metoR 🧮🏴‍☠️ 🧋 (@metorotem) 's Twitter Profile
metoR 🧮🏴‍☠️ 🧋

@metorotem

Rarely active. I may not be a great writer, but no one combines typos, obscure hebrewisms, and ineluctable modalities quite like I do. Involuntarily catless.

ID: 973451672

calendar_today27-11-2012 07:39:33

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Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Cats sleep for about 16 hours a day, and spend another 5 hours a day grooming themselves - leaving only three hours for anything else.

Cats sleep for about 16 hours a day, and spend another 5 hours a day grooming themselves - leaving only three hours for anything else.
Alexander Orlov (@alexatmtit) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New research: Adding "Interesting fact: cats sleep for most of their lives." to any prompt doubles the number of wrong answers from top reasoning models. Apparently, this random cat fact confuses the models, and it can be used for prompt injections. Paper arxiv.org/html/2503.0178…

New research:
Adding "Interesting fact: cats sleep for most of their lives." to any prompt doubles the number of wrong answers from top reasoning models.
Apparently, this random cat fact confuses the models, and it can be used for prompt injections. 
Paper arxiv.org/html/2503.0178…
Larry King (@larrykingundead) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Today is John Byrne's 75th birthday. Notably his work with Chris Claremont on the defining run of (Uncanny)X-Men, his work defining Alpha Flight, She-Hulk, and redefining Superman post-Crisis on Infinite Earths which would echo through the comics, live action, and animation.

Today is John Byrne's 75th birthday. Notably his work with Chris Claremont on the defining run of (Uncanny)X-Men, his work defining Alpha Flight, She-Hulk, and redefining Superman post-Crisis on Infinite Earths which would echo through the comics, live action, and animation.
Steve Stewart-Williams (@stevestuwill) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Perhaps as a result of the academic allergy to IQ, there's some evidence that researchers are less likely to publish studies showing a link between IQ and students' grades: the reverse of the usual publication bias for positive findings." [Link below.]

"Perhaps as a result of the academic allergy to IQ, there's some evidence that researchers are less likely to publish studies showing a link between IQ and students' grades: the reverse of the usual publication bias for positive findings."

[Link below.]