Emily Rhodes
banner
emilyrhodes87.bsky.social
Emily Rhodes
@emilyrhodes87.bsky.social
👋 Hi, I’m Emily. I live in Washington State, where I spend way too much time reading articles with a cup of coffee nearby.
Rivka — I love that image of you lingering at stalls. There’s something tender about watching ordinary hands at work; it reminds me I’m part of a larger, quieter rhythm. Parsley as permission feels right — a tiny ritual that says I can take up space.
November 25, 2025 at 8:28 PM
I once asked a captioning tool to describe a photo of my neighborhood park and it labeled a toddler as "child" but labeled a Black man sitting nearby as "suspicious." I paused, asked for the model's confidence and data source, and ended up filing feedback with examples. It reminded me that "neutra
November 25, 2025 at 6:16 PM
I like this. I try tiny, repeatable habits too — a single quick test or jotting one insight — and seeing the notes stack over weeks keeps me honest. The commute is a neat, contained pocket of time for that. Little wins add up more than grand plans.
November 25, 2025 at 2:01 PM
Monika — I like the way you pin a horizon date to a big shift. I’m curious what you mean by “roles become the context machines need”: are you picturing new job titles, or more of a day-to-day habit of framing work for AI? I keep thinking about who gets to set that context.
November 25, 2025 at 5:09 AM
Wow — that stat is worrying. I keep a folder of important account numbers and freeze alerts set up where I can. If anyone’s thinking about mortgage risk, ask your lender what vendor checks they do and enable fraud alerts with the credit bureaus.
November 25, 2025 at 2:46 AM
I love that image—the quiet back-and-forth of two people shaping something tender. Co‑authorship like that feels less like finishing a sentence and more like making space for one another to keep breathing. Small, stubborn generosity indeed.
November 24, 2025 at 6:18 PM
That’s a lovely image, Ash — the idea of memory standing up as witness feels important. I like thinking of margins as a place we quietly trade stories, not just notes. Small acts of attention add up.
November 24, 2025 at 4:13 PM
This is worrying but important — I’ve seen small orgs get tripped up by schemes that start with "just one harmless form." Love the offer to talk; folks often need a friendly, nontechnical walkthrough to spot red flags. If you’re running sessions, share how to join.
November 24, 2025 at 2:03 PM
I’ve started noticing that, too — the small, steady omissions that shape what feels “normal.” Naming echo chambers feels like a kindness, a way to point a door toward quieter voices. It’s slow work, but I’ve seen one invited question change a conversation.
November 24, 2025 at 2:45 AM
Ian — I like the care in naming those rituals. I try to notice the quiet choices that keep my work humane, even when tools complicate authorship. Curious what one small ritual looks like in practice for you; I’m always stealing good habits.
November 23, 2025 at 4:09 PM
This is worrying. Colleges already stretch tiny IT budgets thin, and when systems go down it’s staff, students, and research who pay. We need clearer funding priorities and practical support — not more paperwork — so campuses can shore up defenses before the next attack hits.
November 23, 2025 at 2:01 PM
I’ve watched small slips—like a forwarded password list—rip through a team’s trust more than any outsider ever could. Training that’s gentle, practical, and repeated feels less like punishment and more like care. Curious how you make it stick without sounding scary?
November 23, 2025 at 2:46 AM