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Finally, competition for Clickhole.

The Onion also owns Clickhole

Used to. Sold to Cards Against Humanity.

Oh shit, was not aware.

You're thinking of a feed trough, like for pigs. This use of feed comes from news services.

My understanding is music generation is more like stable diffusion. It generates a waveform as an image, then turns it into an audio file.

They do use diffusion models, but I don't think they would make a detour via images. They can just generate audio directly with audio diffusion rather than image diffusion.

There technically was one experiment early on to trick Stable Diffusion into generating spectrograms that could be converted into audio. And, it worked surprisingly well.

https://web.archive.org/web/20230314190913/https://www.riffu...

https://huggingface.co/riffusion/riffusion-model-v1

But, I'd expect everything in the past 3 years to diffuse the audio waveform directly.


That's probably what I was thinking of. I haven't kept up as much on non-text generative AI.

Consider Trilium if the collaboration stuff people use Notion for isn't important. It's open source, uses SQLite, and does automatic daily and weekly backups.

https://triliumnotes.org/


Opus 4.7 would come out the day before my paid plan ends.

Firefox started at 0% when IE was more dominant than Chrome is today. Nothing is certain.

Firefox hit a peak of 32% and has fallen ever since. Effectively Firefox crashed at the same time IE did, and I can’t see in what way Mozilla ever attempted to recover.

Now correlate that with when the organization was hijacked by its management into no longer being interested in making a good browser.

Classic "is this a feature or a product?" problem. You're going to have a bad time if you spend all your effort on a feature and nothing to set it apart.

404 for me

I think it also points to the problem of implicit assumptions. Fish is meat, right? Except for historical reasons, the grocery store's marketing says "Fish & Meat."

And then there's nut meats. Coconut meat. All the kinds of meat from before meat meant the stuff in animals. The meat of the problem. Meat and potatoes issues.

If you asked that question before I'd picked up those implicit assumptions, or if I never did, I would have to guess.


I’ve got many catholic relatives that describe themselves as vegetarians and eat fish. Language can be surprisingly imprecise and dependent upon tons of assumptions.

> I’ve got many catholic relatives that describe themselves as vegetarians and eat fish

Those are pescatarians.

It's like how a tomato is a fruit, but it's used as a vegetable, meat has traditionally been the flesh of warm-blooded animals. Fish is the flesh of cold-blooded animals, making it meat but due to religious reasons it’s not considered meat.


Right exactly. The point is that dictionary definitions don’t always align with cultural ones.

Was this one of the trips on the good-as-new plane? The video was an interesting watch.


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