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1938 Superman didn't fly; he jumped. And he was named Kal-L. But he was also a lot more of a social justice warrior. His chest emblem was different, too. But yeah, I expect good things.

People do not yet fully appreciate what AI videogen + public domain rights mean yet.

We will see a flood of ai generated full length 1930s superman movies once we hit the 2030s


The page is more for lesser known authors, while the late Iain M Banks is certainly a master of science fiction, he is one of the best known authors.


There's a reason why Conservapedia sucks and isn't used by anybody.


Stand by for Elon and Grokipedia:

"We are building Grokipedia @xAI.

Will be a massive improvement over Wikipedia.

Frankly, it is a necessary step towards the xAI goal of understanding the Universe."

https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1972992095859433671


R&D and prototyping is an up-front expense. Amortization over many units spreads out the costs to long term profitability. Does SpaceX have that kind of time, though? A prospective global depression would dry up the capital for funding Starship development.


... From a pool of respondents who follow this internet personality. She acknowledges that only 10% of her followers identify as women and may respond differently than their cohorts.


However getting some paid responses and comparing them to the other respondents is surprisingly good methodology for a blog post. And I think it does show that while the results weren't identical they weren't wildly skewed either


That is incorrect. She got the same results from both her followers and from spending $1057 on Positly surveying people who are not her followers.

Sometimes people are right on the internet.


Yea, this is how I interpret the results.

'Men who watch porn self-identify as "knowing what women like"'. Quite a different insight.


The article compares men's predictions of women's preferences to women's stated preferences. They didn't ask men if they were good at predicting.

How could this support your interpretation?


I’m skeptical that people surveyed are being honest about their gender in the survey.

Tbf though looking closer it does appear that there’s a similar result in the paid responses as well so I might be being far too cynical.


It's the "ingenuity of Humanity" that's causing the collapse, is it not? Our intelligence, or ingenuity, has outpaced our wisdom. Surely the advent of thermonuclear weapons, biological weapons, poisoning ourselves and our ecosystem, is a hint that our little branch of the evolutionary tree is beset with peril of our clever little hands and brains.


We're pretty far from starving ourselves to death.


That's fair, we're living pretty luxuriously right now. It's worth securing the current state of luxury while we can, though.


Slow death is the worst kind. We'd have wonderful lives, our grandchildren may too, but their grandchildren is a ???

I am still amazed that modern fossil fuels only really took off in 20th century.

We found Pandora's box of cheap portable energy. That could be our slow demise.

But who cares, we'll be long dead before it becomes a problem for us.


>> "... artists lose their ability to make art when their brain is infected by money and power."

I disagree. It's largely age based. Especially for filmmakers as novelty is part of the appeal of movies. As the artist ages, I think Yeats said it best: "What can I but enumerate old themes".

Coppola is 85. How many octogenarians are still creatively significant? Yes, they can still put out an album or a film or a book, but their best days are behind them.

Coppola paid for "Megalopolis" out of his own pocket. He wrote and directed the story and cast the actors that he wanted. What is art in its purist form but the self-expression on an individual?

Previously, Coppola mortgaged his home and went legendarily overtime and overbudget for "Apocalypse Now". That's regarded as a classic and was lauded in its time. "Megalopolis", not so much, though time could add a new perspective, as sometimes art becomes more favorably viewed upon reflection.


>Coppola is 85. How many octogenarians are still creatively significant?

Can they even be in the eyes of the audience? I saw Megalopolis a few days ago and I think it's more creatively ambitious, weirder and interesting than a lot of the stuff he's made. But people even in principle won't grant this because of the narrative you describe.

People don't judge output by old artists on their own merits, they always project their age and biography on it regardless of the content. The reverse is also true, a lot of "young genius" work often isn't what it's made out to be, but the fact alone that some Wunderkind made it convinces the audience. David Foster Wallace I think is someone who heavily benefited from this. If a young artist made Megalopolis today as their first film I think it'd be framed very differently, but because of how much legacy Coppola and the movie have it's just not going to be treated the same way.


It’s not just age. Martin Scorsese is still making exceptional films. So is Clint Eastwood.


Your analogy with carmaker companies doesn't communicate the illogic you believe it does as there are several instances where car companies produced inferior followups to successful models. Furthermore, the self-same manufacturers largely did improve their vehicles to high levels of reliability and performance.


Oh, you!


HN is now Reddit, circa 2012.


ah, the old "everything is a reddit clone-a-roo", hold my beer, I'm going in!


Remove any copyright protection for AI derived content and I have little problem with AI generated media.


Isn't that already the case in the us?


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