Sam Livingston-Gray

Writes code, not too much, mostly Ruby. Located in sunny* Portland, Oregon.

Objectivists will be blocked on sight; libertarians may be tolerated as long as they keep it to themselves.

* YMMV

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
Morten Juhl-Johansenmjj@mstdn.dk
2025-07-06

" [AI is] like a restaurant selling granite rocks for dessert. Nobody will buy them or eat them—so the product fails miserably. But if a popular restaurant adds a dollar to the meal price, and gives every customer a rock with their bill—well, then they can say that:
* Every customer gets rocks for dessert.
* Every customer pays for it.
* Their business is more profitable because of the tasty granite rocks.

This is how AI accounting works in Silicon Valley."

#quote Ted Gioia: The Force-Feeding of AI on an Unwilling Public
(honest-broker.com/p/the-force-)

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
Elizabeth Ayerelizayer
2025-07-06
Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
Elizabeth Ayerelizayer
2025-07-06
Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
GeePawHillGeePawHill
2025-07-06

C'mon, take the pledge:

I don't use LLMs, and I don't kiss boys who do.

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
2025-07-06

Closing hospitals to fund concentration camps.

That’s it. That’s what it boils down to.

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
Tiffany Litiffanycli
2025-07-06
Sam Livingston-Graygeeksam@ruby.social
2025-07-05

At long last, The Market™️ has solved one of the pressing problems of our age: the inability to shoot flies with a pump-action shotgun without destroying the fuck out of whatever the fly happened to be sitting on. GOD BLESS THE USA

Retail shelf display showing four different colorways of a product called the "BUG-A-SALT 3.0": a plastic gun for shooting insects with table salt.

Top left: classic gray and black with orange highlights.
Top right: CAMO.
Bottom left: clear plastic.
Bottom right: Tonka-themed black and yellow.
Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
GeePawHillGeePawHill
2025-07-05

I mean, realistically, even on paper humans were unlikely to work out. Actual practice has made clear that the paper analysis was, mmmmm, optimistic.

Sam Livingston-Graygeeksam@ruby.social
2025-07-05

@GeePawHill now I'm trying to remember if I've ever been in a bar, period. There was a place once or twice that had pool and shuffleboard; I guess that probably counts... 😂

Sam Livingston-Graygeeksam@ruby.social
2025-07-04

@Ashedryden @cczona I guess that leaves you free to focus on: living fast; dying young?

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
2025-07-04

Wild that caring about what happens to people you don’t know is considered a radical position.

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
Democracy Matters :verified:DemocracyMattersALot@mstdn.social
2025-07-04

Corporations that publicly endorsed Trump's megabill. These are not companies that supported the bill by donating to the politicians that voted for it (although most did that too). These are companies that endorsed the bill publicly and were featured on a White House webpage. People should know the companies that made this choice.

#BigFuglyBill #BBB #BigBillionaireBill #TrumpDidThis #RepublicansDidThis #GOPKakistocracy #Project2025 #NoRepublicansEverAgain #USPol

3M
Altria
AT&T
Charter Communications
Chevron
Cisco
Comcast
Delta Airlines
Door Dash
Great Clips
Hair Cuttery
T-Mobile
Uber
United Airlines
UPS
Verizon
Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
2025-07-04

A big fuck you to everyone who said Project 2025 isn’t real and we’re overreacting.

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
mhoyemhoye
2025-07-04

"America has been vaccinating people for fifty years. If vaccines caused autism, America would have trains, okay? We would have so many trains." - Jon Allen

Sam Livingston-Graygeeksam@ruby.social
2025-07-04

@dimpase as a programmer recently into woodworking, I do like the direct feedback... but I do sometimes think it would be nice if wood had an "undo" button 😜

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
lcamtuf :verified: :verified: :verified:lcamtuf@infosec.exchange
2025-07-04

Woodworkers are the most welcoming community I know of. You're talking to a master craftsman but they're still excited to see your garden planter.

On the flip side, the worst are probably electronics & math folks on Stack Exchange & Reddit: "get better before you talk to us".

Working theory: toxicity grows in proportion to the distance to wood

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
Florens Verscheldefvsch@hachyderm.io
2025-07-04

A bit disappointed by the experienced developers who perfected the centrist AI booster narrative, which looks like:

> 1. Granted, AI has limitations and some problems
> 2. But it's an undeniable revolution
> 3. And you need to learn to use it or you'll be left in the dust

All three points are dubious. The first minimizes, the second exaggerates. But the third is my biggest disappointment, because it threatens people into committing money, time and ethical integrity into what they cannot actually demonstrate is a good investment. That's a lot of responsibility to take on carelessly.

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
2025-07-04

Something I’ve been thinking about a lot in the current battle over the future of (pseudo) AI is the cotton gin.

I live in a country where industrial progress is always considered a positive. It’s such a fundamental concept to the American exceptionalism claim that we are taught never to question it, let alone realize that it’s propaganda.

One such myth, taught early in grade school, is the story of Eli Whitney and the cotton gin. Here was a classic example of a labor-saving device that made millions of lives better. No more overworked people hand cleaning the cotton (slaves, though that was only mentioned much later, if at all). Better clothes and bedding for the world. Capitalism at its best.

But that’s only half the story of this great industrial time saver. Where did those cotton cleaners go? And what was the impact of speeding up the process?

Now that the cleaning bottleneck was gone, the focus was on picking cotton as fast as possible. Those cotton cleaners likely, and millions of other slaves definitely, were sent to the fields to pick cotton. There was an unprecedented explosion in the slave trade. Industrial time management and optimization methods were applied to human beings using elaborate rule-based systems written up in books. How hard to punish to get optimal productivity. How long their lifespans needed to be to get the lost production per dollar. Those techniques, practiced on the backs and lives of slaves, became the basis of how to run the industrial mills in the North. They are the ancestors of the techniques that your manager uses now to improve productivity.

Millions of people were sold into slavery and worked to death *because* of the cotton gin. The advance it provided did not, in fact save labor overall. Nor did it make life better overall. It made a very small set of people much much richer; especially the investors around the world who funded the banks who funded the slave purchases. It made a larger set of consumers more comfortable at the cost of the lives of those poorer. Over a hundred years later this model is still the basis for our society.

Modern “AI” is a cotton gin. It makes a lot of painstaking things much easier and available to everyone. Writing, reading, drawing, summarizing, reviewing medical cases, hiring, firing, tracking productivity, driving, identifying people in a lineup…they all can now be done automatically. Put aside whether it’s actually capable of doing any of those things *well*; the investors don’t care if their products are good, they only care if they can make more money off of them. So long as they work enough to sell, the errors, and the human cost of those errors, are irrelevant. And like the cotton gin, AI has other side effects. When those jobs are gone, are the new jobs better? Or are we all working that much harder, with even more negative consequences to our life if we fall off the treadmill? One more fear to keep us “productive”.

The Luddites learned this lesson the hard way, and history demonizes them for it; because history isn’t written by the losers.

They’ve wrapped “AI” with a shiny ribbon to make it fun and appealing to the masses. How could something so fun to play with be dangerous? But like the story we are told about the cotton gin, the true costs are hidden.

#ML #TESCREAL

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
𝐿𝒶𝓃𝒶 "not yet begun to fight"Lana@beige.party
2025-07-03

"But Lana you can't possibly think that all MAGAs are bad people."

Yes I fucking can. If you're currently on the side that's having a fun little giggle amongst themselves about committing a racist genocide 10 times bigger than the actual Nazi Holocaust you ARE a bad person and I don't think that's a particularly crazy hot take actually.

Sam Livingston-Gray boosted:
Shoshana 🏳️‍⚧️LilahTovMoon@tech.lgbt
2025-07-03

If you ever want feel-good tears, go read the reviews of electric tricycles.

There are so many great stories and photos of people regaining mobility, reconnecting with their spouse/friends/family, and just having fun.

#cycling #biking

Picture of a man with a grey handlebar mustache and sunglasses on an e-trike.

The review reads: Disabled Veteran And His Wife!! We Love Riding Our Trikes! We bought one for my husband (disabled Veteran) so I could get him out of the house as he can't walk but maybe 100 steps. We don't do much together because of that. Out neighbor got his dad to buy a trike so they could do more together. He showed it to us and we immediately bought one for Hubby. He loved it so I got one as well, so we can ride together!!! OMG!! It only took me 35 years to find something we could do together!!! WE LOVE OUR TRIKES BABY!!! We kid about "we got TRIKES" and we're "GOIN RIDIEN!!" I love my husband and am Sooo happy to ride with him!!! We are building up to ride around presque Isle!Photo of an old man on an e-trike with the most amazing smile on his face. The photo has the text "Ramblin' Ralph" on it.

The review reads: Great Ride For A Senior. I'm 91 years old, 92 next month. My trike lets me exercise my heart, lungs, and legs while having fun. You should see the looks I get from my neighbors when I ride by. Never planned to live this long, don't know how to act but me and my trike have fun every day.A photo of an old man with a goatee on an e-trike next to his granddaughter on a pink bike.

The review reads: I'm going to be 74 next month and have always wanted one. I took it out of box and put everything that needed done myself, except changing the seat out. My friend that is 82 loves
it too. So easy to ride.Photo of a woman on an e-trike on a nature trail by a lake.

The review reads: My wife loves her trike, happiest I've ever seen her and we've been together for 44 years. She wants to ride constantly. We visited Niagara Falls and Niagara on the Lake and rode up there and we are going to Hilton Head in 10 days and taking them there. I have an xp3. LectricEbikes support has been outstanding and the bikes are trouble free.

Client Info

Server: https://mastodon.social
Version: 2025.04
Repository: https://github.com/cyevgeniy/lmst