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Instructions how to donate your voice to Buki 2.0 via the Mozilla Common Voice platform. Macedonian speakers, help us train our open-source transcription tool
Буки/Buki is already better than the transcription models of Meta and Open AI If you are a Macedonian speaker, donate your voice for Buki 2.0
We can never remember how many Gauss are in 1 Tesla (10,000) and how many satoshis are in 1 bitcoin (100,000,000). Today we realized that bitcoin/satoshi = (Tesla/Gauss)^2 and our mnemonic needs are satisfied for the day
There's a popular theory by Erik Hoel that we stopped producing Einsteins because we perverted the concept of tutoring and mentorship. In the past tutors were world-class scientists who expanded the horizons of their gifted students. Today tutors are pragmatic professionals who help our children score high on standardized tests. Our Foundation is providing mentorship of the old-school kind. Our director’s essay on this topic is personable, eloquent, and inspiring
“[…] instead of Americans earning money via creating manufactured goods that people want, the American government prints money, gives the money to politically favored corporations, bureaucrats, and workers, who then export the dollars in return for cheap HDTV’s.”
“Many studies have documented a decreasing risk tolerance in scientific research. A core driver has been the dominance of citation-driven metrics to evaluate, fund, and promote scientific research — a process that parallels the ever-increasing bureaucratization of science itself (interestingly, as measured by the increase of academic administration staff, the onset of this trend coincides with the first safetyism conferences that were held in the 1970s). Citations have become the decisive factor in publications, grant-making, and tenure. Consequently, as crowded scientific fields attract the most citations, high-risk, exploratory science, in turn, gets less attention and funding. And, in addition to the risk aversion of scientists, ethics committees, peer reviewers, and commissions are now slowing down scientific progress. This scientific risk aversion, coupled with the increase in bureaucratization, helps explain why scientific productivity has been significantly declining over the past decades." Byrne Hobart and Tobias Huber on the dangers of safetyism in science https://www.piratewires.com/p/against-safetyism