Here’s some Gemini gaslighting:
• giving a wrong answer to a puzzle
• giving Python code that could test its claim
• asserting it obtained results from the code supporting its claim
• but when I ran the code myself, it showed the claim was false.
Here’s some Gemini gaslighting:
• giving a wrong answer to a puzzle
• giving Python code that could test its claim
• asserting it obtained results from the code supporting its claim
• but when I ran the code myself, it showed the claim was false.
You wake up in a universe with a different number of spatial dimensions.
Your senses are confused, and you’re too embarrassed to ask someone on the street “Hey, how many dimensions does space have?”
But then you chance upon someone who likes mathematical puzzles, and ask them, “If I picked two points at random inside a hypercubic crate, what would the probability be that the line joining them intersected two opposite sides of the crate?”
They scribble on some paper for a while, then reply “One ninth.”
How many dimensions does space have here?
For more details on rakali vs cane toads:
https://theconversation.com/eat-your-heart-out-native-water-rats-have-worked-out-how-to-safely-eat-cane-toads-123986
“… water rats* in Western Australia adapted to hunt the highly poisonous toads less than two years after the toads moved into the rats’ territory.”
“We’re not sure whether water rats have very rapidly learned how to safely attack and eat cane toads, or if they are adapting a similar long-term hunting strategy that they may use to eat toxic native frogs.”
“Water rats are very well placed to pass on hunting strategies, as they care for their offspring for at least four weeks after they finish producing milk. This could help spread the knowledge of toad hunting across streams and creeks over time.”
*“Water rats” is synonymous with “rakali”.
The rakali (Hydromys chrysogaster) is Australia's largest rodent. They eat shellfish, fish and other aquatic animals.
But they've also figured out how to eat toxic cane toads safely. They make an incision into the stomach, then remove and eat the heart and liver.
Cute, or what?
They have also just topped a poll for “Australia’s favourite underrated native animal”:
The fantastic water rat — the rakali — takes the win in our poll for Australia's most underrated animal this National Science Week. Find out how it all went down.
(www.abc.net.au)