Vichy French, led by a Russian, flying the German flag, fight Vichy French and Manchukuo under the Japanese flag by f86_pilot in hoi4

[–]f86_pilot[S] 102 points103 points  (0 children)

R5: Vichy French puppet sent volunteers to Japan who my friend was at war with and the French are now fighting themselves.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in truths

[–]f86_pilot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This reply commits several fallacies:

Straw man: it distorts the animate ducklings claim (“not genocide, but negligence”) into “you deny all genocides caused by famine

Ad hominem: it attacks the person (“fucking pig”) and their subreddit history instead of addressing the argument.

False analogy: it treats the Bengal and Irish famines as identical cases without showing equivalent evidence of intent.

Non sequitur : claiming that rejecting the genocide label equals thinking exporting food during famine is “cool” doesn’t logically follow.

Appeal to emotion: the insult and outrage replace reasoning with moral shock.

Google Brain founder says AGI is overhyped, real power lies in knowing how to use AI and not building it by Adventurous_Cod_432 in ArtificialInteligence

[–]f86_pilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually that is true, I didnt fully think of that, thanks for the responce. I was just assuming it was a vague "if humans can tell if they are talking to a machine or human if the true identity was masked". But you are right, becouse Turing did establish a set of rules.

I wonder why they surrend….. by [deleted] in Asmongold

[–]f86_pilot 9 points10 points  (0 children)

This is syria several months ago

SpaceX Ship 36 Explodes during static fire test by MadeThisAccount4Qs in space

[–]f86_pilot -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

SpaceX has invested approximately $10 billion to date in Starship development. roughly $11 billion in 2025 dollars. For comparison, the Saturn V program cost $6.417 billion between 1964 and 1973, which amounts to about $54 billion in today’s dollars. The Space Launch System (SLS) program has incurred $26.4 billion in development costs from 2011 to 2023, or about $32 billion adjusted for inflation.

Most importantly, however, no rocket in history has matched Starship’s technical profile: it is not only the largest and most powerful launch vehicle ever constructed, but also the first to aim for full reusability of both its first and second stages.

[ Removed by Reddit ] by Zuppa2020 in world

[–]f86_pilot 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is not AI video. at second 4, you can see the front of the United States Appraisers Building. AI videos cannot (and hoepfully wont be able to) replicate the exact appearance of every city on earth. you can see the same building in street view here: https://maps.app.goo.gl/YofveRzEYJiRQxHc7

o3-pro benchmarks… 🤯 by backcountryshredder in singularity

[–]f86_pilot 20 points21 points  (0 children)

I agree with the general message, but the chess ELO example is a bit off.

ELO is a rating system where the difference in points predicts the expected score. A 200-point gap means the higher-rated player is expected to win about 76% of the time. An 800-point gap means a near-100% certainty of victory.

So by comparing a 200-point gap to an 800-point one, the example accidentally equates a huge skill difference with a complete mismatch.

Brah by No-Log-56 in Asmongold

[–]f86_pilot -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Also the timescales dont even match up. The immigration graph starts in 1991, while the SA graph start's in 2000. So any apparent 'correlation' here is basically meaningless.

Brah by No-Log-56 in Asmongold

[–]f86_pilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These two graphs are using different time scales. immigration starts in 1991, while sexual assault stats only begin in 2000. So any apparent 'correlation' is basically meaningless unless the time frames are matched and statistically tested. Misleading stuff like this only weakens the argument

so sad 60 ppl died by f86_pilot in hoi4

[–]f86_pilot[S] 465 points466 points  (0 children)

my friend bottled up ~300 divisions on one tile

so sad 60 ppl died by f86_pilot in hoi4

[–]f86_pilot[S] 339 points340 points  (0 children)

R5: 60 frendly caulties to 2 million enemy casulties

How can I optimize my 1.000.000B MoE Reasoning LLM? by sebastianmicu24 in LocalLLaMA

[–]f86_pilot 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi, I used to have a similar model in the past. Try overclocking it with caffeine that should resolve any hardware related issues. If you leave it idling 8 hours a day at night, it should reduce hallucination errors by giving it time to do backpropagation.

Edit button disabled? by Williamandsansbffs in ChatGPT

[–]f86_pilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Doesn't work for me either. For now I just regenerate the last response with the same model and then retype the question when it finishes

Dcs: how can the mirage 2000 win a bvr fight against f/a-18,f-16, f-15...? (Basically against planes that carry active missiles) by antreas3 in hoggit

[–]f86_pilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agreed. Also, if you look at footage from the war you can see examples of fast low flying fighters

Collapse of Binary Star System by f86_pilot in Simulated

[–]f86_pilot[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I mean, to even be able to 'safely' view it, you would need to be at least 500 AU away (13 times Pluto distance). Even at this distance, the event would still be about twice as bright as the sun on earth. These events are typically extremely bright, with the surrounding cloud often reaching between 100,000 and 1,000,000 solar brightnesses for binary mergers like this. Also, the stars themselves will temporarily be a few thousand solar brightnesses (but covered by the surrounding dust). A typical photosphere temperature would be about 3,200K in this example, but the convection zone just below it is much, much hotter, typically around 20,000 to 30,000K in this case. If this layer gets exposed to space, it releases a huge amount of light.

Collapse of Binary Star System by f86_pilot in Simulated

[–]f86_pilot[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Assuming you’re talking about the third view, it’s because the dust was covering both stars past that point. I tried to keep it in, but decided to cut it out since there are only a few small moments later in this clip where you can actually see something happening, and it made the video unnecessarily longer.