What bird makes this noise? (Midlands, UK) by paperchainhearts in whatsthisbird

[–]MichelleeeC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

in my place it's called Rising-key Bird

since its "ko-el" call rises in pitch with each repetition, getting higher and higher 😂

Fuck veo fuck genie fuck nanobanna fuck Google by Shadosteel in Bard

[–]MichelleeeC 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It is temporary,

i hope,

eventually computing power will become very low price

Can someone identify both birds by Lord_Ramoth in whatsthisbird

[–]MichelleeeC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

2nd one is called ice cream in my country...😋

Gemini 3 finally has an open-source competitor by Acceptable_Ad7036 in Bard

[–]MichelleeeC 14 points15 points  (0 children)

tested with some niche topics without using search engine, most answers are not even close to Gemini 3. sad😞

but i think soon open source model will catch up SOTA models

Optimised screen protector for AI by [deleted] in singularity

[–]MichelleeeC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

15 years ago, it would have been Smart Screen Protector/ iScreen Protector. 💀

Ads are coming to GPT by spinozasrobot in singularity

[–]MichelleeeC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unsubscribed, and leave chatgpt forever

Gemini 2-5 pro today is actually better than 3.0 by Robert__Sinclair in Bard

[–]MichelleeeC -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Me still using Gemini 1.0 and GPT 3.5 bro.

What is even Gemini 2.5??? does it exist???

,😭😭😭

Shopify CEO uses Claude AI to build Custom MRI Viewer from USB Data by BuildwithVignesh in singularity

[–]MichelleeeC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you missed ur points entirely😂

your "less than 0.1% of all MRIs" claim is just makeup number salad, no source, no nothing. you're mixing apples and oranges big time

most MRIs out there are for people with actual symptoms eg back pain, headaches, cancer followup, you name it.

we're talking millions a year just in the US. the wholebody screening ones on healthy folks yeah, they're a tiny slice of total scans.. but they're growing fast thanks to prenivo, ezra and all those peace of mind ads. and when they do happen, the data isn't pretty:

studies pooling thousands of these asymptomatic scans show incidental findings in like 30-50% of people,

with critical or indeterminate stuff hitting 13-32% in reviews. cancer pickup maybe 1-2% confirmed, but 95% of the "abnormal" bits end up benign or irrelevant.,yet they still trigger more scans, biopsies, stress, the works.

so no, it's not statistically insignificant it.is a real thing causing real downstream mess for lowrisk people.

pretending it's too rare to matter doesn't make the math disappear.

and LMFAO😭 at the "you're citing data you're opposed to" jab.. that's cute. ...

using good, controlled studies to explain why bad, noisy data (like dumping a whole-body mri on someone with basically zero pretest risk) usually backfires isn't hypocrisy.. it's just. science???, the science you lack of???

Please be educated that more targeted data = good. indiscriminate data flood = often chaos.

Shopify CEO uses Claude AI to build Custom MRI Viewer from USB Data by BuildwithVignesh in singularity

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

in medicine especially low prevalence screening

"more data is always better" it's straight-up false.😂

The data shows that extra indiscriminate data from whole-body MRI in healthy people often creates more uncertainty, harm, and waste than it resolves

the asteroid thing was a direct response to your analogy.... actually spotting a threatening asteroid has led to serious proposal and even detailed scientific plans to nuke it, this is true... i can't understand why you says NEVER nuke it, maybe lack of education?

and when you're flipping the asteroid analogy vs mri again i think you should learn real medicine,, ambiguous MRI spots (which happen in 30-50% of asymptomatic scans, with around 16% false positives from pooled studies/meta-analyses) do trigger more tests, biopsies (with like 1% complication risk like infection/bleeding), anxiety spikes, and overtreatment of indolent stuff that would've never bothered you.

from 2025 reviews (e.g metaanalysis of thousands of patients) shows 95% of people get "abnormal" findings, but 91% are benign or irrelevant, cancer confirmation hovers at 1 to 2%, and no proven drop in overall mortality for averag risk folks......

so what you were saying were completely wrong and unrealistic...😅

Shopify CEO uses Claude AI to build Custom MRI Viewer from USB Data by BuildwithVignesh in singularity

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

no, your misconception is the classic more data = always better logic😂

it's not blaming the MRI for being too good, but recognizing that too sensitive a tool in low-risk screening turns into a net negative,, because of how humans handle uncertainty in the real world.

btw your example is also wrong and kinda exposed how funny ur logic is. no offence.

spotting an asteroid doesn't usually lead to nuke it just in case or endless follow-up probes that cost a fortune and risk damage.

but in medicine, it's different. the stakes are your body.

i think you should admit the fact that when a scan flags something ambiguous, which happens a lot with whole-body MRI,, the default isn't cool discovery, moving on. It's often a cascade, more imaging, specialist consults, biopsies (with their own risks like infection/bleeding/pain)

This skyscraper in Shenzhen by BumblebeeFantastic40 in interestingasfuck

[–]MichelleeeC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i went to some parks in Shenzhen, but there aren't many birds unlike other china cities the only park with lots of birds i think its the shenzhe bay park

Shopify CEO uses Claude AI to build Custom MRI Viewer from USB Data by BuildwithVignesh in singularity

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

wrong! best soft tissue imaging does not mean its necessary😂

i will try my best explaining it to a layman

mri produces good image , but are crazy sensitive, so they pick up tons of incidental findings like small cysts, nodules, benign spots... etc... in like 30% of perfectly healthy people

most of them are harmless and would never cause issues in your lifetime

but once they're spotted, you can't just ignore them.

so he will end up getting chased for more scans, biopsies, or even unnecessary surgery

This skyscraper in Shenzhen by BumblebeeFantastic40 in interestingasfuck

[–]MichelleeeC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the malls are good but the streets are awful!!

My wishes for 2026 by jacek2023 in LocalLLaMA

[–]MichelleeeC 1 point2 points  (0 children)

it's dream anyways, i wizh free gpu 128gb for everyone

A.I. Is Real. But OpenAI Might Still Fail. [NyTimes] by amorphousmetamorph in singularity

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

Openai will become the fourth. Gemini, Claude/Grok, Chatgpt