POPULARITY
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: EA is good, actually, published by Amy Labenz on November 28, 2023 on The Effective Altruism Forum. The last year has been tough The last year has been tough for EA. FTX blew up in the most spectacular way and SBF has been found guilty of one of the biggest frauds in history. I was heartbroken to learn that someone I trusted hurt so many people, was heartbroken for the people who lost their money, and was heartbroken about the projects I thought would happen that no longer will. The media piled on, and on, and on. The community has processed the shock in all sorts of ways - some more productive than others. Many have published thoughtful reflections. Many have tried to come up with ways to ensure that nothing like this will ever happen again. Some people rallied, some people looked for who to blame, we all felt betrayed. I personally spent November-February working more than full-time on a secondment to Effective Ventures. Meanwhile, there were several other disappointments in the EA community. Like many people, I was tired. Then in April, I went on maternity leave and stepped away from the Forum and my work to spend time with my children (Earnie and Teddy) and to get to know my new baby Charley. I came back to an amazing team who continued running event after event in my absence. In the last few months I attended my first events since FTX and I wasn't sure how I would feel. But when I attended the events and heard from serious, conscientious people who want to think hard about the world's most pressing problems I felt so grateful and inspired. I teared up watching Lizka, Arden, and Kuhan give the opening talk at EAG Boston, which tries to reinforce and improve important cultural norms around mistakes, scout mindset, deference, and how to interact in a world where AI risk is becoming more mainstream. I went home so motivated! And then, OpenAI. I'm still processing it and I don't know what happened. Almost nobody does. I have spent far too much time searching for answers online. I've seen some thoughtful write-ups and also many many posts that criticize a version of EA that doesn't match my experience. This has sometimes made me feel sad or defensive, wanting to reply to explain or argue. I haven't actually done that because I'm generally pretty shy about posting and I'm not sure how to engage. Whatever happened, it seems the results are likely bad for AI safety. Whatever happened, I think I've reached diminishing returns on my doomscrolling, and I'm ready to get back to work. The last year has been hard and I want us to learn from our mistakes, but I don't want us to over-update and decide EA is bad. I think EA is good! Sometimes when people say EA, they're referring to the ideas like "let's try to do the most good" and "AI safety". Other times, they're referring to the community that's clustered around these ideas. I want to defend both, though separately. The EA community is good I think there are plenty of issues with the community. I live in Detroit and so I can't really speak to all of the different clusters of people who currently call themselves EA or "EA-adjacent". I'm sure some of them have bad epistemics or are not trustworthy and I don't want to vouch for everyone. I also haven't been part of that many other communities. I am a lawyer, I have been a part of the civil rights community, and I engage with other online communities (mom groups, au pair host parents, etc.). All that said, my experience in EA spaces (both online and in-person) has been significantly more dedicated to celebrating and creating a culture of collaborative truth-seeking and kindness. For example: We have online posting norms that I'd love to see adopted by other online spaces I participate in (I've mostly stopped posting in the mom groups or host parent groups because when I raise an ...
Jigistä on tullut parissa vuosikymmenessä ylivoimaisesti käytetyin heittoviehe kesäisessä kuhan pyynnissä. Monet muutkin viehetyypit soveltuvat kuitenkin tarkoitukseen. Parhaimmillaan ne voivat olla jopa yhtä tehokkaita tai tehokkaampiakin. Vaihtelua ne tarjoavat varmasti. Monien viehetyyppien käytössä on yhtymäkohtia jigaukseen, mikä on omiaan helpottamaan uuden opettelua Kalastustoimittaja Jari Rannisto tarjoaa ajatuksia, omia kokemuksiaan ja vinkkejä aiheesta. Kalastajan Radion mahdollistaa Maa- ja metsätalousministeriö ja kalastonhoitomaksuvarat.
Lahko jih naredimo iz kuhanega ali sveže naribanega krompirja. Kuhan krompir stisnemo, dodamo maščobo (maslo in olje), jajce, sol, drobtine. Oblikujemo polpete (zajemamo z žlico), v ponvi na olju opečemo z obeh strani (da dobijo lepo barvo). To je priloga k solati in jed, pri kateri lahko uporabimo krompir, ki je ostal prejšnji dan. Na drug način pa sveži krompir olupimo in naribamo. Dodamo jajce, drobtine in sol, oblikujemo in zajemamo z žlico, položimo na olje in še malo potapljamo ter spečemo.
Lahko jih naredimo iz kuhanega ali sveže naribanega krompirja. Kuhan krompir stisnemo, dodamo maščobo (maslo in olje), jajce, sol, drobtine. Oblikujemo polpete (zajemamo z žlico), v ponvi na olju opečemo z obeh strani (da dobijo lepo barvo). To je priloga k solati in jed, pri kateri lahko uporabimo krompir, ki je ostal prejšnji dan. Na drug način pa sveži krompir olupimo in naribamo. Dodamo jajce, drobtine in sol, oblikujemo in zajemamo z žlico, položimo na olje in še malo potapljamo ter spečemo.
Attendees discuss models of longtermist movement-building, hear about recent project ideas, and participate in a project brainstorming exercise.View the original talk and video here.Effective Altruism is a social movement dedicated to finding ways to do the most good possible, whether through charitable donations, career choices, or volunteer projects. EA Global conferences are gatherings for EAs to meet.Effective Altruism is a social movement dedicated to finding ways to do the most good possible, whether through charitable donations, career choices, or volunteer projects. EA Global conferences are gatherings for EAs to meet. You can also listen to this talk along with its accompanying video on YouTube.
Rohin Shah (DeepMind), Lewis Hammond (Cooperative AI) and Jamie Bernardi (Centre for Effective Altruism) host a Q&A session on careers directed at solving the AI alignment problem.View the original talk and video here.Effective Altruism is a social movement dedicated to finding ways to do the most good possible, whether through charitable donations, career choices, or volunteer projects. EA Global conferences are gatherings for EAs to meet.Effective Altruism is a social movement dedicated to finding ways to do the most good possible, whether through charitable donations, career choices, or volunteer projects. EA Global conferences are gatherings for EAs to meet. You can also listen to this talk along with its accompanying video on YouTube.
Definisi perselingkuhan itu apa sih sebenarnya bestieeeee, dengerin ya mbakbel jelasin apa sih perselingkuhan itu? Cekidot --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mamabears/message
In this episode of 80k After Hours, Rob Wiblin interviews Kuhan Jeyapragasan about effective altruism university groups.From 2015 to 2020, Kuhan did an undergrad and then a master's in maths and computer science at Stanford — and did a lot to organise and improve the EA group on campus.Links to learn more, highlights and full transcript.Rob and Kuhan cover: The challenges of making a group appealing and accepting of everyone The concrete things Kuhan did to grow the successful Stanford EA group Whether local groups are turning off some people who should be interested in effective altruism, and what they could do differently Lessons Kuhan learned from Stanford EA The Stanford Existential Risks Initiative (SERI) Who this episode is for: People already involved in EA university groups People interested in getting involved in EA university groups Who this episode isn't for: People who've never heard of ‘effective altruism groups' People who've never heard of ‘effective altruism' People who've never heard of ‘university' Get this episode by subscribing to our more experimental podcast on the world's most pressing problems and how to solve them: type ‘80k After Hours' into your podcasting app. Or read the transcript below.Producer: Keiran HarrisAudio mastering: Ryan KesslerTranscriptions: Katy Moore
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Some advice the CEA groups team gives to new university group organizers, published by jessica mccurdy on July 29, 2022 on The Effective Altruism Forum. TLDR: Here are some key ideas we tell new uni group organizers during UGAP kickoff: Prioritize truth-seeking by being honest, open, humble, and making learning a priority. Build a deep community that seriously engages with EA ideas by focusing on the most engaged group members, making sure they have the resources they need to take their engagement as far as they want to go, and fostering strong social bonds through genuine fun. Be serious but approachable by not being too salesy. Not everyone is going to agree with EA ideas, and that is okay. Your work matters, you aren't alone, and we are excited to see what comes! The use of “I” in this refers to me (Jessica McCurdy). This post was reviewed by other members of the CEA groups team (Jesse Rothman, Rob Gledhill, and Jake McKinnon) but the mistakes are my own. This does not represent CEA's opinions as a whole and wasn't reviewed by people on other teams at CEA. Thank you to Matt Burtell for also giving feedback on an earlier draft of this post. I am incredibly grateful for Justis Mills who created the first draft of this based on our kickoff presentation. Intro Over the past quarter, the CEA uni groups team has been focusing on scaling up support for university EA groups. In particular, we publicly launched our University Group Accelerator Program (UGAP) which aims to help new groups get started and grow. One important function of UGAP is that it gives us an opportunity to make sure new university groups are aligned on current best practices and our best guesses at how we should be framing university community building. We hope that this increases the quality, epistemics, and impact of new university groups. In the UGAP kickoff session, we share some key framings and advice for organizing EA groups. We did not come up with this advice ourselves, rather we have pulled from various resources and highlighted the things that aligned with what we have seen from mentoring groups. In particular, a lot of the specific wording and framing comes from a presentation given by the Global Challenges Project, though some of what is written here may diverge from what they think. We also do not think this advice is exhaustive and we hope that it will grow and evolve along with exploration in community building. These are our current best guesses. This post won't be able to go into full detail on why we think each of these things but we hope to produce more content like that in the future. I should also note that these suggestions are a bit more centered on “how to prevent your group from going poorly than how to make your group really great”. I think the latter is super important and I think that Kuhan's reflections on running Stanford EA and SERI do a good job of this (and we have all the UGAP groups read this post too!). The advice in this post applies to many groups, but UGAP groups are typically very new which is why we first start with these key ideas. What we say in UGAP kickoff Prioritize Truth-seeking Stay Humble and Be Really Honest When you're in a position of authority, such as a group leader, it can be tempting to project an aura of (over)-confidence. EA ideas are really complicated, and virtually nobody knows everything going on at the forefront. Beyond virtue and norm considerations, it is really difficult to reliably represent yourself to very smart people (or anyone, for that matter) as understanding something you really don't. Furthermore, the most promising potential EAs are likely to think of questions that nobody has adequately posed or addressed yet; telling them you just don't know the answer will likely signal that you are trustworthy and increase the chances tha...
Would we travel into space? Depends on how far you are wanting to go. Links: For All Mankind DeuceGoneWild named this week's episode! Check out our dctvPedia page (special thanks to j0atm0n) Next week: Just the two of us! Our Patrons kick ass! Thank you so much! Check out Let's NOT Talk About Thrones Find Tom Merritt's ‘Pilot […]
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Questions That Lead to Impactful Conversations, published by Akash on March 24, 2022 on The Effective Altruism Forum. Context We often know the answers to questions that can help us dramatically improve our impact/productivity/happiness/health/etc. This became particularly salient to us after we learned techniques and saw how helpful they were. Examples include: Resolve Cycles (think of a problem in your life, set a five minute timer, and solve your problem, or set a five minute timer to think of a plan to solve your problem, and then set another five minute timer and pick a harder problem) Murphyjitsu (ask yourself “How surprised would I be if my current plan were unsuccessful after the deadline passed?”, and “How can I make myself more surprised?”, and then repeatedly iterating). Hamming Questions (asking "what are the most important problems in your field? Why aren't you working on them?") We (Akash and Kuhan) also often ask questions to try to improve others' impact/productivity/happiness/health, form close relationships, and produce valuable conversations. Questions can help us understand new concepts and paradigms, generate novel ideas and connections, notice our confusion and holes in our understanding, and make friends. We wanted to compile a list of the best questions to ask in different scenarios - one-off questions, questions that should be asked regularly, both to ourselves and others, questions to make meetings better, and more. We'd be excited for readers to also suggest questions they've gotten mileage out of/have enjoyed asking and answering in the comments. The NYT published a list of questions that lead to love. Here's a list of questions that (often) lead to impactful conversations. List of Questions Life Optimization Call Questions credit to Neel Nanda for bringing many of these questions to our attention What do you think are the most important problems? Why aren't you working on them? (Hamming questions) What is most holding you back? What are your biggest bottlenecks? Suppose that this meeting increases your lifetime productivity/impact/happiness/motivation by 2x. What happened? What are the projects you've spent >=10 hours on in the last month? Rate each out of 10 for impact, and write a brief theory of impact. Do you endorse this? What is your personal theory of impact? How do your actions concretely reduce existential risk? Do you consistently feel motivated about what you work on? What goes wrong? Give a concrete example? How frequently do you use obligations to motivate yourself? Do you feel guilty and anxious all of the time? What probability would you put that you have any of insomnia, ADHD, depression, anxiety, bipolar? How are your physical health, sleep, exercise, diet, hydration? What niggling health issues are you ignoring? Are there other important health issues I'm missing? Have you spent at least a full-time week solving this? Why not? Please fill out this depression questionnaire and anxiety questionnaire and consider next steps depending on the results. What is the biggest mistake you've made in the last 6 months? Have you successfully changed the default path of the world such that such a mistake is very unlikely to happen again? Suppose you leave this conversation feeling super inspired and confident your life has changed, and in practice nothing changes. How surprised are you? Bonus: Has this happened before? What went wrong? Suppose you leave this conversation with some concrete action points that are obviously good ideas that will majorly improve your life. What are they? Make them concrete and give deadlines. What are the biggest and sharpest trade-offs in your life right now? What are the costs and benefits of each option? Set a 5 minute timer and brainstorm third alternatives, that capture some of the benefits of each a...
COVID Gas and Tayrot Readings Yeah, this one goes places. Quiz Receipts: It's Kuhan; we don't need no stinking receipts We record this show live every Sunday at 4pm Pacific on diamondclub.tv and twitch.tv/ritualmisery. Check out our dctvPedia page (special thanks to j0atm0n) Next week: Artemis?! Our Patrons kick ass! Thank you so much! Check out Let's […]
Have a Drink by Flo(Void)Curatt Guest : Paul-Kuhan (Smash Hit Combo) Smash Hit Combo https://www.facebook.com/shc.officiel Paul Kuhan : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaAEK3p72OFII2pWs93VfVQ Florent Curatola aka Flo(Void)Curatt [Cc] :: #TalkShow #Metal Connect with Flo! Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/flovoidcuratt Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/flovoidcuratt Twitter : https://ww.twitter.com/flovoidcuratt WhatsApp : +1(403) 681 9483 Mail : flovoidcuratt@gmail.com Flo's Bands! The Black Russian's https://www.facebook.com/theblackrussians Smash Hit Combo https://www.facebook.com/shc.officiel --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Asiantuntijoina Heidi Kinnunen, Jaakko Kullberg, Juha Laaksonen ja Henry Väre. Juontajana Minna Pyykkö.
Man, Riker's head is kind of terrifying. Or maybe I should say that the way the writers picture us picturing the inside of Riker's head is terrifying. Kuhan's website is http://iamkuhan.com/ and he can also be found on Twitter at https://twitter.com/kuhan. The alternate episode with Derek is here: http://www.vanvelding.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Future-Imperfect.mp3
Tuore tutkimus toi uutta tietoa yhden Suomen arvostetuimman kalan eli kuhan liikkumisesta ja ravinnonkäytöstä. Kuhan todettiin olevan vaelluskala, joten kalakantoja on tarpeen säädellä myös järvikohtaisesti. Kuhatutkimuksesta kertoo yliopistotutkija Hannu Huuskonen.
Ranualainen Markku Kuha kaipaa entisaikojen yhteisöllisyyttä ja elävää maaseutua. Hänen mielestään ihmiset ovat hukanneet aitouden ja yhteyden luontoon, mutta muutos parempaan on onneksi käynnissä. Kuha on biodynaaminen maanviljelijä, joka elää ja työskentelee kotitilallaan Ranualla. Elämää ja työtä rytmittävät luonnon ja taivaankappalaiden kiertokulku, ja kierrossa tilalla ovat myös ravinteet. Ruoka tulee omasta maasta, ja se, mikä ei ihmisille kelpaa, menee eläimille. Markku Kuhan mielestä ihminen on sitä mitä hän syö, ja terve ravinto pitää myös ihmisen terveenä ja onnellisena. Hänen mielestään siinä piilee ratkaisu moniin ongelmiin. Ohjelman on toimittanut Sandra Järvenpää.
Verkoston voimalla tuodaan valta takaisin alkutuottajalle. Miksi luonto, eläimet ja ihmiset sairastavat nykyään? Miksi pellot menevät huonoon kuntoon? Mihin katosi lapsuuden maaseutuparatiisi leppäkerttuineen ja kastematoineen? Pitääkö saada tuhat lehmää, vai voisiko elannon tienata jopa kolmella Kobe-tasoisella? Terveyttään tai maata hoitava ihminen on uudessa "hierarkkiassa" ylimpänä, ei enää kasvoton kemikaalimyönteinen koneistosysteemi. Hierarkkian korvaa verkostot jotka syntyy molemminpuolisesta halusta, kiinnostuksesta, inspiraatiosta ja arvostuksesta. Sinun uniikkia tuotetta arvostava unelma-asiakas voi löytyä vaikka Saksasta.
DigiExpoista selvinneet kertovat karua tarinaansa. Kahdeksannen tuotantovuoden kahdeksas jakso.
Download Video | Youtube Link The Green Lantern Spotlight kicks off our first beta episode with a bang! Kuhan goes to C2E2 and kicks it with a few former Green Lantern artists and writers. Plus, be sure to stick around to … Continued
Patrick, Shadowguy, Ronaketh, and Ekaproxy guide Brian and Justin through Chatrealm. Will they finally find their way home?
The 4Chan Military attacks Chatrealm and Justin and Brian find themselves drawn into the middle of the battle. Can anyone fend off the massive horde of 4Chan?
Episode 1 – Eight Months Later… Listen to Kuhan, West, Prime, and Ben as they discuss the highs, but mostly lows, of Flash Rebirth and Blackest Night: Flash and how they feel about the future of the Flash ongoing! Also, old news… Advertisements
It's an Adobeshop smackdown between Dodd Vickers, petefic, and Kuhan! Who will win???
It's an Adobeshop smackdown between Dodd Vickers, petefic, and Kuhan! Who will win???