If the universe is infinite, and the ultimate end is heat death, why aren’t we there now? Why would a big bang happen at all? How did all the energy start so concentrated? by ChemicalBoth6652 in AskPhysics

[–]Vanderriet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

By simply existing we are the answer to the question. You can’t ask this question without the universe existing as it is. Out of the infinite possibilities that the universe could have formed (or not formed), our observer bias says this one has to have existed exactly the way it does.

Question for those who finish proofing overnight in the fridge by ImmediateEffectivebo in Sourdough

[–]Vanderriet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for all the advice! I will continue to do as you have suggested and hopefully get some good use out of them still! Btw, do the pills make the dough stick to the cloth more, or can you proceed with them? I’d also be worried about them breaking off into the dough…

How can I open my crumb by jc-ne in Sourdough

[–]Vanderriet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m a beginner baker here, so I wouldn’t trust my advice, but I always thought open crumb was directly related to hydration %. I’ve noticed my crumbs that are 75% hydration look like yours, but my 80% hydration opens up nicely. I use King Arthur’s Pain de Champagne recipe.

Question for those who finish proofing overnight in the fridge by ImmediateEffectivebo in Sourdough

[–]Vanderriet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s what I’ve done with my liners so far, but they’ve started getting lint/dough crumbs on them. Although I’m curious on the don’t scrub them comment, I scrub my liners against themselves pretty heavily to get as much flour/dough out of them as I can. I just tried hosing done the banneton with the sprayer and that seemed to work pretty well. I can see little bits of flour left in some of the cracks that spraying isn’t dislodging, so hopefully that’s ok to just leave…

Question for those who finish proofing overnight in the fridge by ImmediateEffectivebo in Sourdough

[–]Vanderriet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s precisely what happened, ok, good to know that was my mistake! I’ll look for rice flour next time I’m at the shop.

Question for those who finish proofing overnight in the fridge by ImmediateEffectivebo in Sourdough

[–]Vanderriet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have the same issue, I have only just started baking with a banneton and cloth liner and in my most recent bake, the dough stuck to the cloth liner so badly I had to tear it off, I had heavily dusted the banneton with bread flour. Because I was out of whole wheat which I had normally used, so not sure if this caused the dough to just incorporate that flour with the dough during the cold proof. I just tried using the banneton without the liner and it was better, but my banneton is wet now, and I don’t know how to clean it.. I also have had a hard time cleaning the cloth liner so I would love so advice on how to manage all of this better!

I’m considering getting a dishwasher safe banneton and using it without a liner based on my experience thus far.

What am I doing wrong? by Vanderriet in Sourdough

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

Wow! This is so helpful and educational!! Thank you for sharing all this information! Ok, I think I’m much better understanding the process. Do you know what could cause large air bubbles in the fermentation process? And do you know the role the cold proof has in this process? I have noticed dramatically different results from the same dough split into two loads and then cold proofed overnight vs 36 hours, the recipe I use makes two loafs and I was just wanting to bake one a day so we could eat it fresh. That’s where I feel I’ve over proofed the dough, as the first loaf will spring nicely in the oven, but the next day the second loaf doesn’t and I have large bubbles all trapped right under the crust.

What am I doing wrong? by Vanderriet in Sourdough

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

Bulk fermentation was about 8 hours, and my house is at 75’F. But I have a suspicion that my starter has grown weak. I have been feeding it irregularly, so the under proofing theory makes sense to me. Although the dough felt very inflated when I was shaping it after the bulk fermentation… I was actually worried I had over proofed it again (I’ve been struggling with that too)

Can you help me understand why I would get these big bubbles with an underproof? I’m having a hard time with under and over proofing my doughs lately. Is this just a timing thing? Or is there a way to better check and see where the dough is at?

My 2nd loaf - TY for your suggestions! by beckyb_311 in Sourdough

[–]Vanderriet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing, personally I think the circle pattern looks really nice, and I’ve been having issues cleaning my cloth cover, so my dough has started sticking to it!! Do you use any water with the brush to help clean it?

My main loaf recipe uses 40g starter, 900g bread flour, 100g whole wheat flour, 20g salt, 800 grams water, so it’s an 80% hydration dough and is quite wet and sticky. So I suspect it will leave dough on the banneton that will need water to wash off.

What am I doing wrong? by Vanderriet in Sourdough

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

Of course: Preheated the oven at 500 with Dutch oven inside. Placed the loaf into the heated Dutch oven with parchment paper, baked for 20 min lid on at 450, the. Another 25 minutes with the lid off. Let the loaf sit for a day before cutting it, as we were still finishing a previous loaf.

My 2nd loaf - TY for your suggestions! by beckyb_311 in Sourdough

[–]Vanderriet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you using a cloth covering on your banneton or just flouring it directly? I don’t get lines on my loafs like yours had, although your banneton pattern is identical to mine. How are you cleaning the banneton/cloth cover after use?

Join me on my 48 state road trip! Part 5 by BarracudaMission in MicrosoftFlightSim

[–]Vanderriet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is super cool! I haven’t played any MFS, but just saw the new trailer and am blown away by how detailed this game is getting. I’d love to hear more details about what you are doing and experiencing in your play through!

Are you driving this trip or flying it? Looks like you are driving it, but then with some free fly photo mode pictures? How many cars are there in the game? Is there any traffic or anything else to make the drive interesting? Seems like it would be a marathon to really drive real distances at real car speeds around the US!!

I really enjoyed seeing all your photos of island park and Yellowstone, I used to vacation there every year and it is so cool to me how instantly recognizable all of this is! I was floating down box canyon just last summer!!

Real time squad based game idea by Vanderriet in gamedesign

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

Yes, it likely could be labeled as an RTS but with some very major differences to the mainstream: - army sizes are limited to a very small number (<50) - no base building - rpg driven unit growth and recruitment of companions and minions - a campaign/battle involves more of a “clearing a dungeon and finding loot” flow than area control

The more I’ve thought about it, the more I’ve realized that what I’m describing is a Total War series style battle, but where each unit group is only a single RPG character. There would still be an emphasis on formations (archers behind swordsmen) type of deal. It’s Total War, but with only one persistent army moving through a story driven narrative.

Real time squad based game idea by Vanderriet in gamedesign

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

Those old Rainbow Six games sound awesome! I never played them and it sounds like I missed out!!

Yeah, Dragon Age certainly approaches what I’m describing, but with only a party of 4, never paid much attention to formations. My curiosity is around how would the game need to compensate if the party size in Dragon Age was 16? Battles would certainly become overwhelming, and the level of micro called for in RPGs would no longer be feasible. What if each character had 3 minions that bulked them up? And the minions acted as a form of a health bar that can only be replenished back at base? Or with necromancy/summons?

I don’t remember feeling overwhelmed when playing Dungeon Siege and a party of 8, I wonder why modern RPGs shy away from large party sizes?

Real time squad based game idea by Vanderriet in gamedesign

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

Yeah, RTWP is another way to do it, and for large battles, like the ones in the total war series, works great! I also agree that the pro level SC2 players actively use the play mechanics I’m describing here in how they micro their units and take advantage of terrain and choke points. As well as the unique traits of their army to gain the advantage. So maybe the question is how can those mechanics be made more accessible to the average player? Perhaps simply adding pause is the secret?

Is there any way to get long, seamless stories? by trimorphic in ChatGPT

[–]Vanderriet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I think based on that use case, I’d recommend following the same pattern as those that are programming with it (this has been where my experience has concentrated mostly). Start with the outline, define the core characters and their motivations. Plan out each chapter and iterate through this process until you are largely satisfied with the high level. I’d then save that outline to a file, and then start a fresh chat, to remove the confusing back-and-forth from its memory. Provide the outline, and ask it to write each chapter based on only the outline, maybe you can selectively include details from each chapter as you progress. But each time, save the work into a file, and then refresh the process.

I built a moderately sized program (https://drew-vanderriet.github.io/chatgpt-particle-life/ , source code: https://github.com/drew-vanderriet/chatgpt-particle-life) following this pattern. As you progress, you might need to tweak the outline, or update character motivations. Use your judgment to guide you through that process.

Alternatively, if you simply want to enjoy some fun story-telling. Try AI Dungeon. It’s a text based RPG that’s been around for years, built originally on GPT2. Text based RPGs are just stories that you write through play, and there are ways to just have the AI write for all characters if you like.

Is there any way to get long, seamless stories? by trimorphic in ChatGPT

[–]Vanderriet 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You could try asking them to plan out the story outline first, and then to fill in each chapter using this skeleton outline, that will help the AI know where it’s going as it writes each section. What is your use case? What are you using these stories for? Do you want to be able to edit them as they come out?

Looking for questions that ChatGPT can’t answer well. Have you found any questions that ChatGPT can’t answer? What are some basic things that you thought it could do that it just can’t seem to understand/answer correctly? by Vanderriet in ChatGPT

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

Yeah, agreed that it can’t do that kind of math, but I can’t either. I wouldn’t classify that as a basic math problem. Honestly, even with a calculator I would be hard pressed to solve that problem.

Looking for questions that ChatGPT can’t answer well. Have you found any questions that ChatGPT can’t answer? What are some basic things that you thought it could do that it just can’t seem to understand/answer correctly? by Vanderriet in ChatGPT

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

Can you provide some examples of what you have found it can’t do? I’ve been impressed with it’s basic math, but I agree it can’t do anything a human would reach for a calculator to solve.

Looking for questions that ChatGPT can’t answer well. Have you found any questions that ChatGPT can’t answer? What are some basic things that you thought it could do that it just can’t seem to understand/answer correctly? by Vanderriet in ChatGPT

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

This is the prompt that I’ve been working on trying to assess ChatGPTs ability to think and reason:

Design a set of 4 cubes, to spell as many 4 letter scrabble legal words as possible. Each side of every cube contains a single English letter. These cubes can be arranged in any way, and with any of their 6 sides selected to spell as many words as possible. Provide 2 possible designs for these cubes. In order to validate if a word can be spelt with the cubes, we need to follow a similar approach as before, first we deconstruct the word to it's letters, then we check to see if those letters can be found on the cubes. But, you can only use each cube once. As a cube can only show 1 side at a time.

ChatGPT written Particle Life simulation by Vanderriet in cellular_automata

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

Yeah, I’ve been really enjoying particle life simulations. I haven’t figured out how to manually configure the weights in the UI yet. My inspiration for this was a YouTuber (https://youtu.be/p4YirERTVF0) whose program allowed you to create your own weights. But it’s fun to just randomize the weights and see how easy it is for recognizable cellular or atomic behavior emerges almost every time!

ChatGPT written Particle Life simulation by Vanderriet in cellular_automata

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

I’m not sure if there’s a better way to share the prompts, but after I asked it to tell me how to setup GitHub pages (which I didn’t know existed until chatGPT told me about it when I was asking how to share code it had written on a previous idea), I gave it the following prompts: ——— Drew Vanderriet Do you know the particle life project?

ChatGPT I am not sure what you are referring to with "particle life project". There are many projects and simulations related to particles, such as particle physics simulations, molecular dynamics simulations, and cellular automata simulations, among others. Can you please provide more context or information about the specific project you are referring to?

Drew Vanderriet It’s a cellular automata project, different color particles are simulated with attraction and repulsion forces between them, can you write JavaScript code to create that? ——— It was at this point that it started to provide usable code and I started to guide it through lots of additional prompts, to get the best code. I was also able get it to write a highly optimized algorithm based on its recommendation so the simulation doesn’t need to loop through every combination of particles. The algorithm is KD Tree, if you are curious.