That’s the culmination of the paradox – that greater accessibility to the resource leads to de facto scarcity.
That’s the culmination of the paradox – that greater accessibility to the resource leads to de facto scarcity.
A farmer has 17 sheep. 9 ran away. He then bought enough to double what he had. His neighbor, who had 4 dogs and 14 sheep, gave him one-third of her animals. The farmer sold 5 sheep on Monday and again the next day, which was Wednesday. Each sheep weighs about 150 lbs. How many sheep does the farmer have?
the time the provider takes to reflect on the patient’s symptoms, progress, needs, etc is part of the care. Skipping or skimping on this part not only impacts the quality of care being provided immediately, but also likely degrades care over time, as providers are naturally less engaged in the cases they are working with.
This is so true, and I don't think this is fully appreciated.
OHSU leaders said the turnaround is being driven by a surge in more lucrative complex cases — patients with serious conditions who need highly specialized care and, in turn, bring in higher reimbursement.On Thursday, OHSU President Dr. Shereef Elnahal said cancer services are up 32% from last year and the hospital has seen more bone marrow transplants and other major surgeries.
At 8.4%, Washington has the lowest percentage of total financial reserves to tax revenues of any state in the country.Put another way, Washington’s state reserves are so low that they could only cover 12.8 days of state government operations, ranking 49th out of 50 states. By comparison, the average across every state is 47.8 days.
It's very different in the unsupervised world of autonomous agents. And in a world where people don't code themselves anymore, and just let Claude or Codex write the instructions, I think there are potential problems ahead.For much of the history of computing, it was reasonably safe to assume that a machine was doing what you told it to do (and what its creators promised it would do), because its operations were local.If you scratch the surface just a bit, however, none of this is true when applied to modern technologies, and these assumptions are not safe.
Remember all those Reddit postings and news items claiming that we've had the hottest summer on record? Yeah, that's not really true. Taking the broader view, there's no steady trend since 1899. Paper here.
And when the budget gets tight, the first things that will go are what taxpayers pay taxes for: police, clean parks, and roads without potholes. But instead the City will still build more shelters for the criddlers to trash (and not even use) and continue funding harm reduction supplies, free Narcan and the CHAT program. So businesses and the wealthy will move out of Portland and will stay away, leading to further decline. So fees and taxes will increase, leading to further wealth flight.
And Oregon Zoo staffing is down and they don't have people to manage their $380 million bond. How ridiculous is that? Truly, a city in decline. No qualified people to manage anything anymore in this city, it seems.
There simply will need to be software that can reliably evaluate AI-generated output. Perhaps a neuro-symbolic system.It’s “Would I trust a vibe-coded e-commerce with my credit card number?” Or even “How would I feel if Visa or MasterCard ran on software no human comprehends?”
By the end of day three, Claude had completed 65 tasks, produced a literature review, derived phase-space constraints, computed matrix elements in soft and collinear limits, set up SCET operators, and written a first draft: 20 pages of LaTeX with equations, plots, and references. By December 22, the draft looked professional. The equations seemed right. And the plots matched expectations.
Then, I actually read it.
Claude loves to please
When I asked Claude to verify it had incorporated all its task results into the draft, it responded:
I found an error! The formula in the paper is incorrect.
When I pushed on a ln(3) term that seemed off:
You’re right, I was just masking the problem. Let me debug properly.
The more I dug, the more I found it had been tweaking things left and right. Claude had been adjusting parameters to make plots match rather than finding actual errors. It faked results, hoping I wouldn’t notice.