They just keep coming up with even dumber ideas.

  • foodandart@lemmy.zip
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    22 hours ago

    For Advait Paliwal, Brown dropout and co-creator of Einstein, there isn’t one. “I think about horses,” he said. “They used to pull carriages, but when cars came around, I’d argue horses became a lot more free,”

    No, they didn’t become more free. They became unnecessary and were sold by the millions for food. The peak of the horse population was just shy of 22 million animals around 1910 and has fallen to 2 million today.

    This guy’s an idiot, who would relegate millions of people to ignorance and ultimately irrelevance as they are left behind in greater numbers in an economy that demands ever more amounts of actual intelligence to thrive in.

    Jesus, what a fool.

      • corsicanguppy
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        13 hours ago

        Perhaps he should go to school.

        Ha! Stay in school, kids, or you’ll end up like this chump.

      • bus_factor@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        I think you can buy a horse steak in most western countries, although most regular grocery stores don’t carry it. You’d need to go to a butcher or a higher end store.

        I bought a cut of horse steak in Norway around 2005. I haven’t really looked for it since, so I don’t know if they stopped selling it. It’s often mixed into sausages as well, but labeled in a less obvious way.

        • corsicanguppy
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          13 hours ago

          Right? I’ve had moose, bear, cow, caribou, octopus, squid, chicken, deer, roadkill, pig and sheep. I’ve been responsible for more animal deaths than a PETA animal shelter. I’d try the horse and then I’d only need reindeer to complete the punch card and I get some puma or screech owls or something …right?

          • Soggy@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            Need to branch into herps. Frog legs, gator, rattlesnake, turtle soup, iguana…

            • Mirshe@lemmy.world
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              2 hours ago

              God I love gator. The Cajun restaurant near me (which sadly closed for good this January) served gator every summer, and it was a thing I always looked forward to.

  • SaveTheTuaHawk
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    19 hours ago

    Sigh… my university has seen a jump in admisson marks the last few years, and every semester we have 30-50 students turfed out for generative AI assignments handed in. They even leave “generated by ChatGPT” in the text. Most courses are ending digital testing and reverting back to paper quizes and exams, because the cheating is getting worse, and easy to detect because we add in a bait question we know AI gets wrong.

    Their high school teachers are telling them AI is the future. Tip for you kids: don’t take career advice from someone who ended up a high school teacher.

    • Soggy@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      I know several teachers, they’re doing an important and increasingly difficult/thankless job. Fuck you.

    • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I have former teachers that screamed at me for saying “typing is the future” wanting to relegate art classes to be a few lessons of how to prompt AI image generators. Just like how handwriting strengthens a lot of other skills (usually fine motor ones), art is also good at auxiliary skills. Of course it can be done wrong (Kodály method is infamous for reverse teaching to “force kids to count more”), but that doesn’t invalidate it, and I personally hated writing for uncomfortable pencils and bad holding methods (was instructed to hold on the tapered off position “for better control” as strongly as possible).

    • corsicanguppy
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      14 hours ago

      That’s a full 4-year degree in my area.

      It’s a portable skill that my wife’s sister leveraged to move to Europe. She’s had a great life there.

  • Redstone1@lemmings.world
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    19 hours ago

    Sis is a teach and she tells me she used to let her kids listen to music when doin quiet work but had to stop because too many were using chatgpt

    Fuck ai

  • TheReturnOfPEB@reddthat.com
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    23 hours ago

    why bother to go through a sexual awakening when your fleshlight can just date her vibrator ?

    why bother to get a license when i can call a robotaxi ?

    why bother to exist because A.I. can do that for me ?

    • IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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      23 hours ago

      That middle one kind of sticks out. Seems perfectly valid if your usually walking/biking/using public transportation.

      • Goodeye8@piefed.social
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        22 hours ago

        You can still get a license in case you do need to drive a car. A license is not an obligation to buy a car.

        • AceFuzzLord@lemmy.zip
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          20 hours ago

          This! There are probably gonna be times where you need to drive to get someone somewhere in a hurry. Cannot speak for everywhere, but in my part of the world the police won’t care if you are speeding to get someone to hospital, you’ll still get a ticket, minimum, without license.

      • TheReturnOfPEB@reddthat.com
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        22 hours ago

        The first one was ripped off from Zizek. The second one is because you have to ask WAYMO for permission for access to a vehicle.

        • IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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          22 hours ago

          Still not sure what you are getting at. With sex and existing, those are themselves the goal, so having a machine do it for you makes no sense. With driving, getting from A to B is the goal, not the act of driving itself, which makes calling a normal cab or a robo-taxi both equally valid ways of achieving the goal if you don’t want to drive.

  • MountingSuspicion@reddthat.com
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    23 hours ago

    Really hate the framing of the title, though the article is a bit more nuanced. AI may be able to “do your homework” in the same way a robot may be able to “eat your dinner”, but it cannot do these things for you, only independent of you. No one can “do your homework for you” because the point of homework is to help you understand the information through exercise. Saying it’s done because all questions were answered is like saying you had dinner because a robot removed the food from your plate. You are not getting the actual point of the exercise, the way you’re not getting the nutrition from the food. You can argue about how helpful/nutritious the work/food is, but to argue that the work/food is not necessary is a blatant lie told to you by people trying to starve you.

    This idea that “memorizing things is bad” and that memorizing can be offloaded comes from a fundamental misunderstanding of education. In order to understand things we have to know certain things. Even first had experiences are “committed to memory” so that you can draw from that information later. These people are attempting to rob others of an education and the ability to understand the world around them. I don’t know how they can live with themselves.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      This seems like the same argument people had with calculators. We’ve had calculators, spreadsheets, cash registers for half a century now so why do the still teach math?

    • MudMan@fedia.io
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      22 hours ago

      There’s a difference between knowing things and memorizing them, though.

      I agree on the broad notion that using reference is perfectly fine at all levels of academia. You memorize information by putting it to use. Repetitive reading with no application intended just for memorization is a massive waste of time.

      That is fundamentally different to attending lectures, reading books or paper and definitely not the same as putting in the work of writing your own or doing your own research.

      My concern with this idea is the same as my concern with every other attempt at a “disruptive” AI product: you can already do all the valuable parts of this with existing tools and the novel things this can do aren’t particularly useful or something that chatbots do well.

      By all means use AI tools to do schoolworks if and when they’re useful. It’s just that this doesn’t sound like it is.

      • MountingSuspicion@reddthat.com
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        21 hours ago

        Though I think your first point is mostly semantics, I do it’s ok if some things are expected to be memorized. What do you mean by:

        Repetitive reading with no application intended just for memorization is a massive waste of time.

        Is the class and test not the intended application? I bet most people who learn about DNA or Golgi bodies never apply that information outside of school. Most people who took an art history class had to learn about cubism and likely haven’t uttered the word since. What about the difference between igneous and sedimentary rock? I think these classes are important, but you cannot expect people to have the time to build up an understanding of all of these subjects from first principles. At a certain point you have to memorize something. Even if you went to a volcano and watched the magma cool yourself, you’d still have to remember what the result is called. If a student can define a term and identify it in action when they see it, I don’t think they need to have done any original research on it, and most coursework (lectures/videos/homework) gives them the tools to be able to define and identify it. It’s about exposure and exploration, and for that kind of surface level understanding I think the coursework for most classes counts as sufficient “putting in the work”.

        What does useful mean in this context:

        By all means use AI tools to do schoolworks if and when they’re useful

        My point is that they are not useful because they don’t help you learn the material. What is the “valuable part of this”? It literally just does the work for them. AI repeatedly makes factual errors, so I wouldn’t even trust it to rephrase something, much less teach it to me, especially when there are a lot of trustworthy educational tools and sites out there.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      21 hours ago

      My first semester of college was in the fall of 2005. One of the courses I took that semester was titled Western Civilization. Basically a repeat of high school World History, “white people evolved and did everything, and some other people were around I guess” kind of stuff. We get a couple weeks into the semester when the teacher just…stops showing up. We walk in to find “Read Chapters 1-3 in your textbook” written on the board. He’s gone for over a month, occasionally there’s a substitute who has no fucking idea what’s going on, I think they got someone from Financial Aid or the Registrar’s office to walk in and tell us to read chapters of the book in person. Practically no attempt to teach this class was made. Turns out, the professor was on some kind of emergency response team that got deployed to the gulf coast in aid of Katrina/Rita.

      He gets back for the second half of the semester, and the way he reviewed for tests was “One: A. Two: C. Three: C. Four: B.”

      This is what you’re afraid of automating away.

      You know the really sick thing? I had to earn a flight instructor certificate before I realized what a piss poor state our schools are in.

      • acargitz
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        20 hours ago

        This is what you’re afraid of automating away.

        To work with the “robots can’t eat your dinner for you” analogy, what you’re doing here is you’re saying you went to a bad restaurant once therefore people shouldn’t bother cooking.

        • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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          17 hours ago

          Look, I gave a single example out of brevity. I did ten semesters of college, every essay I’ve turned in was graded on formatting, punctuation, grammar, spelling and not factual accuracy, validity of research or strength of conclusions. Because doing that stuff is hard.

          Multiple choice or short answer tests are easy to cram for and easy to grade. Basing curricula around them encourages cram-and-dump study methods that don’t encourage actual long-term learning. You end up with students who can do high level calculus or discuss the lasting ramifications of the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo for a week or two. If AI makes it impossible to pretend we’re teaching students this way anymore, so much the better.

  • jtrek@startrek.website
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    21 hours ago

    The point of school is to learn stuff. Facts and methods. Teachers aren’t typically asking you to solve math problems or summarize a story because they need the answers.

  • AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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    21 hours ago

    Schooling in which you learn to do arithmetic, write reports, research and collaborate on projects will be replaced with reverse-centaur training, in which you are trained to respond to headset commands more quickly, preparing you to join the only remaining part of the workforce

  • Phoenixz
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    20 hours ago

    This guy is a Republican, I guarantee it.

    Republicans have been working hard for decades to sabotage education and dumb down the US population, because a dumb population is easier to control and manipulate. Whenever I see another “school is dumb” type post, it always ends with Republicans