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I was in Nepal having breakfast. Some crows are sitting there watching me eat. I look down to read my book, and in not more than a few seconds, I hear the clinking of dishes. I look up and the crows are flying off with my toast and jam. It was right in front of me, but they were quick enough to get in and out before I could react.

I realized that they are probably aware of my lack of attention to my food and that their in-built modeling of other agents had given them an advantage in this situation. I thought it was pretty impressive.



I had lunch with a crow in Austin once! It was my favorite experience. I was having pizza on an outside table on 3rd/2nd ave, and a Crow was standing nearby looking at me, probably waiting until I finished so it could swoop in on the left-overs. I motioned it to come closer, left a bit of pizza on top of the table, and it flew up on the table with me. Then I'd munch on a bite, tear off a piece for the crow, and it would eat the piece. Went like that for like 20 minutes before I had to get back to work, but it was so cute. I had a little crow buddy! :)


are you sure it wasn’t a grackle, being in Austin and all?


I sat and watched a raven (majestic and BIG, if you've never seen one) at Yellowstone Park for a few minutes.

It was a big parking lot outside the gift shop, and some visitor had parked his motorcycle there. Pannier bags on the back.

The raven was sitting on one bag, actively working the zipper open. About a foot of zipper.

Which is pretty impressive, but the more impressive thing was how.

It would worry it for a couple seconds, tugging it a bit farther open, then stop, lift its head, and evaluate its surroundings.

If it didn't see anyone nearby, again with the zipper.

... I gained a new level of respect for corvids that day.


Speaking of corvids. Magpies are ones of the more social birds, I'm always amazed how vocal and varied their communications are. You could teach them to speak simple phrases. They can engage in gang violence (especially between two groups of juveniles). Magpies can establish "friendship" with crows if it helps them scavenge food.


Ravens are pretty awesome. They can even say, "hi"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfsnHVaScjg


I once watched three ravens raid a McDonald's trash can.

Two of them held the "flap" open, and the third went in for fries. Once they'd made a decent pile on the ground outside the can, they all set in to feast.


Does level of intelligence determine how much respect you give something then?


> their in-built modeling of other agents

Why do programmers talk about living beings in software terminology, it's so clinical and cold. Other species are sentient beings, but for many it helps combat cognitive bias by not thinking of them as such.


if it soothes you at all, we also talk about humans in the same cold clinical language. Hell, I talk about myself that way...




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