Pons_Aelius

@Pons_Aelius@kbin.social

Este perfil es de un servidor federado y podría estar incompleto. Explorar más contenido en la instancia original.

Pons_Aelius,

Not surprising. The 10K steps idea was first set by a Japanese maker of pedometers as a marketing exercise with zero research to back it up.

Pons_Aelius,

Yes, and that is what the op did...

Pons_Aelius,

It is a link to a wikkipedia article...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bombings_of_Hiroshima_and_Nagasaki

Did you click on the thumbnail?

Pons_Aelius,

I don't know what you are seeing but I copied the link in my post from the op's text link...

Pons_Aelius,

I feel it is important to publicise refutations of extraordinary claims widely.

The media generally loves to publish the extraordinary claims. especially ALIENS!! but is silent when the results comeback as "Sorry, they were wrong."

Pons_Aelius,

So good to hear Batkid is doing well.

To those genuinely interested in moderating (kbin.social) en

@Ernest has pushed an update which allows users to request ownership/moderation of abandoned magazines. Ghost/abandoned magazines were fairly prevalent after the initial wave of hype due to users either squatting magazine names or becoming inactive for other reasons. Now is your chance to get involved, if you were waiting to do...

/kbin logotype
Pons_Aelius,

Another option I would like to see is the outright deletion of some of the very specific and abandoned mags.

Looking at abandoned list link supplied by @ernest (cheers for that and for all the work you have put in) there are ~4,000 abandoned mags.

While many are in need of new mods, there are a lot that just need to be deleted. They can be recreated in the future if they need is there but I doubt a lot will be claimed.

Maybe in a couple of months that could be looked into.

Pons_Aelius,

This sounds like a you problem.

The content you want is not here, so I assume you want others to provide it for you.

There are people with opinions you don't like on reddit...So you engage with the trolls (exactly what they want...) and get banned,

I have to ask, what subs are at the same time

A: So compelling that you must visit them?

and

B So filled with trolls that you get banned by responding to them?

Solution...

Either, visit and don't engage with the trolls.

or

Don't visit

optional:

Create the content you want to see in the fediverse.

Pons_Aelius,
Pons_Aelius,

Thanks, but I don't think I am saying anything that revolutionary.

Don't feed the trolls has been advice since the days of BBSes 30 years ago.

Following it is the hard part.

And as usually there is a Relevant XKCD (and this one is about 15 years old...)

Pons_Aelius,

Cheers for the clarification.

It's amazing what a few years in therapy can do.

Pons_Aelius,

Yes, it does. Keep at it.

But it is like the old joke.

"How many psychologists does it take to change a light bulb?"

"One, but the light bulb has to want to change"

And based on the OPs downvotes and reply to me, they are still not in a place where they want to change. I hope the reach it someday and find some peace.

Pons_Aelius,

Lashing out at those that offer help only hurts you.

Pons_Aelius,

Based on the OP's comments here. Any forum would have, rightly, banned them.

They are not helping themselves, or anyone else with this sort of behaviour. They sound like they have a lot of anger that they need to process and work through, but here or reddit will not help them to do that.

Pons_Aelius,

I doubt they will.

They are in a place were anger is the only thing they have.

In their mind: Everything they do is right and justified, any response they see they that challenges their behaviour is just someone else being an arsehole to them.

Pons_Aelius,

all just be ads anyway

If you have to view reddit. old.reddit.com on FF with ublock is the least worst option.

Or use RSS.

Pons_Aelius,

I stopped using mobile to access reddit when that bullshit started.

Pons_Aelius,

If you are willing to, firstly thanks, maybe contact ernest direct to see it he is ok with it.

Pons_Aelius,

Does automod exist on the fediverse yet?

Not that I know of, then again, I don't know much about the backend of the fediverse.

Pons_Aelius,

Cheers for that. I know we are still in the baby steps phase here and the effort is appreciated.

Pons_Aelius,

Problem solved. :)

Not really.

There has been zero moderation here. The mod log is empty. (again, not an attack as there are no mods)

So the report currently is not seen by anyone.

Blocking is a game of whack-a-mole, I have been blocking several accounts a day. Next day, same spam links on new accounts.

Anyone coming to the mag for the first time will see an endless wall of spam and not bother again. So it is hostile to new users.

Pons_Aelius,

Thanks for passing this on.

Pons_Aelius,

No, both mods have no activity for months.

Well, another mag to block.

Pons_Aelius,

Yep. the mods are mia.

The spam here is getting out of hand. A mag with ~20,000 subs and zero mods...

random is a cess pit as well.

Pons_Aelius,

Nah, the mag is not that important.

Unsub and block seems to be the only effective approach.

Pons_Aelius,

A mod who pops in once every couple of weeks is beyond useless.

Scientists Invent New Glass With Supreme Toughness (scitechdaily.com) en

Scientists have produced an oxide glass with unprecedented toughness. Under high pressures and temperatures, they succeeded in paracrystallizing an aluminosilicate glass: The resulting crystal-like structures cause the glass to withstand very high stresses and are retained under ambient conditions.

Pons_Aelius,

This announcement is: We have managed to do this for a small sample in a lab using specialised equipment, likely taking days to produce one test item.

That is a long, long way from: We have scaled this up to a automated process that produces thousands of identical sheets of glass per day that will cover tens of thousands of phones.

The scientists have proved it is possible, there are now another 100 steps for the engineers it work through to see if it can scale economically.

Pons_Aelius,

Well, Spot would be the obvious name.

Pons_Aelius,

Giraffe spots are brown. The baby is one bug spot.

Pons_Aelius,

Direct link to the published paper.

TLDR: They are looking at distant binaries.

(Distant Binaries orbit many astronomical units from each other, Alpha Centauri A+B, are a distant binary system)

The orbital data for these systems shows a lot of variance that should not be there. One issue is there could be a third (or even forth) smaller star (brown dwarf) also present but undetectable that is causing the errors.

The research team tried to eliminate the possibility of these bodies causing the observed errors in the two body data.

They have found there is still something else happening even when this is done.

This has been published in a very respected journal so it will be interesting to see where this leads.

The Reddit Protest Is Finally Over. Reddit Won. (gizmodo.com) en

The last major holdouts in the protest against Reddit’s API pricing relented, abandoning the so-called “John Oliver rules” which only allowed posts featuring the TV host. The article describes it as "the official end of the battle," which seems an overstatement to me, but it's the certainly the end of the initial phase....

Pons_Aelius,

I often had to scroll quite a bit to get past the obnoxious US politics posts

And the posts that had nothing to do with the US or politics would usually descend into a US centric shit fight anyway.

Any post involving firearms anywhere in the world...flooded with US 2A nut jobs.

etc

etc

Pons_Aelius,

As far as I have heard. It is back working on reddit and there are no plans for a move.

Pons_Aelius,

It takes a while for a post (and subsequent comments) to propagate across different instance servers.

Pons_Aelius,

Part 1

Reddit could slim down management as moves toward an IPO

Thomas Maxwell

Reddit is preparing for an IPO amid controversy surrounding changes to its API.
Reddit employees say the company has a bloated leadership structure with too many managers.
Staffers were told earlier this year that they'd need to do "less but better."

As Reddit prepares for an initial public offering that could come by the end of 2023, it's looking to flatten its management structure, and employees say the company has become bloated with executive- and director-level employees.

Reddit filed for IPO in December 2021, when demand for new tech stocks was at a fever pitch. It said it surpassed $100 million in advertising revenue in the second quarter of 2021. It has also made large investments in artificial intelligence, acquiring the machine-learning startup Spell in June 2022 to help customize ad placements.

Since then, demand for tech stocks has dropped. Reddit laid off 90 employees in early June as it aims to reach profitability. Its revenue growth has slowed, The Information reported.

To prepare for the intense scrutiny of the public markets, Reddit is whipping itself into shape; managers told employees in product earlier this year that the goal was to do "less but better." Part of the mandate could include slimming down middle management.

Reddit is also examining areas of its business where it could squeeze costs. It recently announced a controversial decision to charge for access to its API, or application programming interface, which enables developers to build tools that connect to Reddit. It argued that it couldn't support third-party apps that use Reddit's content but don't provide any money in return.

Insider spoke with five current and former Reddit employees, who requested anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the press or had signed nondisclosure agreements to receive severance. They described some leadership moves and road-map changes that caused what one employee described as "thrash."

The 18-year-old social-media company has long had a culture of "trying to do too many things and doing them really poorly and not finishing them at all," the same employee said. Internally, they said, the company would now focus on "having a simplified product plan and sticking to it."

A Reddit representative declined to comment on this story and pointed to a blog post about the company's acquisition of Spell.
A flattening at Reddit

Reddit executives presented a distribution of managers to direct reports during its last quarterly leadership summit in May in New York City. The distribution showed that many managers oversee four to six people. Managers who attended the summit told employees that leadership suggested the company would in the second half of the year consolidate teams with managers overseeing fewer than six employees, two employees said.

Pons_Aelius,

Part 2:

Employees say this could mean more managers may leave through managed exits.

Reddit is not the only tech company flattening its leadership structure. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said earlier this year that the company would reduce its number of product managers and directors to make it more efficient. Meta had given managers the option to be demoted, with the expectation that many would choose to leave. Shopify has also tried to flatten its organization.
Lost trust in leadership

Reddit employees said they lost trust in leadership after a series of missteps. For example, they said they were repeatedly told before the company conducted layoffs in June that layoffs wouldn't happen.

Product road maps changed in May as the company focused on the API changes and on boosting content creation by users.

The recent change to charge for access to Reddit's API also led to protests from moderators. While many employees supported the API changes, they said Reddit's moderators deserved credit for helping grow the site. A former employee who left in April argued that company leadership should have invested more in supporting moderators and that building tools for Reddit's moderator community "has never been a priority" for leadership.

"Reddit has long had staff who have worked hard to provide a better mod experience, but the will to improve this has never come from the top, and Reddit has yet to fund them to the extent they need to," one employee said.

Illustration of a Reddit logo on a mobile phone with a laptop behind it
Reddit.
Getty Images

On top of that, Reddit hasn't been able to fully integrate Spell's technology since its acquisition, two employees familiar with the matter said. One employee described Reddit's CEO, Steve Huffman, as having pushed through the acquisition despite opposition from vice presidents and directors, as well as bringing its founders as vice presidents and directors "despite Reddit not needing more of either."
Leadership shake-ups

Reddit had some leadership changes earlier this year. Jack Hanlon, who was the vice president of feeds, AI, search, and data, parted ways with the company in March, he and the company confirmed. Hanlon led product and engineering for several areas of the company, including machine learning and data science.

In May, Reddit's head of data science, Jose Lobez, was replaced by Tyler Otto, who'd joined Reddit from Hipmunk, a travel website Huffman founded.

Three employees described Lobez's departure as a surprise, as he was well liked within the data-science organization. "He basically grew the data-science organization himself — a big cultural figure internally," one said. They described Lopez as "pretty open both with reports and about the org as a whole," adding that he "helped deal with interorganization disputes pretty well."

Pons_Aelius,

The perfect site for reddit admins would be endless bots posting, commenting and viewing adds while said advertisers are oblivious to the con.

The first two have been going on at some level for years. The last? Well, it will be interesting to see the official reddit app's adoption numbers in the coming months.

Pons_Aelius,

Most people expect gradual change when many things in life are more like punctuated equilibrium.

Stable state despite gradual change in underlying conditions.

Then rapid change to new stable state.

Pons_Aelius,

Sorry to do that, but I believe the world makes a lot more sense when viewed through the lens of punctuated equilibrium. It does not make things better, just makes the chaos more understandable.

The dot com bubble.

The housing bubble.

Basically every economic bubble all the way back to tulip mania.

The Arab Spring.

The changes in the USA post 9/11.

And most disturbing of all, the recent rapid swing of pretty much all environmental indicators into uncharted territory. Our biosphere may be heading into a phase of rapid change.

Pons_Aelius,

My understanding is that the new API required a new key to use. But the old keys have not been blocked.

I am sure a good contract lawyer would have a field day if reddit tried to charge 3rd parties for themselves not doing the job of cutting off access.

Pons_Aelius,

One worry I have is the opposite scale. Active user growth have been pretty linear so far, but the network effect is pushing user activity growth at a higher rate.

But there is still under 100 kbin servers.

If there is a burst of new users and post activity after the API change, will the system be able to scale up fast enough to cope?

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