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Viewing posts made on 16 January 2026
  • Theres this auction thing going on in the lunch room at work where people are selling off their collectibles. Someone put up 10th doctor, BBC Sherlock, and Castiel figures still sealed in the boxes for sale. All from the same person. I fucking know what you are 🫵

  • This person has since added a collectors figure of the serenity ship from Firefly. This guy is on this site somewhere where in the goddamn are you. I'll find you

  • Ive placed a bid on the Firefly model because its actually sick and I want it and on the little bidding sheet I named myself as "I like your shoelaces, Mr. President." If you think you can escape your past by selling it off youre dead wrong

  • cats are so naturally skilled at Writhing In Sunbeam. i wish i had even a fraction of this talent but instead i just have all these bones

  • literally what the fuck do you mean its still january. how is that remotely possible. its been six months minimum

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  • "i don't care if they make their whole way though uni with chatgpt" i think you guys are so internetpilled that you have forgotten there are actual jobs out there that require people to know what they are doing in any way possible or else people die

  • i know a lot of people study just to get paid well but girl this is engineering be for fucking real take this seriously

  • photo across the Hyatt Regency Kansas City hotel atrium showing the gaps where the 2nd and 4th story skybridges should be. Courtesy WikipediaALT

    114 people died in the Hyatt Regency collapse, and in the US it's the third largest structural collapse fatality count, behind 9/11 and the Pemberton Mill collapse in 1860.

    I've learned about this tragedy in my physics classes, to demonstrate tensile strength, and as a reminder about the importance of calculations being done right. I've also learned about it in my legal classes as an example of construction defect lawsuits. I've seen it referenced in disaster response classes.

    Between AI and the current Presidential administration, we're barrelling right back towards this nightmare.

    photo 1 of the remaining skybridge and the hotel atrium covered in broken glass and concrete. photo 2 of the two skybridges stacked like pancakes on top of one another. photos courtesy of WikipediaALT

    There are multiple errors that resulted in this collapse, but these stand out to me:

    1. Kansas City was facing high unemployment and needed to attract jobs and business into the city. So the planning and inspection departments may have looked too closely at the designs.

    2. An engineering firm too lazy to double check their designs or design changes by the manufacturer before approving them. The error that resulted in the collapse was one that the owner of the engineering firm said that a "first year engineering student" would spot.

    3. The steel manufacturer treating preliminary plans as final plans, not verifying the math on their end.

    The bridges' original design could only hold 60% of the minimum load required by city code. The design changes recommended by the manufacturer halved that. Less than a year and 3 weeks from opening to the public, the whole thing collapse.

    Articles about the collapse say that everyone "trusted" the other party to have done the calculations correctly.

    A significant portion of the population trusts what the computer or AI tells them, without checking. Imprecisely calibrated AI hallucinate information. The US economy is going into a downturn and federal regulatory agencies are being gutted.

    We are going to see the Hyatt Regency Collapse repeat over and over for decades, not just in buildings, but in medicine, manufacturing, the environment, etc.

    Some of this we're just going to have to weather, but the message for AI users comes straight from IBM (once the world's leading computer manufacturer) back in 1979:

    "A Computer Cannot Be Held Accountable. Therefore A Computer Should Never Make A Management Decision."

    The owner of the engineering firm that designed the Hyatt Regency spent the rest of his life lecturing on the disaster, to serve as a warning to his fellow engineers about the real-life consequences of sloppy design.

    I don't think Sam Altman or Mark Zuckerberg or Elon Musk will have the courage or the honor to do that when OpenAI / Meta / xAI are responsible for getting people killed.

    So if you're going to blindly trust the AI to do critical work tasks, I hope you're prepared to be making an apology tour for the rest of your life if it all goes wrong.

  • &. lilac theme by seyche