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I would like to signal boost The Museum of Jurassic Technology in Los Angeles.

https://www.mjt.org/

I've never been anywhere quite like it. My friend once described it as "an art piece that uses museum curation as its medium" and that's the best description I've come across. To get an idea of what that means, understand that it's fully laid out as a museum with exhibits featuring various objects and artifacts and expositions thereof but these exhibits wildly vary between truth and fantasy. Some are showcases of real, if niche, cultural practices and some are histories of entirely fictional figures that are nevertheless compelling and beautiful.

The creator was awarded a McArthur grant in 2001 and I feel it was more than deserved.


Another strong recommendation for this unique place. I visited soon after its 1988 opening. The museum was so off the grid and unknown that early visitors like me received personal guided tours of unlimited duration from its founder/creator, David Hildebrand Wilson.

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


I am green with envy, that sounds amazing.

Do you remember any exhibits from that time that aren't in place today?


It was wonderful. Scintillating. Alas, that was in the late 1980s and I haven't been back, though from the photo in Wikipedia its kind of derelict/dumpy entrance looks like it hasn't changed at all.

If you read "Mr. Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder: Pronged Ants, Horned Humans, Mice on Toast, and Other Marvels of Jurassic Technology," Lawrence Weschler's superb 1995 book about the museum with extended interviews with Wilson, you will find it hard not to want to visit.

https://www.amazon.com/Mr-Wilsons-Cabinet-Wonder-Technology/...


The book "Mr. Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder" about the museum is a good read: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Wilson%27s_Cabinet_of_Wond... Recommend reading it after visiting, don't want to spoil the first journey into the Jurassic.

I once explained to a friend as "imagine Umberto Eco made a museum when he was drunk, and he was a mean drunk."

https://laist.com/news/los-angeles-activities/museum-of-jura... We almost lost it, a fire nearly destroyed it.


On the mobile app you can tap the Instagram logo and there's an option to show only posts from your follows. It's not sticky, unfortunately.

Also if you're on android I recommend:

distractionfreeapps.com/

They make a bootleg version of the app with the ability to remove certain feeds, e.g. reels, discover, stories


It's sticky on the web though:

https://www.instagram.com/?variant=following


I had a sharp intake of breath after reading this and then clicking through to see the header image of the article.


A.I. = Actually Indians


> "Contrary to popular belief, the core problem in dyslexia is not reversing letters (although it can be an indicator),” she writes. The difficulty lies in identifying the discrete units of sound that make up words and “matching those individual sounds to the letters and combinations of letters in order to read and spell.

The more I hear about dyslexia the more it sounds like the result of not being taught to read properly rather than any kind of neurological issue.


Well it is largely genetic, but it could still be behaviourally linked for sure.

As i see it the fundamental issue in dyslexia has to do with tokenization and embedding.

The dyslexic brain uses a embedding space that is not very fit for purpose.

Some stuff that is dissimilar get embedded close to each other and some things that should be far from each other gets embedded close to each other.

Downstream networks that try to use these embeddings has a hard time trying to counteract the bad embeddings. The final result is a dyslexic person.


Not sure I agree? I made some famously (in my family) weird mistakes in writing when I was young. They were obvious dyslectic issues. Mostly that changed because I haven't shown any traits for years in reading & writing. I had an amazing teacher for reading (my mom, who was a teacher).

OTOH while I was educated in music for a long time, I have some kind of problem reading music that disappears when it's projected on a big screen. Yes, I have corrected vision. If I had been smarter I would have just memorized everything I played, which is what I have to do now because projecting music isn't too practical ATM.

So while I think for some people it's intrinsic, I think you're onto something. Never actually considered it as a cause.


Which led to it being misdiagnosed as a failure on the student's part, or of their past teachers.

Much as many autistic children having meltdowns are often viewed as being "ill-behaved", or that their parents don't discipline them enough/correctly.


Is it possible that this is actually just a very common writing pattern used by actual humans and that's the reason AI uses it so much?


To be fair, the ÷ symbol for division must be abolished.


What is the correct order of operations there? I'm treating both representations of division as equivalent, so just running the whole thing from left to right. But there's no reason that because both operators indicate division, that they must have the same precedence.


I did fall for it just now, but I think it's typically easier to read when handwritten.


As a brit, yawn.


Swinsian was the only Mac music player I could find that could come close to replicating my old MusicBee setup. The license fee was annoying but I paid it anyway and have no regrets.


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