neoplastic_pleonasm
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_je5zsr8 wrote
Reply to comment by JetScootr in TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller. by jamescookenotthatone
Their mission was so crazy that their motto became "You've Got To Be Shitting Me"
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_je5yu5n wrote
Reply to comment by nomnomnomnomRABIES in TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller. by jamescookenotthatone
Nah, it's been publicly known for a long while. I think it's mentioned in the book Skunkworks. The Operations Room also has a good video series about the Desert Storm air war that I think mentions it: https://youtu.be/zxRgfBXn6Mg
Edit: around t=13:30
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_je5vzrg wrote
Reply to comment by JetScootr in TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller. by jamescookenotthatone
When I was a little kid, my grandfather, an air force mechanic, gave me a weird little model airplane for Christmas. It was black and pointy and had no cockpit. It wasn't until many years later I learned it was a real plane, a Lockheed D-21 hypersonic supersonic drone, and he'd worked on the project. It absolutely blew my mind that we had hypersonic supersonic drones in the late 60s.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_j7lzl7u wrote
Reply to comment by rockmsedrik in TIL the first Blue LED wasn't commercially available until 1989 and bright blue LEDs weren't available until 1993. by j-merc23
Nail polish is good too. You can use it to make them dimmer but still visible.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_j6jk8gt wrote
Reply to comment by slashd in OpenAI executives say releasing ChatGPT for public use was a last resort after running into multiple hurdles — and they're shocked by its popularity by steviaplath153
Yep, now you only need a hundred thousand dollars more for a GPU cluster with enough VRAM to run inference with it.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_j6j72be wrote
Reply to comment by EmbarrassedHelp in OpenAI executives say releasing ChatGPT for public use was a last resort after running into multiple hurdles — and they're shocked by its popularity by steviaplath153
The ChatGPT model is in the neighborhood of 750GB, so sadly we won't be seeing anything remotely as capable that can run on consumer hardware any time soon.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_j61c19z wrote
Reply to comment by RedSonGamble in TIL that after scientists sequenced the genome of a tiger they found that it shares 95.6% of its DNA with the domestic cat, from which it diverged 10.8 million years ago. by countdookee
Now I want a pet house great white shark
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_j5lfcau wrote
Reply to comment by LordAcorn in TIL the first known résumé was written by Leonardo da Vinci, when applying to be a military engineer for the Duke of Milan. It's mainly just a list of his designs for siege weapons (including trebuchets). He briefly mentions his art: "In painting, I can do everything possible." He got the job. by Pfeffer_Prinz
Or if merely collapsing the mine wasn't enough, they'd pack explosives in it and set them off. It's where we get the word landmine.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_j370oqb wrote
Reply to comment by DoctorBocker in TIL of execution by Breaking Wheel that would start with tying the body to a wheel, breaking the bones of the limbs, braiding the broken limbs through the spokes and leaving the body to be eaten by scavenging animals and birds. by muadib1974
It was done a lot of different ways, but in some cases they'd put the limbs up on wooden blocks and use the wheel to smash them.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_j1b4h2n wrote
Reply to comment by Zondartul in Epistemic Trespassing: Stay in your lane mf by thenousman
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_iyrcfb3 wrote
I used to buy weed and LSD off the darknet. One time I had a little cryptocurrency left over and the market also offered stolen info, so I bought my own stolen identity for just a few bucks.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_iynrpsb wrote
Reply to comment by saintofhate in The TikTok Trend That Triggered a Diabetes Drug Shortage by SimpleDumbIdiot
Without insurance coverage it's $25/mo with Eli Lillys discount card, and telehealth docs will readily prescribe it. I still don't think it's TikToks fault.
Source: I'm on it.
Edit: ah, the article is about semaglutide. I'm on the newer tirzepatide, but they're having the same issue
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_iy94j0q wrote
Reply to comment by pete_68 in Physically active lifestyle is associated with lower long-term incidence of bipolar disorder, study finds by chrisdh79
As a bipolar dude, I've found that when it's hard or impossible to do my regular, intense exercise, it's key to just do whatever I can do at all, even if it's absolutely minimal.
Too depressed to lift heavy weights? Try to lift light weights. Too depressed to lift at all? Try to go for a walk. Too depressed to go for a walk? Try to get up and shower.
It may not be much, but doing whatever I can and being proud of myself for doing it helps a ton.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_iy93dej wrote
Reply to comment by TheLostHippos in Physically active lifestyle is associated with lower long-term incidence of bipolar disorder, study finds by chrisdh79
During my first manic episode, I spent night and day working out with kettle bells in my apartment. I'd switched back to depression by the time I returned to the doc a month later and only realized something had happened when the nurse pointed out I'd lost 30lb.
That being said, I've found that regular exercise (along side my medication and quality sleep) is absolutely vital for preventing mood episodes.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_ixrk0tm wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Dissociative symptoms are common among individuals with depression, study finds by chrisdh79
Had this happen while manic. It's not great.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_iwgv80c wrote
Reply to comment by fllr in AMD Now Powers 101 of the World's Fastest Supercomputers by Avieshek
It's a cluster. I forget if they've published the official number yet but I want to say it was something like 256 racks of servers. I turned down a job there last year.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_iu5le0p wrote
Reply to comment by remarkablyoblivious in TIL that when the French first arrived in North America they met the Ojibwe Indians who introduced them to other tribes but used nasty names. The Lakota/Dakota people were called "Nadowessiwag," which became Nadouessioux in French, then Sioux in English. It means "little snake." by marmorset
Exonyms VS endonyms. In OPs case they're called hostile exonyms. There are a lot of historical peoples we only know by exonyms. There are also many we know only by their native word for "people."
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_it9ahx5 wrote
Reply to comment by Rodney890 in A.I.-Generated Art Is Already Transforming Creative Work by Gari_305
If you take a look at the various AI art subs, you'll find that the most impressive works by far tend to be by people who were already artists.
neoplastic_pleonasm t1_je5zwpc wrote
Reply to comment by seakingsoyuz in TIL Early drones were developed during the First World War. These radio controlled planes were primarily for target practice but by 1942 a drone with a built in TV camera was capable of delivering a torpedo to a ship 20 miles from the controller. by jamescookenotthatone
Oops, thanks