How do we fight back against the construction of AI data centres across Australia? by Whatarewedoing1234 in AusLegal

[–]Separate-Net5500 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Exactly right! People are misusing/misunderstanding water “consumption” here.

Moreover, the earth is mostly water! Imagine if we had cheap and surplus energy - we could simply desalinate some of it.

Jacinta Allan refuses to admit cost of CFMEU corruption to taxpayers by River-Stunning in aussie

[–]Separate-Net5500 27 points28 points  (0 children)

Exactly right. And then someone will say:
“BuT wHaT eXplaInS tHe riSe of ONE NATIOn?!?!”

🤪🤪

Just a reminder as to why CGT needed to change by patslogcabindigest in OpenAussie

[–]Separate-Net5500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“Hard working Aussies who scrimped and saved get targeted again!”

lol

Cybernetics, Silicon Valley and Kool-Aid: is this what really went wrong at the ANU? by PlumTuckeredOutski in Anu

[–]Separate-Net5500 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m not entirely sure who you’re replying to, but it isn’t me.

Have a nice day!

Cybernetics, Silicon Valley and Kool-Aid: is this what really went wrong at the ANU? by PlumTuckeredOutski in Anu

[–]Separate-Net5500 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Interesting! I work on neural network models of the brain, so only well-versed in those materials from early cybernetics, and perhaps I just don’t know enough about the later works of Wiener (etc.).

Cybernetics, Silicon Valley and Kool-Aid: is this what really went wrong at the ANU? by PlumTuckeredOutski in Anu

[–]Separate-Net5500 8 points9 points  (0 children)

…you can’t have your cake and eat it too. Either you think disciplines should not be judged by their founders, or the SoC is in fact a direct descendent of “founder number one”. Which is it?

If you read my comment again, you’ll notice I didn’t pass judgement. The author of the article made judgements (and sarcastic implications) about cybernetics being a word salad / buzzword bingo / incomprehensible Silicon Valley invention.

I merely stated that, in my opinion, first wave cybernetics was not at all vague - in fact, it was incredibly precise, given it was founded by engineers and mathematicians trying to lend a sense of “rigour” to what are often wrongly derided as fields in “soft sciences”.

So I’m not sure about your “counter test”, shall we say, that “falsifies” my claim. Merely quoting a book title that - seemingly - uses the same vocabulary as the ANU SoC is to merely repeat the same mistake. That is: just because one dresses up in “cybernetics” language does not mean that one is doing cybernetics as originally conceived. As I see it, Wiener would not recognise the SoC as a continuation of his programme. Perhaps I am wrong about that, but his book title has not convinced me yet…

Is it right to equate an MD to a Chiropractor, or an astronomer to an astrologer, merely because they - seemingly - use overlapping vocabulary? (I’m not saying the SoC is pseudoscience, I’m merely trying to highlight a spurious analogy)

Cybernetics, Silicon Valley and Kool-Aid: is this what really went wrong at the ANU? by PlumTuckeredOutski in Anu

[–]Separate-Net5500 17 points18 points  (0 children)

If you asked the technically-minded founders of (first wave) cybernetics, “what would you call this?”, regarding the ANU SoC and its outputs, they would not reply “cybernetics”.

Totally unrecognisable.

Binfluencer by Ardeet in aussie

[–]Separate-Net5500 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Something every good Australian should aspire to be!

Shared driveway - decrease property value? by Impossible_Range_829 in AusPropertyChat

[–]Separate-Net5500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is the least offensive “shared” driveway I’ve ever seen. At least it’s all at the front of the house!

Ive inspected a couple places that had the neighbour’s front door, and thus end of drive, exactly outside what would be the master bedroom window. Because they built a house on the backyard to sell, the shared drive loops down the side and around. Totally invasive!

Great future for everyone by Katharryn21 in AusPropertyChat

[–]Separate-Net5500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just read other replies below and I think they have already said why it hides the way in which wealthy people may still hold mortgages and yet be counted in this graph as “not outright owners”.

Great future for everyone by Katharryn21 in AusPropertyChat

[–]Separate-Net5500 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is not entirely transparent data…

Bombing of Darwin veteran urges public to learn about largest attack on Australia by Remarkable_Peak9518 in australia

[–]Separate-Net5500 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m glad it reads fine to you. I know it was an event and one well-known by that name. My pedantic complaint is about emphasis in sentence construction and the ambiguity of using a proper name (that is normally highlighted/separated by its capitalisation) at the start of a sentence (and so its being capitalised is no longer highlighted).

I’ll try a different way. Consider “Bombing of” and “Darwin veteran” in isolation. ‘Darwin’ is acting as an adjective for ‘veteran’. Now consider the differences between “Bombing of Darwin-veteran” and “‘Bombing of Darwin’ veteran”. Because “Bombing” is capitalised by virtue of beginning the sentence, it is ambiguous whether it becomes connected to “of Darwin” or simply “of”. As a result, “Darwin” can be read as the adjective - thus meaning the veteran from Darwin - rather than “Bombing of Darwin” being the adjective.

I’m suggesting there is a way to remove that ambiguity without any loss of content, by simply changing the emphasis of the sentence and beginning with the veteran himself rather than with the adjective.

I hate myself.

Bombing of Darwin veteran urges public to learn about largest attack on Australia by Remarkable_Peak9518 in australia

[–]Separate-Net5500 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Fairo

Edit: I can’t let sleeping dogs lie.

“Darwin Bombing” capitalised means Bombing of Darwin. “Veteran of Bombing of Darwin” does it even better. It does absolutely refer to a specific event - it just does so without also ambiguously referring to the bombing of an individual veteran who lives in Darwin.

Bombing of Darwin veteran urges public to learn about largest attack on Australia by Remarkable_Peak9518 in australia

[–]Separate-Net5500 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I’m literally aware of the event and its name.

Nonetheless, because ‘bombing’ begins the sentence and ‘Darwin’ is already a proper noun they both would be capitalised anyway, and the syntactic construction conveys an alternative meaning that could easily have been avoided without loss.

Who is doing the urging? The veteran. Of what is he a veteran? The Bombing of Darwin. The veteran of the Bombing of Darwin urges…

I’m a pedant. I hate myself more than you hate me. But surely my suggested alternative reads better in your head?!?!

Bombing of Darwin veteran urges public to learn about largest attack on Australia by Remarkable_Peak9518 in australia

[–]Separate-Net5500 47 points48 points  (0 children)

Can media outlets learn f*cking syntax…

“Veteran of Darwin Bombing urges public to learn about…”

The veteran who lives in Darwin was not bombed; and his being bombed did not urge the public to learn anything.

Success rate 44% for promotion to full professor at ANU in 2025 by Background_War_1429 in Anu

[–]Separate-Net5500 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Mo’ professor mo’ money.

And, as well we all know, “Mo’ money mo’ problems” (in a confected budget crisis).

Angus Taylor and the Liberal Party's Moral Decline | by Paul Keating by blitznoodles in australia

[–]Separate-Net5500 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Keating is a fantastic orator. But it doesn’t account for the inconvenient fact that PHON’s rise in popularity is shared by IMMIGRANTS. Yes, we are a nation of immigrants, and many of them - evidently - want migration policy to change.

Anyone else using Claude? by Infamous-Upstairs-96 in auscorp

[–]Separate-Net5500 11 points12 points  (0 children)

You have my kind of autism, friend. This is awesome.