I think this is why I grasp on to strength training and fitness as one of my main hobbies. There is no current shortcut other than steroids but even then you still need to put in the effort. If I stop, I can feel and see my body atrophy, my stress levels rise, my energy going down, etc. You need to keep learning and adjusting to make progress. You can definitely nerd out about it if you want. And it provides the dopamine rush after a tough workout and looking back and seeing my progress. It helps me connect with my body since I’m in my head all day. It’s also a primal and human activity that has nothing to do with AI.
All of this is in your head and projection, especially the part about others being creepy. You think sex and nudity is creepy and people are arguing for easier access to being extra creepy. That’s on you, but your judgments on others is not a healthy truth.
Yeah it’s certainly not safe for work. Should it be? I mean, ideally yes. In practice? Hell no. I don’t need Karen from accounting coming up with her own reasons why I’m looking at a naked pregnant lady even though I know there is nothing wrong with it.
You might want to rethink your perceived timeline for how sexuality works in practice for teenagers if you’re waiting to talk to them on schedule. Source: was a teenager.
Go ahead and see with your own eyes what a lot of HN commenters really think about other humans. It’s pretty plain to see and very sad. They’re the folks flagging everything.
Both can be true at the same time. Just some rough numbers.
There are approximately 30,000 American medical graduates each year. There are about 40,000 residency spots per incoming class each year. Both of these numbers continue to go up at least several hundred per year, it's just that always residency spots > American graduates. That answers the "not enough graduates" question.
Each year, that 10,000 resident surplus is filled with approximately 4,000 US citizens who went to international schools and 6,000 non-US citizens who went to international schools.
Now for hospitals being saturated with learners. There are at least 162,000 residents and fellows and 60,000 medical students (3rd and 4th year students) in total in the hospitals, not counting students in other disciplines such as nursing, physician assistant, etc. That means there are at least 222,000 residents/fellows/medical students in the hospitals. I am saying that to accommodate 222,000 learners getting enough exposure to all the nuances of medicine is extremely difficult and, as medical schools continue to grow, many schools are finding it hard to place students into environments with adequate opportunities to learn.
I'm a doctor. When I was in medical school, I literally had to call and send applications begging other physicians to take me as a student, otherwise the school threatens to dismiss you for not meeting graduation requirements. Many students don't have that problem, however many do and the number is increasing. It is just very hard to scale massively complex infrastructure while maintaining quality.
Yeah, seems like it's even worse in that it's a _death cult_. The people in it know that it's not worth what the market prices it at, so they know any sudden moves in the wrong direction and they're gonna lose all that value. That leaves no choice but to double down and never stop. The collapse of this thing is going to be incredible.