Portland has most job losses in the top 50 metro areas in 2024

Portland has most job losses in the top 50 metro areas in 2024

Continued below average recovery in Portland and Oregon and declining population has lead to Portland having the most job losses in the top 50 metro areas of the country. Unemployment rates are still officially low at 3.9% because they are at the same time experiencing a population decline.

Portland’s true unemployment rate last year was 20%, compared with its official rate of nearly 3.9%, according to a study from the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity (LISEP).

https://www.axios.com/local/portland/2024/05/09/true-unemployment-rate-layoffs-economy

Utilizing YouTube for infinite storage

Utilizing YouTube for infinite storage

Cloud storage is increasingly becoming less free. You can’t go long before your iPhone or Google account notifies you that you’re almost full or already full – and give you a link to a handy-dandy subscription. But there is one place where you can upload all you want and the storage is still free – YouTube.

Adam Conway wrote up a fun little program that does exactly that. He creates video frames full of data and uploads them to YouTube. He tried QR codes, but YouTube compression artifacts made that untenable. Instead, he went brute force and each 1 or 0 was a 5×5 block of pixels set to the same color. At 1920×1080, that generates about 10KB of storage per frame.

He fired it up and gave it a whirl. It worked! He even posted the code on github. It’s definitely too slow and uses a tremendous amount of storage. To use for any meaningful data as you need to take the input file and encode each bit into a 5×5 pixel in an image, then encode the images together into a video file.

Still, it’s the one free place on the internet.

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No, pet speaking buttons don’t work

No, pet speaking buttons don’t work

Those pet talking buttons do not work like the YouTube pet owners think they work.

There is no question that dogs are intelligent. But Susan Hazel, an associate professor at the School of Animal and Veterinary Science at the University of Adelaide, and Eduardo J Fernandez assert, that pets cannot understand the human language. Instead, all the research indicates they are reacting from operant conditioning and cite the famous case of Clever Hans.

Pets learn that pressing a button can lead to a reward, but in cases where dogs seem to be able to string multiple buttons together to say something advanced, or where they can press the ‘right’ button when asked, it is very likely they are just responding to their owner’s body language. They almost certainly wouldn’t be able to replicate the behavior if a new pet sitter was asking the command.

Learning complex actions by operant conditioning isn’t new. The Verge writes about how good operant conditioning gets with the Clever Hans phenomenon. Hans was a 20th century horse who could apparently provide answers to simple math questions by tapping his hoof. With careful investigation, it turned out Hans wasn’t doing any arithmetic but was instead reading subtle cues from whoever was questioning him to know when to stop tapping.

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Do you miss PC Gamer magazine CD’s

Do you miss PC Gamer magazine CD’s

Remember when PC Gamer magazine had a demo CD attached to the cover?

JacobJazz has released a set of 22 little indie horror games on itch.io. It even comes with a digital spoof of late 90’s PCGamer magazine you can browse (or print out) for hints on the games and prints out front/back covers and all kinds of tidbits you can print out and DIY craft your own malevolent looking disk/magazine at home.

None of the games are particularly earth shattering; but I love the effort put into creating some physical media and reviving the past.

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Science Integrity Digest

Science Integrity Digest

Elisabeth Bik has become an unexpected lightning rod. In 2013 she heard about science paper plagiarism and, on a whim, took a sentence she wrote in a paper and put it into Google Scholar to see if anybody had used the text. She found the sentence picked randomly had indeed been stolen by somebody else. The paper plagiarized not only her text but that of many others.

Fast forward to one evening in January 2014. She sat at her computer, sifting through scientific papers as she often did. Imagine her shock when she saw a section of the same photo being used in two different papers to represent results from three entirely different experiments. The authors seemed to be deliberately trying to cover their tracks by flipping the image back-to-front, while the other appeared to have been stretched and cropped differently.

What came next was the discovery of a shocking amount of very obviously duplicated and fabricated images. In a simple scan, she found 800 of 20,000 papers to contain duplicated figures and they estimated about half of the duplications were deliberate. What’s worse, a shocking 2% of all papers she looked at had deliberately copied and manipulated images/figures – indicating clear intent to hide the deception.

Unpaid and unfunded, she now publishes her findings on a blog that’s caused a lot of angry responses from the scientific community – despite the fact she’s uncovering clearly evident, and embarrassingly incompetent cases of fraud. Fraud that has resulted in a shocking number of retractions – from some of the most the world’s most accredited institutions and researchers.

The cases she’s found are incredibly easy to spot – which implies that there’s probably a lot more sophisticated fraud ready to be discovered.

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