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Videos (55) | Sift Talk (3) | Blogs (5) | Comments (336) |
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The dancing squid dish from Japan
That is fucking disgusting. You can argue all you like about whether or not it's still 'alive' or whether it's a reflex action. The problem is the barbaric disregard for another creature's life that is on display here.
"Look, poor hot liquid on it and it moves, HAW HAW HAW, how amusing, it's funny how the near dead creature still moves"
Fucking wrong.
There are a lot of westerners who hold up Japanese culture as being some pinnacle of human manners and decency and good... and then you look at hentai porn and the number of cruel and unusual ways they manage to eat/store/treat live animals and I have to question that a lot.
Yes we eat animals, as do a lot of other animals, it's all part of the food chain, but we should be above causing them distress and indignity merely for our amusement.
I upvote so more people can see the 'majesty of Japanese culture'.
(I am planning on having sushi for lunch... as an aside)
How to deactivate a cat
Thats when my gills come in handy. =)
>> ^Payback:
>> ^ant:
Ah. I am surprised adult cats still have this.
Actually, ever been in a strong wind, or had compressed air blasted at your face? If you have a hard time breathing properly, that's due to the same reflex in babies that causes them to expell from their lungs when their faces hit air for the first time.
How to deactivate a cat
>> ^Payback:
>> ^ant:
Ah. I am surprised adult cats still have this.
Actually, ever been in a strong wind, or had compressed air blasted at your face? If you have a hard time breathing properly, that's due to the same reflex in babies that causes them to expell from their lungs when their faces hit air for the first time.
Ew. Yes, I can't breathe in winds.
How to deactivate a cat
>> ^ant:
Ah. I am surprised adult cats still have this.
Actually, ever been in a strong wind, or had compressed air blasted at your face? If you have a hard time breathing properly, that's due to the same reflex in babies that causes them to expell from their lungs when their faces hit air for the first time.
The Very Worst Driver of The Netherlands Goes Wrong
>> ^Sagemind:
He lets go of the wheel to cover his eyes. Great reflexes!
He must have lifted his feet off the pedals as well, because he didn't use the breaks!
(anyone have a translation for this?)
Brakes!
What was the point of this? Driving tests with hot women?
How To Train Your New Babies
excellent demonstration of the dive reflex (bradycardic response).
The Very Worst Driver of The Netherlands Goes Wrong
He lets go of the wheel to cover his eyes. Great reflexes!
He must have lifted his feet off the pedals as well, because he didn't use the breaks!
(anyone have a translation for this?)
PJ Harvey sings "Grow Grow Grow" on French tv
woah.
reflex upvote after that first vocal phrase (@0:58).
Police State: Arrested For Dancing in the Jefferson Memorial
http://videosift.com/video/News-report-on-Dancing-at-the-Jefferson-Memorial
Here's a link to a news report that discusses this incident.
Personally, I am bored to death by folks like Adam, who reflexively respond to any "limitation" put on their "freedoms." The best way to handle this "protest"? Turn your back and walk away. Nothing to film, nothing to complain about.
I think it is interesting of the original flash mob only one person was arrested. I suspect it wasn't dancing that got her arrested, or all of them would have been.
I also find it interesting that the cops and the protestors are actually both doing EXACTLY THE SAME THING. They feel disrespected and they respond. Everybody is human, hows about that?
Seattle cop kills nonthreatening pedestrian
>> ^gwiz665:
Alcohol is not the killer, the gun is. You can't kill anyone with alcohol, you need the car (or a weapon).
>> ^Psychologic:
>> ^gwiz665:
This is why amateurs should not have guns and this is why gun laws in the states are also crazy.
Might as well outlaw alcohol too then. Idiot drunks kill people on the highway, so obviously no one can be trusted to drink.
On a side note, I know an "Alcohol Enforcement Officer"... drinks more than anyone I've ever met, and not in a good way.
the same could be said for guns. it takes someone pulling the trigger to kill.
i do want to add a bit of commentary on these developing stories. between this and the jose guerera case, both cases piss me right the fuck off and heres why. In both instances you have an overwhelming force subduing another. in this case, gun toting cop vs knife toting dude. in jose's case, an entire swat team vs one armed man. the end result was death, fucking wrongful, wasteful death.
now having said that, the commentary i would like to add is this: i know that in armed conflict and escalating situations such as these (presumably, even hypothetically, ie, he could have charged the cop with the knife off screen and an attacker can close distance in most cases faster than the shooter can react and fire) it takes steel nerves and lightning reflexes reinforced by training to make the decision to fire or not fire.
........however, when i was in afghanistan, i found myself in the middle of a legit "mexican standoff". long story short, my PCC team were to accompany the scout platoon to escort a rogue afghan border patrol police general back to our FOB to speak with his superiors. When we arrived to our PCC compound we found that he was there, along with over 100 of his loyals, preparing to mount a raid of their own (they were usually running illegal checkpoints, shit like that). Naturally when they figured out that we were there to detain their leader (in their eyes, our direct orders were to not detain but persuade him to come with us, if he refused we were to leave without incident). My CO talked with the general and persuaded him to willingly come with us.....but to his loyals, we were capturing him. within seconds, the guards they had in their towers had oriented their crew served weapons inwards, ANP loyals were loading their RPG's with armor piercers and taking fighting positions behind buildings oriented at us, you could hear dozens of ak's "racking" (chambering a round). There was over a hundred of them and less than 20 of us. Had it exploded into a firefight, we certainly woulved fucked all shit up.......but few, if any, of us were leaving alive. all it wouldve taken was one round to go off from either side to fully escalate that encounter to a full on gun battle. fortunately we kept our cool (as did the anp loyals), assessed the situation, navigated the battle space, reinforced by our training which emphasizes self control, discipline, and situational awareness, and we were able to diffuse the situation without incident. Not a single round was fired. and we had accomplished our mission (btw turns out the general had been hoarding police gun stocks, by the thousands, and had cached them at his house and was selling them off to taliban)
now my point being if i and the members of my team had the intestinal fortitude and mental tenacity to diffuse that highlyvolatile situation without incident, especially considering the higher stakes (this was in the middle of a fucking war, not in someones neighborhood or on a crosswalk), so to speak.......what is your fucking excuse Tucson swat team? what is your fucking excuse, cop in this video?
Cat meets Fox
Good thing that fox has cat-like reflexes.
Building Watson - A Brief Overview of the DeepQA Project
>> ^spoco2:
@<a rel="nofollow" href="http://videosift.com/member/budzos" title="member since October 30th, 2006" class="profilelink">budzos Why do you say that? Is it not amazing to have a self contained machine being able to listen to, understand, and correctly answer natural language questions better than humans?
Is it not difficult to see that this is a pretty amazing step along the way to creating machines that can converse with us with spoken word like robots in Science Fiction Films?
How is that not exciting?
I agree with the sentiment of the answer! AI has been my sci-fi hope for as long as I can remember. Probably why I thought "The moon is the harsh mistress" is the best book ever. When I was back in college, one of the papers I wrote was on the current state of AI, and the likelihood of the AI we see in TV and movies coming to fruition. It is amazing, and frustratingly slow field of discovery. It has taken 30 years just to begin to start to code machines to interpret language. In pursuit of this, we have come to a better understanding of how complex human speech is, and how powerful the brain is in understanding this very complex arena.
With that said, Watson doesn't "understand" or answer questions better than humans. There are many clips of the respondents just failing to beat Watson to the buzzer, most likely possessing the correct answer. Watson is the same level of impressive as the normal champs, but with mechanical reflexes. Give the humans robotic arms, and I am sure it would be a level playing field. Or, give Watson the questions one word like the humans have to do. He gets his input all in one text file and starts parsing for information before the humans have had the entirety of the question read to them (though, Watson's speed might be as such that this is trivial).
Also, as of yet, computers don't have "understanding". They can answer questions in a way that seems to make them intelligible, but they don't understand. Understanding comes from consciousness. It is still only understands the wold in terms of syntax. It is able to apply this language of syntax to properly answer trivia, but has no understanding of what the question even means. It doesn't have any experiences which are necessary for understanding. It is like if you train a parrot to respond with the correct answers to trivia questions, it doesn't actually know what it is saying.
Watson is the better parts of a parrot, and a repository of human facts. Philosophically, I am convinced that true "AI" is impossible...but I hope I am wrong! None the less, this is still super exciting, and unprecedented...how can you compare it to Sanjaya!
Ken Jennings frustrated with IBM Watson answering too fast.
>> ^Drachen_Jager:
Yeah, Watson is a bit of a cheat. Give him average human reflexes if you want to test how good he is at Jeopardy. We all know a computer can beat a human in the reflexes department.
Not just reflexes...give him human humility or doubt. That'll be enough to slow him right down and start Hunting Sarah Conor!
Ken Jennings frustrated with IBM Watson answering too fast.
Yeah, Watson is a bit of a cheat. Give him average human reflexes if you want to test how good he is at Jeopardy. We all know a computer can beat a human in the reflexes department.
The freaky snowman prank
>> ^Abel_Prisc:
I hate the kid that kicked a hole in. Kids always ruin the fun.
I'm pretty sure my first reflex would have been to kick him, too.