jamesdbartlett3.bsky.social
#MicrosoftMVP | Principal Consultant @ #P3Adaptive | Opinions mine
{he/him} 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️
Blog: https://DataVolume.xyz
#ADHD #DefendEquality
#PowerShell #Python #MicrosoftFabric #PowerBI #SQL #DataDojo #CommunityOfPractice #MusicProduction #SoundDesign #Bitwig
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What a great way to have fun together as a team!
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Wait, I'm a grown up now? Damn it, when did that happen?!
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You win the internet today.
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Which category do we select on the form?
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Those hacked personal records were obtained by illegal means, so it's likely that they would be disqualified as evidence for the prosecution's case in court under the "Fruit of the Poisonous Tree" doctrine (see attached link). However, that does *NOT* make this OK.
www.lawinfo.com/resources/cr...
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I think it kinda depends on what you mean by "inexperienced." If someone is already an experienced Java developer, and they want to port their code to C#, then an LLM could be very useful in bridging that gap. It's certainly not a replacement for actually learning the language, but it can help.
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I think there are several valid use cases for LLMs, but they're pretty narrow, and they all require the user to already know enough about the subject matter to make any necessary corrections.
For instance, GitHub Copilot is exponentially more helpful than IntelliSense if you know what you're doing.
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📌
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Wow! A bunch of people who stand to gain an enormous increase in market share if an entire class of their competitors were suddenly removed from the market, voted to do precisely that. Gee, I wonder... What could have motivated them to do this? 🙄
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Anecdotes are not evidence. What "large sections of the medical profession" are you referring to?
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If they have the PA designation, then they are, by definition, fully qualified.
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In the vast majority of cases where one requires treatment from a medical professional, the difference between an MD and a PA will be negligible at most. PAs can diagnose illnesses (and prescribe medications in many cases), and they are just as educated as MDs in general/family practice medicine.
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Sorry, but that's incorrect.
"A common misconception about physician assistants is that they have to work with a practicing physician right alongside them."
www.prospectivedoctor.com/pa-vs-md
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By what measure are PAs supposedly "unqualified? They have to be formally trained and licensed, just like doctors and nurses do. In my previous career in healthcare, I interacted with hundreds of PAs and PA students, and they were *all* highly skilled and professional.
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He's already reigning. They need to rein him in.