoveries and experiments made over the years concerning evolution and natural selection in modern animals with the hope of convincing some people that evolution is indeed real and visible in the real world and that animals can change and evolve over time and in response to environmental conditions entirely naturally. Hope you enjoy!

Chapters:

  1. Intro
  2. Big Bird: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Bird_(bird)
  3. Italian Wall Lizards: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_wall_lizard
  4. Stickleback: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stickleback
 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/4443753

In the past 10 years or so, tech specialists have repeatedly voiced concerns that the progress of computing power will soon hit the wall. Miniaturisation has physical limits, and then what? Have we reached these limits? Is Moore’s law dead? That’s what we’ll talk about today.

  • 00:00 Intro
  • 00:53 Moore’s Law And Its Demise
  • 06:23 Current Strategies
  • 13:14 New Materials
  • 15:50 New Hardware
  • 18:58 Summary

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/4443753

In the past 10 years or so, tech specialists have repeatedly voiced concerns that the progress of computing power will soon hit the wall. Miniaturisation has physical limits, and then what? Have we reached these limits? Is Moore’s law dead? That’s what we’ll talk about today.

  • 00:00 Intro
  • 00:53 Moore’s Law And Its Demise
  • 06:23 Current Strategies
  • 13:14 New Materials
  • 15:50 New Hardware
  • 18:58 Summary

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/4443753

In the past 10 years or so, tech specialists have repeatedly voiced concerns that the progress of computing power will soon hit the wall. Miniaturisation has physical limits, and then what? Have we reached these limits? Is Moore’s law dead? That’s what we’ll talk about today.

  • 00:00 Intro
  • 00:53 Moore’s Law And Its Demise
  • 06:23 Current Strategies
  • 13:14 New Materials
  • 15:50 New Hardware
  • 18:58 Summary

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/4443753

In the past 10 years or so, tech specialists have repeatedly voiced concerns that the progress of computing power will soon hit the wall. Miniaturisation has physical limits, and then what? Have we reached these limits? Is Moore’s law dead? That’s what we’ll talk about today.

  • 00:00 Intro
  • 00:53 Moore’s Law And Its Demise
  • 06:23 Current Strategies
  • 13:14 New Materials
  • 15:50 New Hardware
  • 18:58 Summary

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