Furisode with a Myriad of Flying Cranes, detail of a kimono, 1910-30. Silk. Japan. Via Rijksmuseum

#extradirty

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Jules of Nature
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Product Placement

oozey mess
cherry valley forever

@theartofmadeline
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sheepfilms
Peter Solarz

pixel skylines
Today's Document
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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if i look back, i am lost
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@atlaswithin
Furisode with a Myriad of Flying Cranes, detail of a kimono, 1910-30. Silk. Japan. Via Rijksmuseum
Glenn Brown (English, b. 1966, Hexham, Northumberland, England) - On Hearing Of The Death Of My Mother, 2002 Paintings: Oil on Panel
Source
by Levy
Martin Isaac
Even more brand new limited edition screen printed designs for ya! First up is ROBOTIC BONES! Glows & gone at midnight! TheYetee.com! ☠🤖
So I looked this up and the whole story is wild.
Basically, market research for japanese bakeries determined that a) they sell more breads and pastries the more different varieties they have, and b) japanese bakery customers prefer items which are not wrapped, because individually wrapped things give the impression of being like, preserved or something instead of fresh and good I guess? So the obvious solution is to sell as many different kinds of unwrapped breads and pastries as you can.
But! In actual practice, that’s a nightmare. No packaging means no barcodes to scan, so the cashier needs to know all like 200 different (often very similar) items by heart and add them up manually, which means training new employees is a slow and painful process and customer service in general suffers badly. And having a person handle all those un-packaged foodstuffs to count them or examine them, in addition to being slow and clumsy, is unsanitary as fuck.
So one bakery chain owner approached this computer guy in 2007 asking for a system to automate the checkout process. It took five years and the company barely survived a financial crisis in the middle, but long story short they developed a highly specialized AI that will look at the pile of bread a customer picked out and automatically identify everything, tally it up, and charge them correctly, while the live cashier is free to make small talk or help people out or whatever. The whole process is simple, fast, sanitary, and pleasant for customers and employees alike, and to an outsider it looks like fucking magical bullshit.
But then in 2017 a doctor saw an ad for this bakery scanning system and it occurred to him that cells under a microscope don’t look all that different from weird loaves of bread. And it turns out that yeah, you can use almost all of the same code to analyze a tissue sample and pick out any potentially cancerous cells in it. Other people have started buying the same program for everything from analyzing the readout from big physics experiments to labeling charms and amulets for sale at shrines to detecting problems in the wiring on jet engines.
I knew pastry would save the world one day.
This is a good use of AI! Do the tedious work so the worker can socialize with the customer. And then use that same AI to fight cancer. This is fantastic! I hate AI “art” but not AI as a whole.
by samanthacavet
Cats Being Introduced in the Art of Mouse-Catching by an Owl, c. 1700, Lombard School
Hermann Hesse, Demian.
The best free software
PSA:
1. If you are not silly, it is vital you become silly
2. If you are silly, you must stay silly
2. If you used to be silly but have stopped, you must make all efforts to return to silliness
The three laws of humordynamics.
oh god