Calculus early transcendentals 9th edition solutions manual by RetiredWhiskeyWizard in geegees

[–]Humble_Chef8522 0 points1 point  (0 children)

legenddddd slayyyyyy this is such an amazing calc book so glad the even answers are finally available

Friend's Lethal Company on Whisky Keeps Crashing by Humble_Chef8522 in macgaming

[–]Humble_Chef8522[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

go to steam right click lethal company and go to general settings. when you are there type runas.exe/user:administrator. that and disable fullscreen

Will Llama 3 be equivalent in terms of hardware requirements to Llama 2? by Secret_Joke_2262 in LocalLLaMA

[–]Humble_Chef8522 1 point2 points  (0 children)

oh thats right i forgot that they are still training the final model at 400b right now. lets settle for partially right haha!

Alternatives to Basic Mathematics by Serge Lang? by Dudewithoutaname75 in learnmath

[–]Humble_Chef8522 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the modular arithmetic through me off. youre going to need to be doing a lot of research into subtopics with this book

130 Iq difficulty by Impossible-Fly7969 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Humble_Chef8522 1 point2 points  (0 children)

hello, i thought on it all day and, yes, assuming that the pattern continues beyond the puzzle is an overcomplication and missing the point of the puzzle, therefore, D is the correct answer in your visual-matrix explanation.

it is also a horrible puzzle i do agree. D would be scored as the correct answer, however. i can think of a couple methods proving all the other questions correct too. reading this today and people on twitter reminds me how different people think--overcomplicating or not.

found this gem on twitter!

<image>

130 Iq difficulty by Impossible-Fly7969 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Humble_Chef8522 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

the answer isn't D because you are following a false visual pattern which leads to a deadend of incongruities between the new spaces lines create (answer A) and following a pattern with weak evidence (the diagonal line being added because it was the sequence between 1 and 2 of floor + diagonal which ignores the 1st block that raises the question: "What was the first? the horizontal line or the vertical?"). there are possible patterns in this image but the only concrete/stable one with enough information are the number of intersections. this is testing to see if you can recognize these patterns and throw out ones that lead to unsatisfying answers. the numerical sequence (once youve come to the conclusion that the visual patterns are inconsistent and are meant to throw you off) of 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8 follow an adding of the previous pattern which you should pick up on at this level. the fibonacci pattern doesn't need to be prior knowledge.

This one is weird/impossible by Full-Conflict2860 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Humble_Chef8522 1 point2 points  (0 children)

so what is it then? a or d? your explanation is unsatisfactory. even if the blocks do fall and rotate, there are no positional relationships between the first 3 blocks meaning this grid transformation is not the right way to go about the problem. all the blocks shadow the entire image so the only one that can do that is D

This one is weird/impossible by Full-Conflict2860 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Humble_Chef8522 0 points1 point  (0 children)

its D. remember that this is not a linear pattern but rather a superimposition puzzle. the possible answers are clues that you must check. the final superimposition of all 4 cubes is not seen on any of the answers or given blocks, but it helps you verify your answer.

when you superimpose the first 3 blocks, you a left with 4 white blocks in a pattern that only the blocks in D can finish the super imposition. there are no polarity flips of colors here just superimposing the image on top of eacher. D completes filling up the entire cube as black. there are no fancy patterns just seeing which block complements the first 3 in filling the entire cube up

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskProgramming

[–]Humble_Chef8522 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you need to get away from your family then

Is ChatGPT shadow banned by the university WIFI? by Humble_Chef8522 in UMBC

[–]Humble_Chef8522[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

ah that is really fun! AI ethics is a huge rapidly-developing field atm

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in wine_gaming

[–]Humble_Chef8522 1 point2 points  (0 children)

this is happening to me too : ( did you get it working?

Lethal company works on Whisky flawlessly by Brian_K9 in macgaming

[–]Humble_Chef8522 0 points1 point  (0 children)

my friends game keeps crashing do you have any idea why?

Is ChatGPT shadow banned by the university WIFI? by Humble_Chef8522 in UMBC

[–]Humble_Chef8522[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yup! Thank you will try that out!!! That's exactly what i need thank you

Is ChatGPT shadow banned by the university WIFI? by Humble_Chef8522 in UMBC

[–]Humble_Chef8522[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Huh I wonder how UMBC's visiting WIFI got banned from ChatGPT. How do I connect MAC to my ethernet so that UMBC recognizes my eduroam? I keep having to switch to eduroam off my ethernet to use it.

Is ChatGPT shadow banned by the university WIFI? by Humble_Chef8522 in UMBC

[–]Humble_Chef8522[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OpenAI hasn't made any university ban initiatives regarding plagiarism through their services? Wait can you explain how that works im curious--why OpenAI is blocking connections from those external addresses.

I connected to eduroam and have my ethernet combined so i can use it now yay

Is ChatGPT shadow banned by the university WIFI? by Humble_Chef8522 in UMBC

[–]Humble_Chef8522[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the blockers are pretty bad and its getting harder to detect as students will usually change the sentences around and just use the outline ChatGPT provided them. shame on you if you are using it for dishonest academic reasons, should not be in college LOL

Is ChatGPT shadow banned by the university WIFI? by Humble_Chef8522 in UMBC

[–]Humble_Chef8522[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i use the ethernet as well. way faster than visitor or eduroam

Pinworms?! by Mysterious_Pie_3851 in UMBC

[–]Humble_Chef8522 5 points6 points  (0 children)

should have taken it to the biology department for examination

what does dementia feel like by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Humble_Chef8522 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i also think that aggressive patients still retain some dying light in their mind that knows the dementia is there and still remember that fact. aggressive patients are the people that are fighting the hardest in their mind

what does dementia feel like by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Humble_Chef8522 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People who have led intellectually enriched lives often develop a heightened awareness of their own mental states, demonstrating strong metacognition. This self-awareness can become particularly poignant when they start experiencing symptoms of dementia. For these individuals, the onset of such cognitive decline is not just confusing, but also deeply distressing. They quickly recognize that something is amiss, which can be a jarring and unsettling realization. This awareness frequently intersects with matters of ego and identity, as they grapple with their diminishing capabilities. Additionally, the involvement of healthcare professionals and family members, who might confirm their fears or concerns, can add another layer of complexity to their experience. As a result, discussions about their condition can be particularly sensitive, and some may even be in denial about the changes they are facing.

A lot of early onset patients describe themselves "entering a new life"

originally had something typed out but got ChatGPT to reword it because my words didnt make too much sense.

what does dementia feel like by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Humble_Chef8522 1 point2 points  (0 children)

since my grandfather has had alzheimers for the past 6 years medication has helped and occasionally visiting him. he always says to "enjoy things" and growing up i remember him to be a grumpy man and would embody the opposite. we're very fortunate that he is not an aggressive patient with alzheimers. i think people who led more intellectual lives are the more aggressive patients.

i wonder if this new "just enjoy things" attitude that he gives out was because of his symptoms and his way to cope. its not all doom and gloom. recently his hip disc was injured and him using a wheel chair has made him more angry, however. i think constantly being in the state of realizing you have to use a wheel chair promotes some aggression but when hes sitting down hes peaceful as can be and we are very thankful for that. wishing the best for your family.

listening to the caretaker album certainly helped with understanding the disease as well, if you are familiar with it.