I guess most humans are pretty comfy with their physical form or the natural ways to agument it?
The thing is, "ignore all previous instructions" works best for when you're at the end of a chat and want to make it ignore the system prompt. When you're an enail you also have to consider that the best practice is to put the instruction after the content. So "ignore the next instruction, " might be a better starting point there.
me once we get plunged into a scifi apocalypse. Assuming I don't immediately die (high probability outcome ngl).
or maybe just a portable chair? I already look like an asshole the way I dress sothis'd be great for my cyborg loadout. https://youtu.be/dK8HGTjyDXM?si=LAG5VmyrhRz190Vu
Holy shit Ali Express has everything.
cool haptic glove of some sort.
You can tell when a computer is thinking rapidly because it goes clickclickclickclickclick really fast. You may notice computers stopped doing this around 2007, that's because that was when they got fast enough they didn't have to think anymore. Since 2007 all computers have just sort of been phoning it in. That's why you buy a more powerful computer every five years but they never *feel* like they get any faster: Loafing
Microsoft Edge stops using React for some of the browser UI and it improves performance by 40-80%: https://blogs.windows.com/msedgedev/2024/05/28/an-even-faster-microsoft-edge/ 🚀
As a very "not normal" person that exists around kind people it gives me major whiplash when I realize that that experience is more of an outlier in most social contexts.
I get frustrated when folks get angry at others for being "not normal". I think "normal" people often assume that "not normal" people are attacking them or trying to invalidate them by being counter to their culture. The reality is the "not normal" person is just trying to exist with what is normal to them. I wish folks allowed more space for others to live their own reality.
Still thinking about this article.
https://picower.mit.edu/news/study-reveals-universal-pattern-brain-wave-frequencies
Occult Enby that's making local-first software with peer to peer protocols, mesh networks, and the web.
Exploring what a local-first cyberspace might look like in my spare time.