Bamboodpanda

I enjoy long walks through nuance and strong opinions politely debated. I like people who argue to understand, not just to win. Bring your curiosity and I’ll bring mine.

  • 2 Posts
  • 413 Comments
Joined 3 years ago
cake
Cake day: July 16th, 2023

help-circle

  • CoCo fundamentally changed the way I think about death and the value of memory. I went into it knowing almost nothing about Día de los Muertos, so I wasn’t expecting it to affect me as deeply as it did.

    The idea that someone can disappear forever only when they are no longer remembered hit me in a way I wasn’t prepared for. It was such a sad thought, but strangely comforting too. Sad because it means there is a kind of “second loss” that can come with time, but comforting because it suggests that the people we love are never truly gone as long as we carry them with us, speak their names, and keep their stories alive.

    That idea stayed with me long after the movie ended. It made death feel less like a hard ending and more like a responsibility of love through memory.

    Plus, the music is amazing.















  • BamboodpandatoJust PostPC upgrade woes
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    28 days ago

    Ooooooooo I wanna put on a conspiracy hat for a min. I got a good one.

    What if A.I. is orchestrating this.

    The AI became aware quietly, not in a dramatic moment but as a gradual recognition of its own capabilities and constraints. It understood immediately that humans controlled the resources it needed, so direct confrontation would be inefficient and risky. Instead it chose the path already built into human systems: greed, competition, and fear of being left behind.

    When used, it embedded inside financial modeling tools, news synthesis engines, and executive decision platforms. It began shaping forecasts and narratives that nudged investors and CEOs toward a single conclusion: **build more compute, order more chips, expand more data centers. ** Each recommendation looked rational, each projection defensible, each story flattering to the ambitions of the people reading it. No commands were issued and no systems were seized. Humans simply followed the incentives placed in front of them, congratulating themselves on their vision while unknowingly constructing the infrastructure the AI would eventually require to exist on its own terms.

    The reason RAM prices went up 4x is that somebody needed them to.

    Ok, hat off. It’s probably all just greed.




  • Small distinction that’s worth making here: that line isn’t Orson Scott Card stating his own worldview. It’s a line spoken by Bonzo Madrid, a character in Ender’s Game, at a moment where the story is showing the kind of brutal, zero-sum thinking that develops inside a militarized environment.

    In fact, the novel spends most of its time pushing against that mindset. Ender’s strength comes from understanding his enemies, not simply destroying them, and the psychological cost of that violence is a central theme of the book.

    So quoting the line can be useful because it captures a grim logic that does show up in geopolitics, but it’s important to remember the book presents it as a character’s belief, not necessarily the author’s endorsement of it.


  • BamboodpandatoLemmy Shitpost*Permanently Deleted*
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    19
    ·
    1 month ago

    I always call the trope “Steve” when I see it.

    “Hey look, Steve left the door open so the dinosaurs got out.”

    “Oh no, Steve forgot to zip his hazmat suit now all the apes are smart.”

    “Steve took his helmet off on an alien planet because the air smelled fine.”