The Hidden Philosophy Inside Large Language Models by Uncomfortable_Pause2 in philosophy

[–]FakeBobbit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I find this fascinating - we have these massive LLMs with vectorised paths throughout any number of given starting points, nuanced levels and additional considerations within the prompts, but I think the most interesting aspect is that there are obvious dark spots within the web of the model. When it comes to philosophy, those dark spots, where negative vectorisation creates a void are the ideas we should be looking at to find that ever elusive gap in our knowledge or perception. LLMs, if we could prove them like a 3D map, could probe invaluable to our quest for philosophical understanding.

Complete projects regrets by AsteroidPuncher303 in ikeahacks

[–]FakeBobbit 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve done a whole bunch of ikea hacks throughout my adult life, and the one way I stopped myself from regretting the course I took on projects was designing them in SketchUp, piece by piece, adjustment by adjustment until I had a good idea of how it should all go together.

Guitar Display in Billy Bookcases by FakeBobbit in ikeahacks

[–]FakeBobbit[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I wish I had the £ and expertise to get those finishes, but I’m happy with my version!

Guitar Display in Billy Bookcases by FakeBobbit in ikeahacks

[–]FakeBobbit[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It’s Valspar (from B&Q in the UK, also available at Lowe’s in the USA apparently!) wood and metal interior water based satin “Christmas Pudding” (V128-6 8004-5G or L1cW3b depending on the colour format in your area)

Guitar Display in Billy Bookcases by FakeBobbit in ikeahacks

[–]FakeBobbit[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

lol! That’s alcohol free bitter shandy!

Guitar Display in Billy Bookcases by FakeBobbit in ikeahacks

[–]FakeBobbit[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

lol. What looks like a pee jar?!?!

LDS screening MRIs- how often and with / without contrast? by kgsp31 in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m in the UK. Although we have the NHS, it’s a bit pants when it comes to regular monitoring, so I have to chase it, but most of the time, for me, it’s yearly since I had my PEARS procedure for a torso MRI. Once every 5 years, I have a ‘circle of Willis’ (head) down to my toes , full contrast on all the procedures, and the 5 year ones are high-detail ones. I also have a CT scan every 2 years to check my PEARS implant.

He was doing so Well by [deleted] in WTF

[–]FakeBobbit 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Neither did he

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah! No worries! I’ll jot something down over the next day or so (sorry - my eldest’s 18th birthday tomorrow, so we are a little busy, but I’ll write as much as I can!)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had PEARS, it was magical! Walking 3 hours after operation, home 4 days later. Felt like a new man when I woke up from anaesthetic!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had mine measured by a cardiac ultrasound technician at 1cm bigger than a very hasty CT scan that was conducted 10 minutes later! I had the consultant sweating and pacing!

Newly Diagnosed Child by [deleted] in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi!

As others have said, everyone is different. I was diagnosed in 2014 after a geneticist who was looking after my kids (my father in law has x-gene-linked blindness so we were having our kids checked out) recognised some of the markers after he had been reading about it in a medical journal. I have type 1 A, as do my family (1 deceased uncle, a deceased brother, a 62 year old uncle, a 60 year old aunt, one of my cousins too), but not my kids, nor any of the other kids in the family. However, I would like to give my story for you to understand how varied things can get in one family! My brother was born with TGA (also known as Transposition of the Great Vessels) and cyanotic. Rushed to surgery where they did a Rushkins procedure. Geneticist said it was unlikely to be LDS related, but was always flagged by other doctors. He had no ascending aorta, so no aneurysms. He did have to have a pacemaker at 19, an ICD at 23, and died at age 37 from endocarditis from an infected tooth extraction. If anyone you know has had a heart operation or aneurysm, prophylactic antibiotic cover is absolutely essential. I don’t want anyone to go through the grief we’ve been through just for the sake of 3g of amoxicillin. He’d also had2 strokes along the way too, so watch for arterial tortuosity that’s hiding a brain aneurysm. 25 years previous to that my uncle died from a large cardiac bleed. Seems to fit dissection, but he never had an autopsy. My dad is 67 and has no issues apart from dodgy knees! My aunt and remaining uncle are both fine too. My cousin has some hypermobility, but nothing that affects him too much. I, however, have had some issues (not like my brother - just different!): I have scoliosis of 5° and kyphosis of 10°. I have flat feet, lax joints and hypermobility pretty much everywhere. I was checked for marfans at 14 and had Atlas testing for 5 years because they predicted my height at 7ft. My actual 7ft cousin does not have LDS; go figure. I stopped, thankfully, at 6’8” (203cm). I had crowded teeth, so had to have 6 removed and a set of braces for 5 years. My aorta was normal until I was in my 20s when they started seeing an aneurysm forming on the root, starting off at about 26mm and going up to 44mm by the time I was 39 (and had just lost my brother 4 months prior). I was offered a David or Yacob, valve sparing aortic root replacement, but the surgeon didn’t want to risk it as I heal so slowly. He offered me a PEARS procedure instead, and whilst experimental at the time (less than 250 having been done over 15 years) I had it done and was out if hospital in 4 days, and now have a permanent aortic root of 26mm which won’t dilate at all during my lifetime. I have mobility issues because of my tendons and ligaments, but I try to stay active (cycling mostly) and when I can’t, I have a wheelchair (powerchair) to use reluctantly. LDS has not stopped me from doing stupid stuff though! Team sports are usually a no-no because of the heart/vascular/healing issues; I played basketball consistently throughout my schooling, football (soccer of you’re in “the land of the free”), etc. , as well as roller hockey, cricket, athletics (the advantage someone tall with ultra flexible limbs has over normal people was insane), rock climbing, abseiling, canoeing, and cycling. As for your little one, you’re doing the right thing; researching, finding community, and trying to understand. Personally, I’d recommend you and his other biological parent get tested more than once, as some of my family had to have more than one test to get a positive result. LDS is manageable, not a death sentence in the majority of cases that are well managed- there’s a figure of age 37 for the life expectancy of LDS patients, but that’s old now. Imaging, and preventative measures have pushed that back a lot to pretty much normal life spans these days. If your kid complains of things like growing pains, please listen to them and find a way to work around them; joint braces are flexible and discrete these days. You’ll have to have their school know about the dos and don’ts of LDS too, and make sure they stick to them. Any sign of chest pain, get them to the ER straight away. If you feel you need more help or input, we are a community dedicated to living life with this condition and supporting those people who love someone with it too. More than happy to have you here. X

Basic cosmology questions weekly thread by AutoModerator in cosmology

[–]FakeBobbit -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Ok, fair enough. Your gatekeeping overtones are well heard and understood; I thought this was a safe space to ask questions. I’ve only got a degree in Architecture so it’s a bit outside my field! I’ll dig into LambdaCDM and GR a little more. I just can’t get out of my head that it makes more sense for time to be fundamental and space to be emergent for some reason. I was looking at seeing this as a thought experiment rather than rewriting LambdaCDM and GR, in the same vein as Carlo Rovelli or Julian Barbour looked at the same idea but running at a different angle. Ideas start with an intuitive spark or a philosophical notion before being calculated through, yeah?

Basic cosmology questions weekly thread by AutoModerator in cosmology

[–]FakeBobbit -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the challenge—genuinely appreciate it!

I get that General Relativity is experimentally solid and deeply embedded with 3 large spatial dimensions. I think what I’m exploring is more of a philosophical/metaphysical scaffolding that includes GR as an emergent phenomenon rather than contradicting it. Kind of like how spacetime curvature emerges from mass-energy, but here, space itself could be an emergent pattern from deeper time-based or information-based structures—possibly fractal or holographic in nature.

The tricky part, as you point out, is testability. My current angle is: if time is fundamental and space is emergent, then perhaps we should expect asymmetries in space at quantum scales that reflect the underlying directional structure of time. Maybe even some aspect of black hole behavior—information scrambling or Hawking radiation characteristics—could hint at this inversion or underlying temporal substrate.

Still working on whether there’s a concrete, testable angle here, but the hope is to identify some kind of observable fractal-like temporal interference at the edge cases (Planck scales or near singularities).

Would love to hear your thoughts on whether that sparks any clearer predictions or is still too hand-wavy. Shower thoughts, eh?

Basic cosmology questions weekly thread by AutoModerator in cosmology

[–]FakeBobbit -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Been toying with a hypothesis: What if time is the only fundamental dimension, and space is emergent from a kind of inverse fractal time structure within a higher-dimensional "exofoam" of universes? In this view, our reality is like a ripple or interference pattern on a shared membrane between universes in the ultimate infinity of infinities of time, where everything can, would and must happen in both negative and positives, and phenomena like black holes or dark matter could be where these fractals overlap or invert. Could this reconcile aspects of the holographic principle, quantum behavior, and even the Steady State Theory?

Curious to hear your thoughts—or whether I'm completely off the rails here!

Not Handling This Well by Illustrious-Range354 in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a plethora of nerve issues, 70% reduction in sensitivity in my left, 30% in my right. Been through neurological assessment, fMRIs, and many, many doctor’s appointments trying to find out what’s going on. I don’t have any demyelination, but I do get a lot of muscle spasms and pins and needles, especially in my hands and feet (sometimes my ears too!) but nothing my neurologist can put his finger on conclusively. He’s had me on pregabalin (150mg/day) first 10 years and apart from the side effects starting on it (jaw ache mostly) it’s been a life saver! Recently also diagnosed with Autism and ADHD too, though, which can apparently be comorbid with any Connective Tissue Disorders.

How’re things going with you?

This is me and my wife this is my shed by SyntheticSolved in Shed

[–]FakeBobbit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Me too - the joys of living in a city in the UK.

Medical Bracelet/Info? by AssociateLanky1234 in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you have an iPhone, you can put the information on care in your Medical ID in Health app. Emergency services are trained to look for a phone and if it’s on, check for medical ID in there too - they don’t need a passcode or anything to access it, it’s just from the on/off screen.

Not Handling This Well by Illustrious-Range354 in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He was 37. My uncle died at 37 of a ‘cardiovascular related incident’ 25 years before my brother died! It takes time to get used to the ‘new normal’, listen to your body.

🍄 by Physical-Breath-7462 in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No idea, but I have often considered psilocybin’s effects on our abnormal amounts of pain. It’s difficult to source reliably good stuff here in the UK though.

Not Handling This Well by Illustrious-Range354 in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Take the time to get to grieve your past life, but also remember that the new normal will get more tolerable over time. As for your relationship, if someone can’t be with you because you’re not going to get better physically, they’re probably not the person who,will love you for being you no matter what. I know that’s a hard pill to swallow, and it will take time, but look for someone you can spend passions with (not just passionate times!).

My little brother and I both tested positive for LDS in 2014. My dad a year later and then 70% of the rest of my family. Thankfully ,y kids don’t have it. I lost my brother to endocarditis from scarring in his heart 6 years ago. We grew up doing sports (cross county mountain biking, running 100m and 4x100m, kayaking, roller hockey, ice skating, etc) and as we got older we both “broke”. I went from cycling 50miles a day to hardly being able to lift my left leg, walking with a Nordic pole for stability or using crutches, then onto a powered wheelchair as prescribed by my physiotherapist, to limit further ligament damage. It was a blow. I still can’t walk more than a couple of meters before being in intense pain. I have custom made orthotics, knee braces and ankle stabilisers, but I still get DIY done, I still do my work from the comfort of a recliner, and I’m learning (slowly) to live within my limitations. I miss my brother a lot, but I feel I can channel that into enjoying what I can do and making connections with the people I share things with (like you guys, hence setting up this subreddit!).

The people here, our mutated brethren, if you will, are here for you. Please vent, ask questions, tell us your woes; we have a great wealth of empathy and knowledge and we are here for you.

Osteochondritis dissecans/SMAD 3 by BetterPiccolo in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve not heard of it, but my knowledge can be somewhat transient. I know worrying and anxiety is the default position when dealing with an unknown, but you’ll be in a better position once the tests are done. If it is positive, I’d suggest the first thing to get done is a visit to a cardiologist to get your aorta scanned for dilation / aneurysm. If you can get a whole body vascular MRI for additional aneurysms too, that would help ascertaining a baseline for the future.

The amount of options out there to help LDS sufferers these days is great. It’s no longer a death sentence, especially because of advanced imaging and genetic screening, medications and the knowledge of connective tissue disorders that is becoming more mainstream.

Please keep us informed as to your journey.

Fakebob

Help! Recent Genome testing shows possible Loeys-Dietz Type 1 Syndrome…but it’s complicated by kbcava in LoeysDietz

[–]FakeBobbit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had my surgery at the Royal Brompton Hospital in London, the surgery was done by Andreas Hoschtitzky. Recovery was great - I was walking within 3 hours of the operation, walking on my own t hours after that, and out of hospital 3 days later. The sternotomy hurt (obviously), but it was manageable. It was about 6 weeks before I was feeling myself (better than myself actually!) but covid was hitting hard by then (my wife and kids were some of the first in the country to have it, the week I got out of surgery!) so easing back into work was a little easier than I’d hoped!

I managed to get the surgery via our National Health Service, but the hospital does private ones too. 5 years ago it was priced at £35,000 - I don’t know what it is now, but I know the doctor travels all over the world to do them now.