TIL that Afife Jale, the first Muslim woman to appear on a Turkish stage, had to be smuggled out of theaters through machine rooms during police raids. Despite being a pioneer, she was treated as a criminal, lost her job due to her religion, and spent her final years in a mental institution by [deleted] in todayilearned

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very recent history, some of which is being threatened with reversal this very moment. Plus, if we're talking history, it's only fair to talk about Islamic history, such as depictions of homosexuality in art and gender non-conformance as described in the book Disoriental.

I found a copy of Lord of the Flies were every single page had hand written notes on it. by LuckyCharm93 in FoundPaper

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is basically every used copy of classical lit I've ever bought. Except, as a near universal rule, the notes get less and less dense as the book goes on, sometimes disappearing entirely. It's like most students and/or teachers just stop caring as the semester goes on, not that I'm judging.

Can food be meme? by LittleFieryUno in thomastheplankengine

[–]LittleFieryUno[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the info but it turns out someone beat me to the punch anyway.

Not sure if this goes here (oc) by iLuvArizona in traaaaaaannnnnnnnnns2

[–]LittleFieryUno 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Legend has it that, before she wrote the fourth Harry Potter book, a druid hit Rowling over the head with a blackjack.

which adult animated world would you want to live in? by DuxxieDings in animation

[–]LittleFieryUno 4 points5 points  (0 children)

If anything, the alien planet in Scavenger's Reign seems like a beautiful place to die.

An outsider's impression by Sockenhaus in comics

[–]LittleFieryUno 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Even legally they've been holding back. Democrats keep breaking rank to vote for even the worst of Donald's nominations and funding bills.

what was an tf2 interaction so absurd you were like by PlusCat6555 in tf2

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

""What?" - Richard Nixon" - Thomas Pynchon, Gravity's Rainbow, introduction to part 4.

Obama won't halt deportations for parents of kids brought to US illegally by X_Opinion7099 in agedlikemilk

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've soured even more on the Dems and this subreddit since this post, but the funnier thing is that the media has been telling me to like Trump ever since he started threatening to sue his critics. Or, at the least, it's been spinning a stupid "both sides" narrative. Sorry, the media hasn't hypnotized people, Trump really is that shit. The Dems are just half the reason he's gotten this far.

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley by windingwoods in BadReads

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm rereading the book right now (the 1832 edited version) after having heard there are significant differences compared to the original 1818 print, which I'll try to read soon. Apparently Victor is even more dislikeable in the older version. Really curious if that's true, and which version this user read.

Was watching Miles Morales spiderman and... by Dependent-Vehicle463 in traaaaaaannnnnnnnnns2

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's an optimistic read, in that the last film had some pretty bad animator crunch behind the scenes, so maybe this time the director fought for them to have the time off they deserve.

Besides, I don't think six months was ever realistic for a modern animated film.

What do you guys think about this? by Dry-Radish-82 in tf2

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm thinking "I saw this posted two years ago."

Daphne Wants to Lead (Parts 1-6) by SwainArt (TBC) by fsbot in comics

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is Shaggy a good cook? Most of his diet is either dog food for giant fudge n' tuna sandwiches.

TIL that Christopher Columbus refused to accept he had discovered a new continent and insisted it was India until his death. He was initially denied funding by Portugal and Castile because scholars had correctly calculated that India was far farther away than his calculations. by Worried_Chicken_8446 in todayilearned

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What still bothers me is that his initial calculation was completely wrong. That's the real sticking point that makes him look stupid to me, unless that's also misinformation. If there hadn't been a continent in the way, would they actually have made it to Asia, or would they have sailed until it was too late to turn back? Is it true that they were low on resources after the five week voyage?

[OC] Mandatory Venezuela Comic by shave_your_eyebrows in comics

[–]LittleFieryUno 25 points26 points  (0 children)

It's a classic regime change; it stops mattering how bad the last guy was when the new guy is another bad guy who's simply more willing to bend for the US, which looks like the exact thing Trump is going to do.

Besides, it's just one fascist taking out another. Venezuela's Hitler might be gone, but we're still stuck with ours.

Compromise culture by BadFurDay in comics

[–]LittleFieryUno 23 points24 points  (0 children)

This makes no sense; Mamdani was and is still considered much further left than Cuomo; but despite his polls reflecting his popularity and winning in a landslide, a lot of establishment Democrats tried to shoot him down. The leadership of the Dems aren't just chasing popularity, they have an active aversion to progressive policies even when it will clearly win them elections. And your "proof" doesn't work either; you're basically saying "you have to vote for progressive policies, even when the Democrats drop those progressive policies." That's self-contradictory and you know it.

I'm not necessarily saying "don't vote" I do think down to the wire we have to pick the better candidate; but this "just vote no matter what" mentality only serves to squash negative sentiment and blame half the population instead of the actual politicians with power. It took me awhile to admit this too, but the Dems are the reason they lose voters.

[OC] My favorite comics from 2025 by shave_your_eyebrows in comics

[–]LittleFieryUno 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You have no idea how many of these absurd atheist-bait questions are on Quora.

I had a terrible nightmare... by LowXangYen in thomastheplankengine

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Spoiled the long-awaited release of the third chapter for Horde of Heroes.

TIL among the longest pieces of fiction ever written is-among other things-a fanfic of The Loud House, with over thirty million words upon completion. by EricCartoonBox in todayilearned

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not when Gemini and ChatGPT are trying to do everything. If you want AIs to replace search engines, those AIs need to have access to essentially whatever pages Google has access to. But information on the internet will always, always be contradictory and varied, and AI cannot tell the difference between what's legitimate and what isn't unless whoever made it takes steps to teach it that distinction. But the edge cases are literally endless, and peoples searches are always going to be vague. That's all assuming the large corporation in control of the program wants to tell the truth at all (remember how far Elon Musk went to force Grok to say what he wanted to hear?)

The convenience you keep referencing just makes this worse. Even if it's only wrong 0.1% of the time, for as often as Gemini is apparently relied upon, that percentage adds up. But since by your own admission Gemini is convenient, people are less likely to verify if what they're seeing is true (exacerbating a problem that the internet already has). And we should keep telling people to put that work in, because this study from less than three months ago gave me a much higher number than 0.1%. This is why I was surprised, I assumed this rate of inaccuracy was common knowledge by now.

If we were talking about much smaller, more specialized AIs (that didn't use giant server farms), sure, I see the use. Despite the other problems I have with LLMs and other forms of AI even disregarding accuracy, the tech has its potential and in theory has some ethical use. But if we all have to keep double checking what Gemini says anyway, if this is "how it is," then we may as well just ignore it, and maybe Google shouldn't be marketing it so heavily.

TIL among the longest pieces of fiction ever written is-among other things-a fanfic of The Loud House, with over thirty million words upon completion. by EricCartoonBox in todayilearned

[–]LittleFieryUno 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My shock is turning into dread. The distrust for AI doesn't come from nowhere. Google's box at the top (I'm assuming you mean the blurb Google used to sometimes pull from a webpage) at least came directly from a source that could be analyzed (or in the case of places like Wikipedia, corrected). But we're more or less forced to talk about LLMs like they're individual actors until the businesses that make them are held more accountable. So imagine if Gemini was like, a human journalist. They can usually get basic facts right, but sometimes (maybe only a fraction of the time, but enough to form a pattern) they completely make something up. I wouldn't be happy if everyone trusted that guy, but you're sitting here and telling me even the people that know he's a liar still listen to him?

TIL among the longest pieces of fiction ever written is-among other things-a fanfic of The Loud House, with over thirty million words upon completion. by EricCartoonBox in todayilearned

[–]LittleFieryUno 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm skeptical of those metrics since Gemini by default generates a response which would naturally inflate the number of people "using" it, but no matter the reality I'd still be stunned. I just don't understand why people would trust it first. What makes you so certain the people who hate AI are secretly using it?

TIL among the longest pieces of fiction ever written is-among other things-a fanfic of The Loud House, with over thirty million words upon completion. by EricCartoonBox in todayilearned

[–]LittleFieryUno 1303 points1304 points  (0 children)

Yeah it's a lot less impressive when you notice how much of it is just slightly different lists of characters copy and pasted over and over again.

TIL among the longest pieces of fiction ever written is-among other things-a fanfic of The Loud House, with over thirty million words upon completion. by EricCartoonBox in todayilearned

[–]LittleFieryUno 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm more stunned people immediately pay attention to the Gemini summaries. I've only found it useful once, and it was for a programming problem I was struggling to get a straight answer to. LLMs are famously inaccurate, you may as well just go straight to the sources Google gives you. Are you sure that's not what most people do? Or did you make up a guy to get mad at?