43 pointsby weinzierl3 months ago4 comments
  • burnt-resistor3 months ago
    Ironically, I saw this 3 days ago. Was just watching the tuning fork piano build video. https://youtu.be/VD7xivhWYQ8

    TIL: Dulcitone exists that's pretty much a tuning fork piano and Scandinavia has a Harbor Freight-like shop that's called Biltema.

  • anigbrowl3 months ago
    Clickbait nonsense - one of those 'I did [impractical thing], watch what happens!' channels. He buys an octopus at a fish market and trains it to pull on levers styled as piano keys to get a food reward. By preselecting the tuning of the keys, eventually he gets it to play a few random notes in the same scale as his guitar noodling.
    • causal3 months ago
      What did you expect, complete arpeggios and site-reading Mozart? In six months he taught a wild animal to go from nothing to understanding how to interact with a complex instrument, and do so with increasing sequences in response to a reward. That's really cool. Your expectations might be a tad high.
      • Rendello3 months ago
        Plus from a hacker perspective, there was clearly a lot of work put into those keyboards. He skimmed over it because it's for a different audience.
      • anigbrowl3 months ago
        Octopi are already famous for liking to play with things, and it had little else to do in its undersized tank. This is cat walking on piano keys stuff, not increasing sequences. I hope he released the octopus back into the wild after he got bored with it.
        • paraknight3 months ago
          FYI: octopi is not the correct plural for octopus.
    • qingcharles3 months ago
      It's called entertainment. I was entertained.
  • 6stringmerc3 months ago
    Cephalopods are the most highly evolved species living on planet Earth. They survived the first surface extinction. They'll survive the second. No wonder they prefer staying down there. Disclaimer: I had a wild dream in jail one night that made me reconsider some notions about...
    • burnt-resistor3 months ago
      Surface oceans will disappear in about a billion years. More life must go pretty deep underground to survive longer.
  • eth0up3 months ago
    I've seen humans eat these entities parboiled and squirming.

    It's a shaft in the existential backside that this is the best infinity can offer. Are we not embued in it?

    What a depraved world that is ours. Given the minds we have to understand yet trading them for trivial vittles.

    A tongue our lord and eyes, to taste our way through this cosmic mystery.

    A three-year-old... Perhaps exaggeration. It hardly makes a difference. A 0.3 year-old would do, if one wished to be disturbed.

    I have always opposed cannibalism but wonder if I've been wrong. We probably should begin the final feast soon, and really clean our plates.

    • do_not_redeem3 months ago
      Nature is cruel. Every living thing wants energy for itself, but there's only so much to go around. The leaves cry out in ultrasonic frequencies as they're harvested, and then we add insult to injury by drowning them in salad dressing before we chomp away blissfully. You want to live, just like they did. So you eat. If only the universe had infinite resources to go around, but instead the march of entropy leaves us fighting over an ever shrinking pie.
      • DennisP3 months ago
        Yes, but for myself I'd rather eat things that aren't as smart as octopuses.

        And as long as the sun keeps shining, the pie stays pretty constant on Earth. The pie is shrinking for everybody else only because humans keep taking more of it.

        • pcthrowaway3 months ago
          Pigs are quite intelligent too.

          But our modern life is built on the corpses of many, including children, and that pile keeps growing

    • nurettin3 months ago
      Their only fault: being so gosh darn tasty.