I've heard the Expanse books are great, I watched the Amazon series already. Are the books even better?
hbar
Awesome list, thanks! Looks like the first book of Honor Harrington is free on Kindle so I can check it out right away. Should I read that series in publication order?
That's rad, how do they work?
I started getting into Lemmy with the reddit API announcement like many others. if the RIF app shuts down I'm never going back, and even if it manages to stick around I probably will be done with reddit. I've committed to Lemmy at this point, I'm trying to build a pathfinder RPG community here, and I've been contributing to many other communities where I can.
I've fully committed to replacing reddit in my life, I'm trying to be active here and pointing people to Lemmy when I can. Reddit has made it clear they dont care about users. they get content for free, moderation for free, etc. They pissed on their base and deserve a mass exodus. I just hope people follow through.
time travel, horror, air ships
I have a mix of RSS feeds that go straight to Feeder (Android). A few of them include Ars Technica, the Google ai blog, Less wrong, slashdot, MIT news (ai), bbc. I'm constantly adding and subtracting.
This was done with gpt 3.5, I wonder how it holds up to gpt4
I start with 1s, look in the row blocks to see if I can fill any, then the column blocks. Then move on the 2s, 3s... If a block or row or column is mostly filled in I see if I can get any of the rest to close it out.
Big city communities. Like Milwaukee (could fit into Midwest social)
I think the rich will get richer, the poor will have less, and eventually AGI will emerge, blowing past our ability to control it and kill us all.
I'll be happy though if at some point before societal collapse we get some generative model that produces season 2 of Firefly.
I use a mix of RSS feeds and the Feeder Android app to accumulate articles. I'm still tweaking my list of feeds, currently using Ars Technica, MIT news (ai), slashdot, bbc, npr, and some niche ones