Nicolas Darmanthé
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doctornicosmic.bsky.social
Nicolas Darmanthé
@doctornicosmic.bsky.social
Junior doctor by day. Data cruncher by night. Interested in everything, always learning and easily distracted by shiny objects. Born at 360ppm. 🇫🇷🇦🇺 Currently in Darwin, Australia 📌
Have you read "crocs in the cabinet"? The NT is an endless stream of shitfuckery
September 10, 2025 at 2:46 AM
Agree that this will be globally disruptive in the short term, but I'm optimistic that this will be a catalyst for incredible growth of research/leadership outside of the US in Eurasia/Australasia. It's sad for decent hard working Americans but the rest of the world may actually come out ahead.
February 11, 2025 at 10:05 PM
What do you use? I've found duckduckgo alright, haven't really tried/encountered other alternatives.
January 4, 2025 at 7:41 AM
It doesn't look exactly like it looks in this long exposure picture, but it's epic in a way that a camera can't capture. You get a real sense of depth and vastness when you lie down on the ground and look up at the sky in the outback.
September 2, 2024 at 8:36 PM
The net result is something like starvation in the midst of plenty, with LLMs being the fast food of our online worlds giving us internet diabetes.
August 17, 2024 at 11:58 AM
The internet has also allowed people who previously didn't have a voice/platform to share their knowledge with the rest of the world. The problem is that in parallel there's been a boom in the amount of "garbage content" that can be generated, shared, paraphrased by LLM and shared again ad infinitum
August 17, 2024 at 11:56 AM
The internet initially supported the democratisation of information and lowered the barrier to entry for knowledge acquisition. Millions more people now have access to information that previously would have been locked away in a university or state library.
August 17, 2024 at 11:50 AM
Google search peaked 5 years ago. Total garbage now.
August 17, 2024 at 11:35 AM
Been there good luck 😂
October 20, 2023 at 8:55 AM
Agree for simple cases, seems to break down when more advanced logic is required
October 20, 2023 at 7:46 AM
I typically give extensions no questions asked but keep track in case it becomes a recurrent issue. I also don't like blanket penalty rules like "-2% every day this is late". Instead I might just be slightly less lenient/have higher expectations around the "no excuse for messing this bit up" stuff
October 14, 2023 at 1:56 AM
I just discovered obsidian yesterday and I love it to bits. I can finally move out of the Evernote ecosystem! It feels very vscodey and I love that the notes are just simple markdown. Will make it a breeze if I ever decide to publish notes to a website
October 12, 2023 at 9:01 AM
This used to be possible on twitter until their API had its brains blown out by elong
October 11, 2023 at 11:36 PM
Looking forward to better API and documentation. Would be interested in ability to pull all (or sample of) posts containing a keyword, with the handle it originates from, if there is a target handle (e.g. reply), if it is a repost etc. This would allow us to do basic social network analyses
October 11, 2023 at 11:34 PM
And yes for sure there's people that are naturally very gifted and just get it quickly (eg Karl Friston?) but I still think "slower learners" can bring super interesting things to the table too and should be encouraged and supported
October 7, 2023 at 2:46 PM
I wonder how many people there are out there who think they're terrible at maths, but are actually quite gifted if they can find a problem that interests them and can build up some confidence 🤔 I've met a few people (particularly girls) who I thought unfairly saw themselves as bad at maths
October 7, 2023 at 2:38 PM
Even discrete maths and basic probability maths (which I wasn't so bad at to start with) became so much cooler when I started having interesting & practical problems to solve (rather than abstract textbook exercises)
October 7, 2023 at 2:31 PM
In fact I got better at maths thanks to coding. I realised "oh, this expression is just a fancy math way of writing a for loop" for example. And linear algebra finally became super interesting (and easier) once I had a reason to compute things on n-dimensional neuroimaging related matrices.
October 7, 2023 at 2:29 PM
I felt the same about dyscalculia. A few early traumatic experiences in the French education system tanked my confidence. Still not great at reading pure maths, but have good intuition about numbers/can visualise well. Find maths so much easier when I need it for a practical reason and can code it.
October 7, 2023 at 2:26 PM
Keen to see this site grow but at the same time loving the small tightly knit communities. Content feels more relevant and engaging. Easy to have little discussions with people. Feels cosy/like Twitter used to be back in the day!
October 7, 2023 at 2:19 PM