30 Recently Popular Files

MLTSHP
I love to save the best stuff on MLTSHP! Like more things to let me know what’s good!
Join MLTSHP! »
Join MLTSHP, support the site and post something yourself!
alt text
A mirror lying on grass reflecting the sky, engraved to resemble the tarot card The Fool, except that there is no main figure on the card. Yet.
alt text
three turquoise Fiat Panda cars parked side by side: except the middle one is a tiny slice barely wider that the headlight. It's a driveable one-off electric modification
alt text
A post from linked in. It reads...
Mark Butcher
Digital sustainability & Gree...
3d
1) Sandra used Al to write a report
2) Bill used Al to summarise the report
3) Bill used Al to write questions about the report
4) Sandra used Al to respond to the questions
5) Bill used Al to create a presentation about the report
6) Jane used Al to take notes from the presentation
7) Jane's team used Al to summarise the notes she shared
No one wrote the report, no one ever read the report, no one understood the questions or the answers.
No business value was achieved
But but but Al adds business value.
352 Comments + Follow 98 Reposts
Mark Butcher
Digital sustainability & Gree...
3d
1) Sandra used Al to write a report
2) Bill used Al to summarise the report
3) Bill used Al to write questions about the report
4) Sandra used Al to respond to the questions
5) Bill used Al to create a presentation about the report
6) Jane used Al to take notes from the presentation
7) Jane's team used Al to summarise the notes she shared
No one wrote the report, no one ever read the report, no one understood the questions or the answers.
No business value was achieved
But but but Al adds business value.
352 Comments + Follow 98 Reposts
Please pretend this is the future. The stock prices of Meta, Alphabet, And Amazon desperately need this to not turn out like 3d televisions.
I work in AI (non-generative) and can tell you that genAI is utter crap for most purposes involving critical thinking, authorship, and everything else that makes individual endeavor valuable.
Claude is nice for bringing me a top-line summary of something I know nothing about, but it also hallucinates. And it's supposed to be one of the good ones.
And yet, every college student, MBA, and corporate exec in the world trusts genAI as if it were an oracle.
Claude is nice for bringing me a top-line summary of something I know nothing about, but it also hallucinates. And it's supposed to be one of the good ones.
And yet, every college student, MBA, and corporate exec in the world trusts genAI as if it were an oracle.
@MackReed I work in analytics and have been studying machine learning and AI as a part of my field for a long time. I really appreciate how it can work 'like magic' for some things. It is actually very good at specific stuff.
I just wish it wasn't being sold to normal people like it is actually capable of telling them which settings to use on a washing machine if you upload a photo of the dirty clothes.
"Yeah but it can read the tag...." - NO. Stop that. Your clothing tag has a set of symbols that could easily be trained using image recognition on a raspberry pi in an afternoon by a motivated middle-school student able to read and follow instructions. It does not need to be tied to a power-sink data center to do it in literally the least efficient way possible and then still have a reasonably large chance to get the answer wrong. Large-scale generative AI is not trustworthy and very expensive, just like the billionaires that are trying to shove this unwanted crap into the market.
I just wish it wasn't being sold to normal people like it is actually capable of telling them which settings to use on a washing machine if you upload a photo of the dirty clothes.
"Yeah but it can read the tag...." - NO. Stop that. Your clothing tag has a set of symbols that could easily be trained using image recognition on a raspberry pi in an afternoon by a motivated middle-school student able to read and follow instructions. It does not need to be tied to a power-sink data center to do it in literally the least efficient way possible and then still have a reasonably large chance to get the answer wrong. Large-scale generative AI is not trustworthy and very expensive, just like the billionaires that are trying to shove this unwanted crap into the market.
Every tech company and investment desperately wants LLM _now_ so they can have a labor force they can deduct on their taxes like they do any other business expense. Every media company wants to get out of royalty payments and residual shares, etc.
A sleeper clause from the first trump admins tax cuts has gone into effect that means tech companies can no longer deduct payroll for the R&D teams as an operational expense. In case you’re wondering where also those big tech company layoffs came from recently.
A sleeper clause from the first trump admins tax cuts has gone into effect that means tech companies can no longer deduct payroll for the R&D teams as an operational expense. In case you’re wondering where also those big tech company layoffs came from recently.
alt text
Gozer the Destructor of Sweaters
alt text
A young man sits in a chair with headphones on, his eyes closed. Appears to be deep in thought. Near him is a young girl staring at the boy intensely. A table full of various cheeses sits on a table behind the young couple
In regards to https://mltshp.com/p/1R4NF
alt text
An illustration showing a chair (with long spindly legs), a side table, and a side table with noodly legs, along with a number of stylized plants (some green in a red pot; some, inverted, red in a green pot). Scattered around the illustration are the words FUCK AROUND AND FIND OUT.
source: https://www.potato.horse
alt text
A burnt out hotend
Looks like I need a new one.
(It's the part of a 3D printer that heats the plastic.)
(It's the part of a 3D printer that heats the plastic.)
alt text
upside down photograph of an empty movie theater multiplex lobby
source: https://www.reddit.com/r...
What an exceptionally confusing photo
@stereoplex Well, understandably….they’ve made the letters in the Welcome sign backwards!
ǝsɐǝld sʇǝʞɔıʇ
I’ve had this dream
@m3moellering It doesn't help that I saw it within 15 minutes of walking up
alt text
But hark!
and they’re like, it’s better than yours
alt text
A dummy in a taxi driver costume (bluejacket, peaked cap, button down whirt, black tie) says over his shoulder to the huge, exhausted looking man in his back seat, “Hell of a day, isn’t it?”
alt text
Porcelain vulture with red, black, feathers on white tree stump.
source: https://www.artic.edu/artworks...
"As elector of Saxony and king of Poland, Augustus II (r. 1694/97–1733) presided over the ambitious transformation of his capital, Dresden, through advances in architecture, the arts, science, and technology. Produced beginning in 1710 through royal sponsorship and funding, Meissen porcelain was an exclusive luxury good of its time. Around 1728 Augustus conceived of replicating the animal kingdom in porcelain for display in a Baroque palace that he was transforming into a showcase for his collections of Asian and Meissen ceramics. This porcelain zoo was intended for the long gallery on the main floor of the palace. By 1733, the year the king died, more than thirty different models of birds and almost forty animals had been made, many by the sculptor Johann Joachim Kändler, who worked at Meissen from 1731 to 1775. Kändler drew this vulture from life, which allowed him to animate his work with the creature’s quintessential spirit. Such porcelain animals remain the most vivid expression of Augustus’s wish, as elector and king, to possess and rule over the natural world.
As elector of Saxony and king of Poland, Augustus II (r. 1694/97–1733) presided over the ambitious transformation of his capital, Dresden, through advances in architecture, the arts, science, and technology. Produced beginning in 1710 through royal sponsorship and funding, Meissen porcelain was an exclusive luxury good of its time. Around 1728 Augustus conceived of replicating the animal kingdom in porcelain for display in a Baroque palace that he was transforming into a showcase for his collections of Asian and Meissen ceramics. This porcelain zoo was intended for the long gallery on the main floor of the palace. By 1733, the year the king died, more than thirty different models of birds and almost forty animals had been made, many by the sculptor Johann Joachim Kändler, who worked at Meissen from 1731 to 1775. Kändler drew this vulture from life, which allowed him to animate his work with the creature’s quintessential spirit. Such porcelain animals remain the most vivid expression of Augustus’s wish, as elector and king, to possess and rule over the natural world."
"As elector of Saxony and king of Poland, Augustus II (r. 1694/97–1733) presided over the ambitious transformation of his capital, Dresden, through advances in architecture, the arts, science, and technology. Produced beginning in 1710 through royal sponsorship and funding, Meissen porcelain was an exclusive luxury good of its time. Around 1728 Augustus conceived of replicating the animal kingdom in porcelain for display in a Baroque palace that he was transforming into a showcase for his collections of Asian and Meissen ceramics. This porcelain zoo was intended for the long gallery on the main floor of the palace. By 1733, the year the king died, more than thirty different models of birds and almost forty animals had been made, many by the sculptor Johann Joachim Kändler, who worked at Meissen from 1731 to 1775. Kändler drew this vulture from life, which allowed him to animate his work with the creature’s quintessential spirit. Such porcelain animals remain the most vivid expression of Augustus’s wish, as elector and king, to possess and rule over the natural world.
As elector of Saxony and king of Poland, Augustus II (r. 1694/97–1733) presided over the ambitious transformation of his capital, Dresden, through advances in architecture, the arts, science, and technology. Produced beginning in 1710 through royal sponsorship and funding, Meissen porcelain was an exclusive luxury good of its time. Around 1728 Augustus conceived of replicating the animal kingdom in porcelain for display in a Baroque palace that he was transforming into a showcase for his collections of Asian and Meissen ceramics. This porcelain zoo was intended for the long gallery on the main floor of the palace. By 1733, the year the king died, more than thirty different models of birds and almost forty animals had been made, many by the sculptor Johann Joachim Kändler, who worked at Meissen from 1731 to 1775. Kändler drew this vulture from life, which allowed him to animate his work with the creature’s quintessential spirit. Such porcelain animals remain the most vivid expression of Augustus’s wish, as elector and king, to possess and rule over the natural world."
alt text
Two planter boxes are united by a mesh cow panel arched between them, supporting several tomato plants that have grown up to be more than five feet tall when the photo was taken.
You may recall last year’s post about my tomato mystery (the closer box in this photo routinely had identical varietals cared for identically produce plants half the size of the opposite box). This year I have made sure to provide double or treble the water to the “weaker” box after last year seemed to confirm that the water just drained faster in that box for some reason. That seems to have done the trick - it not only has multiple volunteer plants from leftover seeds from last year starting to flower now, but the plants generally match the height of those on the other side. Victory!
Unfortunately, very long story short, we were several weeks later than usual getting them I. The ground to begin with, so we will have only a fraction of the fruit of previous years.
Additionally, we chose a couple full-size varietals this year instead of all cherries. Hopefully they won’t all die or come ripe while we’re out of town for a couple weeks in the near future.
P.s. the red spiral in the foreground is a fun tomato support for a volunteer tomato that sprouted in the yard that I moved to a pot amongst my mint.
Unfortunately, very long story short, we were several weeks later than usual getting them I. The ground to begin with, so we will have only a fraction of the fruit of previous years.
Additionally, we chose a couple full-size varietals this year instead of all cherries. Hopefully they won’t all die or come ripe while we’re out of town for a couple weeks in the near future.
P.s. the red spiral in the foreground is a fun tomato support for a volunteer tomato that sprouted in the yard that I moved to a pot amongst my mint.
Thank you for the update. Sorry you won't get as much nom noms as you were hoping for but I'm glad you solved the conundrum and figured out the watering needs.
@samh ❤️😊❤️
alt text
Smithsonian via FB:
Revenge can be a dish served cold or simply screen-printed on Tyvek. In “Bullies,” in the collections of our Cooper Hewitt, artist Virgil Marti, got back at his childhood bullies by adding their faces to this vibrant, floral wallpaper.
Marti sourced pictures of boys who had bullied him from his junior high school yearbook. Designed in 1992, the artwork is embellished with traditional wallpaper motifs and saturated with a garish color palette. The design exploits the tension between "good taste" and "bad taste"—one of the hallmarks of a camp aesthetic. It was initially installed in the boiler room of a former elementary school in Philadelphia and then, in the restroom at the Fabric Workshop and Museum, where Marti is a master printer.
Art critic Holland Cotter described "Bullies" as “every shy, gay 98-pound weakling’s idea of sweet revenge.”
Revenge can be a dish served cold or simply screen-printed on Tyvek. In “Bullies,” in the collections of our Cooper Hewitt, artist Virgil Marti, got back at his childhood bullies by adding their faces to this vibrant, floral wallpaper.
Marti sourced pictures of boys who had bullied him from his junior high school yearbook. Designed in 1992, the artwork is embellished with traditional wallpaper motifs and saturated with a garish color palette. The design exploits the tension between "good taste" and "bad taste"—one of the hallmarks of a camp aesthetic. It was initially installed in the boiler room of a former elementary school in Philadelphia and then, in the restroom at the Fabric Workshop and Museum, where Marti is a master printer.
Art critic Holland Cotter described "Bullies" as “every shy, gay 98-pound weakling’s idea of sweet revenge.”
alt text
I've never played this game yet I somehow have second-hand nostalgia for it.
@urlnotfound
I didn’t own an n64 myself but in my group of four high school friends the one kid who did would hold epic sleepovers. We would be up until dawn playing GoldenEye and MarioKart. There was substantial skill mismatch so we would make up all sorts of goofy scenarios, adjusting the settings so that the map had no weapons but it was one shot kill, so we’d go around karate chopping at each other and laughing our heads off we essentially eye poked one another to death.
I didn’t own an n64 myself but in my group of four high school friends the one kid who did would hold epic sleepovers. We would be up until dawn playing GoldenEye and MarioKart. There was substantial skill mismatch so we would make up all sorts of goofy scenarios, adjusting the settings so that the map had no weapons but it was one shot kill, so we’d go around karate chopping at each other and laughing our heads off we essentially eye poked one another to death.
I wasn’t until a few days ago, when I rewatched it for the first time in decades, that I realized that Pierce Brosnan is in “The Long Good Friday”
it's dangerous to go alone
@urlnotfound me too!! I think it’s because of all the old-internet content that referred to it - maybe we miss those days…
@pantsrobot I very much miss the days when I thought the internet would be a net positive for society.
I thought this one was a real photo! Spooky.
alt text
@byjove on Tumblr
"I wish they could invent a medical device that temporarily transfers your symptoms and pain to the doctor treating you and it worked like a shock collar. “I think light exercise would-.” and then bam they’re rolling around the floor clutching their stomach in agony and dry heaving."
"I wish they could invent a medical device that temporarily transfers your symptoms and pain to the doctor treating you and it worked like a shock collar. “I think light exercise would-.” and then bam they’re rolling around the floor clutching their stomach in agony and dry heaving."
saving for constant use
YESYESTHISATHOUSANDTIMESTHIS
Honestly being able to experience symptoms firsthand might make diagnosis that much more effective. “Oh wow I haven’t felt this since med school but I would never forget it”
Empathy? Is this amazing new medical technique called empathy?
@BennyTheIcepick I think a lot of doctors might be surprisingly OK with this - and that goes triple for pediatricians. Of course, the ones who resisted it would be the ones most in need!
@karmakaze I REALLY need that to be a book series / movie franchise / tv series, something!
alt text
Jon Fauxvreau?
Hehehehehe…. I had a buddy in S.F. who looked a great deal like Jerry Rice. Needless to say, we didn’t pay for drinks OR ❄️❄️ whenever we went out with him!
snow? booger sugar?
alt text
A flat, barren expanse with a small platform in the middle. A large, horned monster is being lowered onto the platform, probably via a crane. The monster is a purplish orange and is holding a suitcase. To the left of the monster stands a figure wearing an orange helmet and construction vest with reflective yellow stripes. The figure is directing the crane. The ground is a dark purple; the sky is lavender. The painting is signed "Chris Silverman".
Goodbye Lenin, 2003, dir. Becker
alt text
Meryl Stripe?
@Xedrik FINE
@Xedrik We don't do "angry upvote" here but if we did you would get one from me.
Who's that lady hiding in the bedroom closet?
"I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate...."
alt text
photo by Mike Melton
source https://bsky.app/profile...
source https://bsky.app/profile...
The other day, as I was standing on tiptoe to hang up the feeder after refilling it, an Anna's buzzed in, landed on the feeder, and started chugging while I was still reaching for the hook. Probably the closest I'll get to being a Disney princess, but I'll take it.
alt text
A cedar window box contains a spiderwort plant which has small round leaves on creeping stems, cascading over the edge of the window box. A small progress pride flag has been stuck in the window box, and a berry full and tall prickly pear cactus can be seen in the background.
Our cedar window boxes are a little worse for wear, but still strong enough to carry this thriving spiderwort! I like, too that you can also see the head-high prickly pear that was just three paddles when my wife bought it for me years ago.
alt text
photo of a cat with its eyes closed right as a ball hits its head, with text on the cat that says, "Me trying to stay informed," and text on the ball reading, "Yet another devastating historical event happening."
the rest of it is like walking out in a hailstorm with tennis ball sized hail
from all the climate change
from all the climate change