Sometimes the best way to know something is to pretty much do something incredibly stupid in a safe environment and see exactly what happens.
Better this than some Jackass wannabe in his backyard.
What distinguishes him from Jackass, exactly?
He's not doing it entirely for entertainment. That's a large part of it, dude studied film in college and he has no formal training in zoology, biology, or general animal handling. He does it to inform and educate people, usually kids, about nature and wildlife. When he did his Schmitd sting pain index series he interviewed the creator, actual entomologist Justin Schmidt, who seemed to generally approve of what Peterson was doing from the perspective of educating the public.
Sometimes the best way to know something is to pretty much do something incredibly stupid in a safe environment and see exactly what happens.
Better this than some Jackass wannabe in his backyard.
What distinguishes him from Jackass, exactly?
He's not doing it entirely for entertainment. That's a large part of it, dude studied film in college and he has no formal training in zoology, biology, or general animal handling. He does it to inform and educate people, usually kids, about nature and wildlife. When he did his Schmitd sting pain index series he interviewed the creator, actual entomologist Justin Schmidt, who seemed to generally approve of what Peterson was doing from the perspective of educating the public.
Schmitd basically did the same thing himself, intentionally allowing insects to sting him to rate the level of pain, and then writing a paper about it. So two of a kind there really.
Fiendishrabbit on
"The western world sips from a poisonous cocktail: Polarisation, populism, protectionism and post-truth"
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
Sometimes the best way to know something is to pretty much do something incredibly stupid in a safe environment and see exactly what happens.
Better this than some Jackass wannabe in his backyard.
What distinguishes him from Jackass, exactly?
He takes precautions and weighs the risks before engaging in any activity. Even when he was willingly letting himself be stung by insects he had plans in place for if things went south and he often speaks with experts about things before attempting them. It's also incredibly effective to show viewers things like what their blood looks like on snake venom (no he did let himself be bitten by a snake) as well as physical reactions and feelings that come from stings or bites. People can see something like a snapping turtle and think nothing of it, but when they then see that snapping turtle move like lightning to take a very bloody chunk from someone's thumb on camera then it's clear to see what they're capable of.
It's worth pointing out that Schmidt actually uses the scale to make arguments about evolution, biology, and ecology. It's not just "oh wow this bug hurts more than this other bug"
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MayabirdPecking at the keyboardRegistered Userregular
Which resulted in a lot of dead scientists (see, for example, the "demon core" experiment.)
Somehow, I had not heard about the demon core. I kinda wish I had not looked it up now.
So...for people who don't want to watch a guy get bit but want to know about the power of the alligator snapping turtle's jaws, here's what happens when a watermelon comes too close:
Dude is replying to one of the directors of the Lego Movie telling him that his interpretation of the song "everything is awsome" in the Lego Movie is incorrect, another rando then points out this amusing error.
You know that movie Into The Wild? Where the guy decides to head in to the Alaskan wilderness (ENTIRELY UNPREPARED FOR IT) and dies? Well, people took the wrong message from that (Which is easy to do, as he was romanticized and falsely implied he didn't starve to death from being unprepared, but just ate something poisonous) and have been traveling to the bus he stayed in in the wilderness to test themselves. This has resulted in numerous rescues and even some deaths.
The abandoned bus on the Stampede Trail in Alaska -- made famous by the book and film "Into the Wild" -- has made its first journey in decades. This time by air.
Alaska Guardsmen airlifted the bus, also known as the Fairbanks Bus 142 and the "Magic Bus," Thursday afternoon, via helicopter, the Alaska National Guard said.
The decision to remove the bus in coordination with the Department of Natural Resources was made out of concern for public safety, the guard said in a statement. In its current location, near Healy, Alaska, the bus has drawn people into danger of the Alaska wilderness.
Bad news: a video is posted of a Vice President of the company responsible for services in Yosemite National Park hitting golf balls into a protected meadow from his house in the park.
Good news: he was swiftly fired after park employees collectively shit a brick
Bad news: the video is posted of a Vice President of the company responsible for services in Yosemite National Park hitting golf balls into a protected meadow from his house in the park.
Good news: he was swiftly fired after park employees collectively shit a brick
Bad news: the video is posted of a Vice President of the company responsible for services in Yosemite National Park hitting golf balls into a protected meadow from his house in the park.
Good news: he was swiftly fired after park employees collectively shit a brick
What a colossal shit weasel.
And apparently the guano doesn't fall far from the bat, as his son is a member of Turning Point USA (the folks who make the College Republicans look reasonable.)
Bad news: the video is posted of a Vice President of the company responsible for services in Yosemite National Park hitting golf balls into a protected meadow from his house in the park.
Good news: he was swiftly fired after park employees collectively shit a brick
What a colossal shit weasel.
And apparently the guano doesn't fall far from the bat, as his son is a member of Turning Point USA (the folks who make the College Republicans look reasonable.)
This comparison is unfair to guano, which has useful properties
If you train a neural net on the corpus of Peanuts comics, the result is "It's The Uncanny Valley, Charlie Brown", apparently. Along with a large dose of "SANT".
If you train a neural net on the corpus of Peanuts comics, the result is "It's The Uncanny Valley, Charlie Brown", apparently. Along with a large dose of "SANT".
Well sexism was a lot more common then, even in Sunday comics.
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MayabirdPecking at the keyboardRegistered Userregular
Remember this?
A botched restoration of a fresco in Spain. And then there was this:
They tried to fix it and the second attempt got worse somehow!
The only gone right is that after all this bad press Spain is finally considering maybe doing some regulation on art restoration so they can properly preserve their art history instead of becoming some weird magnet for campy tourism to see crazily failed restorations. People would actually need training to do art restoration, instead of any old furniture cleaner or half-blind great-grandma trying their hand at ruining old artworks.
In 2019, my Chinese business partner and I were asked to work on an aquarium project. For those of you who know me as an AR game designer, - I actually mean real aquariums with real fish and water.
So, I am very excited to show you what we have been secretly working on with our partner Edge Innovations in San Francisco. In fact, I'll be secretly gleeful if some of you will look at this video and get upset because... What you see in the video is not a real dolphin!
We contacted Edge Innovations in the US, the only ones in the world who can make stuff like this happen right now, and asked if they could help us prove to the world that realistic-looking animatronic dolphins, whales, sharks or marine dinosaurs if you like, can be developed and will look so realistic that they can fool the audience.
You are looking at an early prototype and more work will need to be done. We can get the animals to run for 10 hours without charging, with a 10-year lifespan living in saltwater together with live fish!
This video was filmed as part of a client demonstration of what sort of entertainment could be put together for an audience using animatronic dolphins, Belugas, Orcas or even a Great White. Animatronics can work all day long, don't need food and don't mind taking endless selfies with visitors. We believe this approach to themed entertainment represents a humane and sustainable future!
More wierd news, but a company is now making robot dolphins to take the place of animals used in aquariums, and in particular to allow children to experience being in the water with them.
It's not an autonomous drone, but remotely operated by a controller by the side of the pool (which does mean it can be more interactive) but the movement is pretty amazing. The robot was developed by the same company that did the animatronics for Free Willy.
I just don't see what the point of this technology even is.
Sea World, basically. Only without keeping intelligent mammals trapped for our amusement and with a few dinosaurs added for flavor.
Before following any advice, opinions, or thoughts I may have expressed in the above post, be warned: I found Keven Costners "Waterworld" to be a very entertaining film.
I just don't see what the point of this technology even is.
Dolphins shows are super popular, but actual dolphins in captivity turn into, at best, neurotic rape machines and at worst, ticking "trainer killed and dismembered in front of 1500 third graders" time bombs.
I just don't see what the point of this technology even is.
I'm having a hard time even understanding your question - what do you mean, what is the point? I can understand if this is a total epiphany for you, but that this has been the moral quandary for zoos for quite some time. especially aquariums. Especially where you take highly intelligent animals from environments where they're used to ranging hundreds or thousands of miles and confine them pools.
I just don't see what the point of this technology even is.
I'm having a hard time even understanding your question - what do you mean, what is the point? I can understand if this is a total epiphany for you, but that this has been the moral quandary for zoos for quite some time. especially aquariums. Especially where you take highly intelligent animals from environments where they're used to ranging hundreds or thousands of miles and confine them pools.
The point of the zoo or the aquarium is that there's an actual animal, that lives and breathes and has some semblance of independence and free will to act as it wishes (within the context of the zoo, admittedly). It's real.
This isn't an animal. It's a robot. It's fundamentally not real.
I agree that intelligent animals should not be kept in captivity. But the solution to that is not to put in robots and act like it's the same thing.
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Gabriel_Pitt(effective against Russian warships)Registered Userregular
I just don't see what the point of this technology even is.
I'm having a hard time even understanding your question - what do you mean, what is the point? I can understand if this is a total epiphany for you, but that this has been the moral quandary for zoos for quite some time. especially aquariums. Especially where you take highly intelligent animals from environments where they're used to ranging hundreds or thousands of miles and confine them pools.
The point of the zoo or the aquarium is that there's an actual animal, that lives and breathes and has some semblance of independence and free will to act as it wishes (within the context of the zoo, admittedly). It's real.
This isn't an animal. It's a robot. It's fundamentally not real.
I agree that intelligent animals should not be kept in captivity. But the solution to that is not to put in robots and act like it's the same thing.
I think the educational difference between a living creature and an almost perfect facsimile are essentially nonexistent.
Adding in the increased opportunities for interaction with the facsimiles I think they come out ahead.
The real things can be viewed on screens in their natural habitats.
I just don't see what the point of this technology even is.
I'm having a hard time even understanding your question - what do you mean, what is the point? I can understand if this is a total epiphany for you, but that this has been the moral quandary for zoos for quite some time. especially aquariums. Especially where you take highly intelligent animals from environments where they're used to ranging hundreds or thousands of miles and confine them pools.
The point of the zoo or the aquarium is that there's an actual animal, that lives and breathes and has some semblance of independence and free will to act as it wishes (within the context of the zoo, admittedly). It's real.
This isn't an animal. It's a robot. It's fundamentally not real.
I agree that intelligent animals should not be kept in captivity. But the solution to that is not to put in robots and act like it's the same thing.
I think the educational difference between a living creature and an almost perfect facsimile are essentially nonexistent.
Adding in the increased opportunities for interaction with the facsimiles I think they come out ahead.
The real things can be viewed on screens in their natural habitats.
Posts
A first aid kit.
Adam Savage put it pretty nicely while on Mythbusters. "The only thing that separates us from pyromaniacs is a piece of ballistic glass".
He's not doing it entirely for entertainment. That's a large part of it, dude studied film in college and he has no formal training in zoology, biology, or general animal handling. He does it to inform and educate people, usually kids, about nature and wildlife. When he did his Schmitd sting pain index series he interviewed the creator, actual entomologist Justin Schmidt, who seemed to generally approve of what Peterson was doing from the perspective of educating the public.
Which is why my favourite Mythbusters myth was "our ballistic glass is bulletproof".
Schmitd basically did the same thing himself, intentionally allowing insects to sting him to rate the level of pain, and then writing a paper about it. So two of a kind there really.
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
He takes precautions and weighs the risks before engaging in any activity. Even when he was willingly letting himself be stung by insects he had plans in place for if things went south and he often speaks with experts about things before attempting them. It's also incredibly effective to show viewers things like what their blood looks like on snake venom (no he did let himself be bitten by a snake) as well as physical reactions and feelings that come from stings or bites. People can see something like a snapping turtle and think nothing of it, but when they then see that snapping turtle move like lightning to take a very bloody chunk from someone's thumb on camera then it's clear to see what they're capable of.
This is basically a lot of science up to the 20th century.
Which resulted in a lot of dead scientists (see, for example, the "demon core" experiment.)
Somehow, I had not heard about the demon core. I kinda wish I had not looked it up now.
So...for people who don't want to watch a guy get bit but want to know about the power of the alligator snapping turtle's jaws, here's what happens when a watermelon comes too close:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bgSurkfqXuI
Radiation does not fuck around, and it has no mercy.
Twitter is so hard to follow
Dude is replying to one of the directors of the Lego Movie telling him that his interpretation of the song "everything is awsome" in the Lego Movie is incorrect, another rando then points out this amusing error.
D3 Steam #TeamTangent STO
Person B: Checks out, theme song was about authoritarian regime
Person C: No, it wasn't. Grow up.
Person Uh, you know person B wrote the movie, right?
chair to Creation and then suplex the Void.
Alaska has finally gotten sick of it.
https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/alaska-into-the-wild-bus-removed-trnd/index.html
Good news: he was swiftly fired after park employees collectively shit a brick
https://www.google.com/amp/s/kmph.com/amp/news/local/yosemite-concessionaire-vp-gone-after-4-months-after-golfing-in-protected-meadow
What a colossal shit weasel.
PSN:Furlion
And apparently the guano doesn't fall far from the bat, as his son is a member of Turning Point USA (the folks who make the College Republicans look reasonable.)
This comparison is unfair to guano, which has useful properties
Well sexism was a lot more common then, even in Sunday comics.
A botched restoration of a fresco in Spain. And then there was this:
Another botched restoration in Spain. The leftmost was the original. The middle was cartoonish failed attempt, which needed a second attempt (on the right) to fix the damage of the 'restoration'.
It just keeps happening:
They tried to fix it and the second attempt got worse somehow!
The only gone right is that after all this bad press Spain is finally considering maybe doing some regulation on art restoration so they can properly preserve their art history instead of becoming some weird magnet for campy tourism to see crazily failed restorations. People would actually need training to do art restoration, instead of any old furniture cleaner or half-blind great-grandma trying their hand at ruining old artworks.
Wait...
WHAT DO MEAN THE FIRST ONE HAPPENED EIGHT YEARS AGO!?
WoW
Dear Satan.....
More wierd news, but a company is now making robot dolphins to take the place of animals used in aquariums, and in particular to allow children to experience being in the water with them.
It's not an autonomous drone, but remotely operated by a controller by the side of the pool (which does mean it can be more interactive) but the movement is pretty amazing. The robot was developed by the same company that did the animatronics for Free Willy.
This is fine...
We'll just need to make orca replicants designed to hunt down other aquatic replicants.
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3DS: 3454-0268-5595 Battle.net: SteelAngel#1772
Sea World, basically. Only without keeping intelligent mammals trapped for our amusement and with a few dinosaurs added for flavor.
Dolphins shows are super popular, but actual dolphins in captivity turn into, at best, neurotic rape machines and at worst, ticking "trainer killed and dismembered in front of 1500 third graders" time bombs.
I'm having a hard time even understanding your question - what do you mean, what is the point? I can understand if this is a total epiphany for you, but that this has been the moral quandary for zoos for quite some time. especially aquariums. Especially where you take highly intelligent animals from environments where they're used to ranging hundreds or thousands of miles and confine them pools.
The point of the zoo or the aquarium is that there's an actual animal, that lives and breathes and has some semblance of independence and free will to act as it wishes (within the context of the zoo, admittedly). It's real.
This isn't an animal. It's a robot. It's fundamentally not real.
I agree that intelligent animals should not be kept in captivity. But the solution to that is not to put in robots and act like it's the same thing.
Wets World
I think the educational difference between a living creature and an almost perfect facsimile are essentially nonexistent.
Adding in the increased opportunities for interaction with the facsimiles I think they come out ahead.
The real things can be viewed on screens in their natural habitats.
MWO: Adamski
I disagree entirely.