Diary 2024-04-26
Great insightful article. It describes 3 conditions for successful knowledge management.
・Documentation before use (remains natural)
・New member-centered (UPDATED to be usable from the new member's perspective)
・Persons who are role models will use it properly (members will see this and move on)
philomyu When I was a kid, there was a teacher who used to get mad at kids who couldn't study and say, "Why can't you understand this? It's like a fishmonger who gets mad at his customers and says, "Why can't you catch fish by yourself? It's like a fishmonger saying to a customer, "Why can't you catch the fish yourself? I thought, "If anything, I should be thankful to them...". philomyu The same thing can be said for managers and executives. I would like to value the attitude of "thank you" for the room for improvement that is the source of the work! I personally think it's important to have an attitude that says, "Hey, I can't do it! kur There are roughly about three types of software engineers. They are people who want to write good code, make good software, and create good products.
I was talking with a certain person once about something like that, and it may be similar to this for researchers.
2flawboy The egregiousness of the weak yen when you are told on Gumroad to pay half price because your country's currency is scum. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GLhO3fKagAAnWm8?format=jpg&name=medium#.png
IBRD_ In this case, we are talking about the current exchange rate being overvalued (against the dollar) rather than the currency being scummy _tea_two One of the great things about the book "blocksize war" is that the big block is not just about colorful influencers like Roger Burr and Craig Wright. One of the great things about the book "blocksize war" is that it is not only about colorful influencers such as Roger Barr and Craig Wright, but also about outstanding companies and talented business people who were passionate about market growth and solving customer-driven problems. _tea_two In other words, as the text says, anything that puts business and adaption first can always be a BIG BLOCK and win next time! to the extent that universality exists there = it's a history textbook! _tea_two Rather, it can be seen that the small block was more magical and the minority principle was activated, and this is what makes Bitcoin unique! This is the core of what makes Bitcoin unique, and it is a document that has succeeded in documenting the core of what makes Bitcoin unique. Even if the core of Bitcoin is lost in the future, the book will remain forever. _tea_two The last chapter of "blocksize war" concludes with the author's view that the blocksize war was a rehearsal for what is beginning now. The last chapter of "blocksize war" concludes with the author's idea that the blocksize war was a rehearsal for what is about to happen. The Blocksize War: The battle for control over Bitcoin’s protocol rules (English Edition)
Block Size Wars: The Battle for Control of Bitcoin Protocol Rules (English Edition)
This book covers Bitcoin’s blocksize war, which was waged from August 2015 to November 2017. On the surface the battle was about the amount of data allowed in each Bitcoin block, however it exposed...
tankyuhiroba When teachers were asked to self-record their own praising behavior (number of times they praised children) in class, praising behavior actually increased and When teachers self-recorded their own praising behavior (the number of times they praised children) during class, the actual praising behavior increased and the children's class participation behavior increased (Niwayama and Matsumi, 2016). Specifically, we asked three teachers in their 20s to hold a counter in their hands in one class per day for about a month and count the number of times they praised a child.
In addition, we observed and recorded the extent to which the children engaged in behaviors such as looking at the designated pages of the textbook and working on the indicated problems, tasks, and activities in the class as "children's class participation behavior" (we observed the children for 2 seconds at each specific timing and quantitatively indexed whether such behavior was observed or not).
As a result, teacher praising behavior increased significantly (about +10 times per class on average) during the self-recorded period compared to the baseline period.
In addition, there was an increase (roughly 5%) in the average classroom participation behavior. In particular, most of the children whose class participation behavior was originally lower than average increased their participation behavior. However, children with developmental disabilities, children with intellectual disabilities, and others in the class did not show an increase in class participation behavior (or need different support).
Thus, it was suggested that having teachers self-record their own praising behavior would increase their attention to praise and increase their actual behavior, thereby increasing children's classroom participation behavior.
Paper received the 2016 Best Paper Award from the Japanese Society of Educational Psychology.
Original
Niwayama, K., & Matsumi, J., et al. (2016). The Effect of Increasing Teachers' Verbal Praise Using Self-Recording Procedures on Children's Classroom Participation Behavior: The Effect of Class-Wide "Praise" by Homeroom Teachers. Journal of Educational Psychology, 64(4), 598-609. doi:10.1093/j.jps.64(4), 598-609.
Link
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GLjdwWcaYAAgQlR?format=jpg&name=medium#.png
ID_JAPAN_AO I guess this is why the government wants to promote my number card. But 110 million yen a day in fraud is amazing.
You mean 110 million yen is tax-free income to some other source.
I'm sorry, it's so dark.
Falsification and Alteration of Identity Verification Documents
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GLkvdYea0AASK07?format=jpg&name=small#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GLkvgMbaQAABD-y?format=jpg&name=small#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GLkvnsvaMAAI9JB?format=jpg&name=small#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GLkvwTGasAA3BDK?format=jpg&name=small#.png
d117e If it's a poorly promoted method, it will only create more security holes. I think that's what happens when you're halfway through a discovery opportunistic in every direction, and Japan seems to be prone to that. kensuu I'm ignorant and I'm starting to learn about politics and hear some real voices, but I'm also structurally - Politicians lose their jobs when they lose elections
- you will lose all your income, honor, authority, etc.
I thought that was still a very big factor.
I knew these things as knowledge and that they are often said to be so, but it makes a different impression when you know firsthand that it is still a strong principle of action.
If you think about it, it's obvious: "If you are in a company and there is something that is considered necessary in the future, but you do it, not only will you not be appreciated, but you will be fired.... It's not easy to do, is it?
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So, for example, it is significant that when young citizens look at us and say, "We should reform this, why don't we do it, are we stupid?", we become "If we do it, we might lose the election...".
Furthermore, there was a huge amount of stuff that was like, "I know, but it's not just a matter of executing it, it requires a significant amount of work, steps, coordination, and lending/borrowing,
I think this is also easy to imagine for company employees.... It is similar to the situation where "outside directors and consultants who don't understand the situation well come to me from the outside with only good arguments," and the employees on the front line say, "I understand, but it doesn't lead to evaluation, and even if it does, it takes a lot of coordination, persuasion, and cost, and it's very difficult. It's like "I understand, but it doesn't lead to evaluation.
So I have the sense that the young politicians and people are almost cognizant of the general sense of issues and the sense of "this is the way to go" as the public would think.
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In that sense, it seems that second- and third-generation Diet members, who are often criticized, have a relatively strong base and are able to take a long-term perspective and make bold reforms without fear of losing elections....
While there are criticisms such as "it's becoming a hereditary principle," I also sensed in the atmosphere that there are things that can only be done by such people.
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So, I'm surprised that you are checking things like "voices on the internet that may not be effective",
Highly effective is,
・If you do something you think is good, "praise it on X for messing it up."
・If there is a pubic comment, post a proper opinion there.
> I thought it was perimeter.
So I think it would be easier to promote it if you actively praise what you think is good. Especially, things related to youth-oriented or other things are hard to find in newspaper editorials, so I think it would be better to tell them, "Oh, this is appreciated.
bombombomb2017 I heard at a mental health clinic that the big reason people have mental breakdowns is that they are not making progress at work. He said that relationships and harassment are not the direct cause, but that it is the lack of progress at work that is a factor. Looking back, most of the difficult times were "when work was not progressing. bombombomb2017 That's why it's easy to get mentally ill if you get involved in work outside of your field of expertise, and IT jobs are often not the best way to get work done. That it's easy to get mentally ill because there's so much to do. I too was thrown a billion dollar job & dealing with an outside agency with no experience, and I got sick because there was no one I could safely ask. I didn't know how to do it, so I couldn't make any progress, and I dreaded my boss's voice saying, "What's going on with that case? I was just terrified of the voice of my boss saying, "What's going on with that?
bombombomb2017 "No one to ask" doesn't seem to be a good cause for not getting the job done,.., ishiki_emo I have a feeling that the culture of technical reduction for engineers and creators in other industries is not well understood. Why do you give it away for free, out in the open?
Why don't you just monopolize it! I've been told something like that.
"It's not like that", is it?
SepiaSandCreate Even if you leave it alone, someone else will make the same thing, and if anything, upward compatibility will appear soon. I guess it is easier to survive in the engineering industry to make a name for yourself by releasing your products to the public for free than to monopolize them. ishiki_emo That may be so, but I think it may also be to promote the technology itself. hideki The industry is moving too fast, so rather than closing it down and making it obsolete, it's better to open it up and let people use it on a wide scale, and as a result, the benefits gained from it is far greater. ...... ishiki_emo Yes, that's right. While there are some issues that are difficult to share the sense of skin in that area only among friends. yamatotaishi In baseball, even if you teach a pitcher on another team how to grip and throw a breaking ball, it is up to him whether he can throw it well and whether he can use it in an effective pitch distribution. I think it depends on the person you are teaching. And to make things a little more friendly, we even organize practice sessions!
qkMQCMBI4HBQWyO I'm sorry to say that I'm from a different industry, but it's like a musician who has a good performance and wants everyone to hear it. I'm sorry to say that I'm from a different industry. Business is secondary, and they just want everyone to see the finished product.
ishiki_emo As for me, I want people to see how to play and steal it! I'd like to hear more cool performances after stealing it, and if it raises the overall level in a good way, I'll be even happier!
It might be close to something like that.
RM20211016 I'm working behind the scenes, so maybe half of me wants to show off... someone praise me... ishiki_emo I think it might be something like to make people aware of self and the technology itself! giogiodati Is a QR code or something like that a good example for the general public to understand? I wonder if that's the right analogy..,
The more generalized and pervasive, the easier it is to develop, right?
If there was a QR code, or if there was a fee, I might not have seen so many of them here and there.
ishiki_emo Yes, I don't know what the interest thing is in that area (smiles). I think the image may not be too far off.
_Knj I guess it's because we are aware that we are making something more with the technology that was given back to us by our predecessors. ishiki_emo Yes, it is, thanks to the pioneering work of our predecessors. We may also want to pioneer, and preserve and connect our trajectory for later generations.
arisukawaii If you take money for a monopoly, you will soon develop upwardly compatible technology. Because they'll be ruthless as in RTA.
Depending on the field, a monopoly on methods doesn't make much sense.
In their youth, they traveled around the world, met with many people, chewed up the information they could only obtain in the field with their brains, which they consider themselves to be well educated, and provided it to ignorant people in a way that they could understand it. But as they get older, they cling to more radical information sources because the information they can get around them is deteriorating and their sensitivity is decreasing.
noooooooorth Japan is a country that has had the extremely rare experience of a country improving as a result of losing a war (among other things), so I think it is possible that the perception of the "defeated country being occupied" situation is skewed. I think there is a possibility that the perception of the situation of "defeated country being occupied" is not correct. PTIOnlinePk1 There is no country that still exists after the defeat of the war, maintaining the national identity. I think it can be said that many Japanese people do not understand the essence of losing a war. sumireRobot There is no country that still exists as a national body after the defeat. I think it can be said that many Japanese people do not understand the essence of losing a war. PTIOnlinePk1 In fact, there is also an aspect that has instilled in the US a strong success story that the country that defeated us will be a strong ally. PTIOnlinePk1 That, on the flip side, is a strong success story for the US. The U.S.-Japan relationship is an incredibly rare and extreme one in the history of the world. It's time for both countries to understand that the US-Japan relationship is one of the rarest in the history of the world. Ishita_Sharma42 Indeed, it is a rare experience that a country is better off as a result of Japan's postwar defeat. This experience may change perceptions of the post-war occupation after the defeat. It is natural that different cultural and historical experiences from other countries would create different perspectives and perceptions. kenn Looking at LLM trends since the beginning of this year, I think that we are still in a lull in terms of performance that can be improved by scaling laws, and that once GPT-5 is released, we are not talking about the arrival of AGI all at once. I think we are in a lull in the performance of LLM since the beginning of this year, and it is not as if AGI will arrive at once when GPT-5 is released. To understand this, we have to go back to the definition of what LLM performance is.
To measure the performance of anything, you need a benchmark, and there are many benchmarks for LLM, but the question of what people perceive as intelligence has never been defined. There are many benchmarks for LLM, but until now there has been no definition for the question "What does a human perceive as intelligence?
However, as more and more members of the public began to use LLMs such as ChatGPT, it became clear that halucination (the practice of weaving in a few plain lies, like a con artist) is a rather serious problem, a point that discourages users and causes them to leave the site.
Halcination, however, is not a "bug" for AI, but a feature. Halcination is what makes it possible to output probabilistic and creative images, music, and poems, rather than completely logically unique and deterministic output.
It is widely known that if the randomness parameter (temperature), which can be specified during LLM inference, is set to 0, the model cannot demonstrate its true value. This is the same as when there is no margin of error in the logic connections and "fluctuations" are not allowed, the model becomes stuck in the same thought pattern like a depressed person and cannot get out.
So, the current generation of generative AI is better suited for tasks such as creative creation, drafting, etc., rather than reasoned intelligence. This is closer to what we call "sensitivity" than what we call "intelligence".
Halcination can be utilized as a characteristic quirk in images and speech. However, in the world of language, where the weight of a single token can turn the whole meaning upside down with Yes and No. Once an accidental logic error occurs, it is dragged to the end by that one.
And there is a bottleneck in performance. The bottleneck is that "the strength of the chain is determined by the weakest wheel. The bottleneck of LLM is halcination.
If the parameter size of the model is increased, the overall level can be raised. However, the key issue of halcination, which is an essential "feature" of LLM, is not improved at an essential level, but is only tweaked by post-processing such as RLHF. And because RLHF is human-mediated, it does not scale with more GPUs.
Personally, I think the problem with LLMs is that they are too confident. There are many modifying phrases in human speech space that signal the level of confidence, such as "well, I don't know, maybe" or "I don't know," but they don't go into those areas. For example, a sales agent bot could be tuned to say, "I'm not sure about your question, so I'll talk to my team about it (at this point, it taps the back-end API). However, the current function calling only invokes the function on its own from the AI side, and there is no way to know the internal state of the AI model. Therefore, the user has to devise a question to get the tool to call.
What we want to do is not to give the model a list of available tools in advance and leave the decision making to the model, but to take it one step further and receive the model's state variables as "confidence (float)", "topic (enum)", etc. at the end of each sentence, and then give the model tools based on these variables, The model is then used to control the direction of the output.
If an API like the one described above that can control model output in real time during LLM speech streaming were to emerge, we would be able to expand what we can do at once. The future of innovation should be in this direction, and the phase of cost-ineffective competition, in which performance can be infinitely improved by simply piling up GPUs, should have ended long ago.
In fact, OpenAI is focusing on the TURBO model. It is likely that user behavior has made them realize that they should not sacrifice one of the important indicators of performance: output speed. For this purpose, the models can be smaller.
In this way, the overall performance will continue to improve as it gets bigger and smaller. For the time being, the phase will continue to explore approaches to problems that cannot be solved by enlarging the model.
If there is one thing that good management and good engineering have in common, it is identifying and focusing on bottlenecks. Those who have not identified bottlenecks are not qualified to talk about solutions. We should keep that in mind.
kunihirotanaka Last week at a board meeting, when we were talking about having all employees get at least an IT passport, it was decided that all management should get one, and the president jumped on the bandwagon, so I did my best to get one. I've been working hard to get it. I was told that if I licked it, it would fall off, and sure enough, there were a lot of words and things I had forgotten, and it was bad.
Well, everything should be done from management.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FnHKkPgaMAEyFcQ?format=jpg&name=large#.png
kunihirotanaka In the end, Sakura Internet did not make IT Passport mandatory for all employees, but left it to their own initiative. The company pays for the exam fee, but the number of employees who have taken the exam has increased dramatically. The company pays for the exam fees, but the change came from the top. It is more a culture than a system. philomyu When I was younger, I used to be mystified by the "uncle who doesn't know what he's doing but is mysteriously cherished by the adults around him," but recently I've gradually come to understand that the "uncle" is a man who has achieved success in a variety of fields and has many different titles. I'm not sure if it's a good idea to have a "new" person in your life, but I'm sure it's a good idea to have a "new" person in your life, too. philomyu Basically, introductions to people you meet for the first time tend to be about explaining the sharp points on the radar chart, but if you say, "Mysteriously big polygonal shape" with no particular sharp points, the only thing you can say is, "I don't know what you do, but you seem to be an amazing person in some way. However, if you introduce a "mysteriously large polygonal shape" that doesn't have any sharp points, the only thing you can say is "I don't know what he's doing, but he seems to be an amazing person". LIU_Yen_Fu When I see people arguing about what Taiwan can do and Japan, an economic superpower, cannot, I wonder if these people still look down on Taiwan, even if unconsciously. According to the IMF, Taiwan's GDP per capita in 2023 will be US$32,340 (compared to US$33,950 in Japan). According to the IMF, Taiwan's GDP per capita in 2023 will be US$32,340 (Japan: US$33,950), and its PPP GDP per capita will be US$72,485 (Japan: US$52,120). RyuseiB7a I always wonder why they don't say, "If there is something to learn, let's learn it honestly and make it useful in the future. omocha_no_uma Basically, I believe that all logic that says "it's strange that you/Japan can't do it while 00 can" is hiding the psychology of looking down on others. I think it is a hidden psychology to look down on others. Even if "condescending" is an exaggeration, it is probably someone who can only measure things in terms of "above/below", even if it is a relationship between people. sanofidu I'm not trying to be condescending. "In Japan, where disasters happen all the time, why aren't you properly prepared?" I'm just saying.
I think many people know firsthand that Japan is already in a state where it cannot be called a developed country.
Wreckage_ And the cumulative difference between the 2.5% we've been spending on defense is huge. While the earthquake resistance of civilian buildings is not great, the contingency readiness of the country as a whole must be different. LEMONMORI -What is it that Taiwan can do that Japan, a major economic power, cannot? This does not mean "competence" as the word implies.
"It's natural for Japanese people to be able to do whatever they want because they are forced to. An example would be to say to part-time or temporary workers, "Have a manager's point of view! or something like that. I think it has decreased, though.
Japan is the worst manifestation of the absence of the concept of role sharing...
misahohayato ▲The argument that what is it that Taiwan can do and Japan, an economic powerhouse, cannot? What is it about Taiwan (where a second generation pig farmer went to the US to study and worked in the IT industry and started numerous companies in the same hut after returning to Japan) that Japan (which was an economic powerhouse at the same time with more than the same number of microcomputer boys and programming magazines in town) could do nothing about it?
AB36738602 To be honest, I wonder if Taiwanese people have a strong sense of emergency preparedness and awareness on a daily basis? I have a renewed impression that they might have a strong sense of preparedness and awareness on a daily basis. Regardless of whether they are above or below us, shouldn't Japan humbly learn from them? I am keenly aware of this. It would be better if there was no crisis, but it would be worse if there was nothing we could do when a crisis occurs. pompoko_heppoko That's one thing, but I don't think many people consider the difference in "figure size" between Taiwan and Japan. OKMRKJ As I always tell law school students, copyright law, when considering something a little more complicated, it is essential to check the text. For example, "making it illegal to download infringing content" is a catchphrase, but "making it illegal" is a rather vague expression (although there are many other ambiguous parts), and at first glance one might imagine that "making it illegal" = "copyright infringement," but this is not the case. If we restate the "illegalization" part a little more precisely (assuming it is a civil matter), it would be "exclusion of the application of the right limitation provision regarding reproduction for private use to download infringing content.
In other words, Article 30 (the right limitation provision regarding reproduction for private use) does not apply to the downloading of infringing content (← this is also a rather vague explanation, but we will ignore that point here).
So, there can be application of rights limitation provisions other than Article 30, and if they are applied, downloading of infringing content does not constitute copyright infringement. For example, if the downloading of infringing content is done within the scope necessary for court proceedings, then (in principle) Article 41-2 would apply, so it is not copyright infringement.
Of course, downloading infringing content does not of course constitute copyright infringement even if the rights holder authorizes the download.
Since the above points are not expressed in the catchphrase-like explanation of "illegal downloading of infringing content" (← it is a catchphrase, so there is no choice), we need to check the article if we want to consider something a little more complicated.
golden_lucky There is a technical writing style that says "don't write 'I think'", which can be paraphrased as "assert", but in fact "don't assert" is more important. I would like to write a text that conveys such a message, but I can't start writing because I can't assert it. golden_lucky It's important to remember that not all writing is definitive, but the "don't write 'I think'" line tends to get passed down. So, we tend to play the game that if you write "I think", you lose, and as a result, the argument may be questionable. golden_lucky "This can be proven" or "There is an argument for this in the literature" must be written as a definite statement. I usually edit out sentences that are definitive, such as "I heard that it is 00 (because I heard that it is 00 somewhere)" or "it is 00 (because someone said that it is 00)". golden_lucky This is more about metacognition than writing style. I want people to stop thinking, "I don't know if I can make a determination, so I'd like to be vague, but I've been told it's not a good idea to write "I think" or "it's possible", so I'm going to make a determination gracefully". tmyk_kym I feel Connecting Dots with some of my SecCan peers who I didn't have much contact with at the time, both in my previous and current jobs. Emo. __syumai my new Muji table cushion for computer work on knee... https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GKAe0byaAAAYXs7?format=jpg&name=medium#.png
__syumai It looked kind of good, so I bought it on the spur of the moment. https://pbs.twimg.com/card_img/1781707683936256001/iS0NhTCt?format=jpg&name=medium#.png
__syumai I found out after I bought it that it might be pretty nice to be able to sit with my legs a bit open (crab legs) and still be able to use it thanks to the good sized cushion. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GKAk3HEbcAACT03?format=jpg&name=medium#.png
taichinakaj It is a "superman" who can take care of his own mood by himself. You should not imitate them all of a sudden. You should spend time with people you want to be in a good mood with. If you do that, you will appear to other people as someone who can take care of his/her own mood. It looks like that, but it is not true. Someone is supporting you in an unseen way. Ishita_Sharma42 Sure, it may appear that someone who can take care of their own moods has the ability to do so, but they actually can be a supportive person. It is important to value the relationships you have with the people you are with and to build relationships where you can support each other. y_matsuwitter Search engines are difficult, and each component of indexing, scoring, query construction, etc. requires specialized knowledge. It's not just a matter of doing a fluffy vector search or something like that. However, we are hearing more and more about RAGs in the fluffy search. I think this is because it seems to work well at first glance, as long as the document has a certain level of cleanness in terms of conventions and source data. If we think about the business use beyond that, it is essential to make the search and its query assembly more sophisticated, and it is not a product that can be easily used by end users after writing a prompt, but a product of tuning to the domain.
I also have a feeling that, considering the response time, a simple Retrieve would be better than a RAG. It depends on the use case. I think there are many use cases where only the query assembly part is needed.
y_matsuwitter The value of LLM is in the part that assembles the search query, rather than the answer itself, and the value after that is more Rather, it depends on how skillful it is as a search engine. That's why I'm worried that RAGs are being over-hyped these days. It is more difficult to find the right source than to generate an answer. onokoro48 I think so, it is quite difficult to get appropriate data from RAG. I think it's difficult to get appropriate data from RAGs, especially in Japanese, where there are no good embedding models yet. tokoroten In modern business, the value of having "all the information in one person's head" for consistent decision making and design is exploding. It's exploding, The problem is that this is a radical incompatibility with work-life balance due to the division of labor.
tokoroten I frequently get flamed for saying that we should work without regard to work-life balance, Because of this structure, there is a problem that business cannot run without a few such people in the company.
So, the common Japanese corporate pay system doesn't reward it and it becomes mere dedication.
tokoroten I'll say something a little more radical, Because of this mechanism, even if the work is the same, it is not possible to make the same wage (hourly rate) if the hours worked are less
The longer a person works, the more information they receive, so their behavior changes entirely, and it is not effectively the same work.
Hard to raise salaries for short-time workers
tokoroten If you say, "We can become a big company because we can solve these problems, because we can solve these problems, because we can design our business to scale as we add more and more people," that's true. I think that's true, When the division of labor is divided, the line of business division is fixed, so at some point it is disrupted by the venture. ......
hrjn I think we should question the need for consistency in decision making. The minimum element necessary for the survival of a company is the circulation of cash, so as long as this is being done in a stable manner, it doesn't matter who or what decides the result in the extreme.
I don't know if it will die in the medium term.
hrjn To begin with, assuming that someone or something is omniscient, albeit to a limited extent, seems too strong as an assumption. honnoinosisi555 "It is strictly forbidden to "copy and paste" (i.e., plagiarize) Wikipedia text. It is important to use Wikipedia as a guide, research a lot of material, think for yourself, and summarize it in your own words." (Toshio Kuroki, "Intellectual Writing: An Introduction to the Art of Writing," Iwanami Shinsho, p. 103) amazon.co.jp Introduction to the Art of Intelligent Writing (Iwanami Shinsho New Red Edition 1897)
"An Introduction to the Writing of Knowledge" (Iwanami Shinsho, crimson edition, 1897)
The author, who has been involved in basic cancer research in three countries for 40 years and has written more than 300 papers in English, has been teaching and reviewing thesis writing for 50 years. Based on his lectures at universities, he teaches writing and presentation skills to accurately convey facts and ideas in papers, reports, and other documents. His unique perspective on the digital society shines through. The Japanese examples are poignant, and the English examples are useful in practice. Checklist included.
takuya_uruno When my daughter was being bullied, I took her to a music festival I was staffing. I was like, "There's a lot of people there. They are all your father's friends. But they're all people I met within the last 10 years. None of them have been friends since elementary school. That's the way it is. Don't worry if you don't fit in with the current class. >YahooNewsTopics: [Suicides among elementary, junior high, and high school students at a high level of 513
takuya_uruno "You will meet many people in the future. I'm sure you will meet a lot of people in the future, and you should be friends with those you can be friends with. There is no problem if you don't get along with people who just happen to be in the same class at the same school. You won't see them again in a few years anyway. You don't have to force yourself." And we talked about that, didn't we?
takuya_uruno In addition, I thought that even if I thought so, it would be hard to stay in the classroom because of strange interactions, so I negotiated with my homeroom teacher to allow me to stay in the infirmary or library all the time. I negotiated with my homeroom teacher and asked her to allow me to stay in the infirmary or library all the time. I told her that if she didn't want to go, she could take a day off, but she didn't really want to. kurishinblog These words were really reassuring to your daughter. I'm so encouraged and don't care about the little things that are happening right now!
Topixboy "Mere, there are billions of people in the world who don't like the 40 people around them!" I remember one day I said to myself, "I feel so much better.
takuya_uruno It's more than enough that there are tens of millions of people who don't hate you even if 99% of all humans do lol. zubazubazubazubazubazub I know this is a little unrelated, but I'm wondering how your homeroom teacher explained to the other students about going to the nurse's office or library? nimi_korisu Excuse me from outside FF. I'm commenting because I thought it was a nice daddy move. I too was in the position of being bullied, and I was a student who had to endure it without anyone noticing. I'm sure it was nice to be noticed, understood, and leaned on. ikaryakuchan I rarely see my elementary and middle school classmates after graduation. mizutanias A sad memory about clear files and the importance of questioning your 'norm'. What is natural for me is not always natural for others!
1/2
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GJz7_Q9acAAkyOw?format=jpg&name=large#.png
mizutanias But still too late to realize it (3 years after retirement). (2/2)
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GJz8dFBaEAA0Bxc?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GJz8dQoaQAA38hB?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GJz8decaYAATDVD?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png
mizutanias So, if you are right-handed, please use this at least once to experience a state where the existence of the incision is not important. I really never paid attention to the cutout here until you pointed this out.
https://pbs.twimg.com/card_img/1783728835856683008/gPcEWRqE?format=png&name=small#.png
mizutanias There are universal designs that say they are easy to use from the right or left, but in the end they are slightly more difficult to use than the dedicated ones. I guess. I'm a left-handed person, and I find it exquisitely difficult to use a ladle with a pointed tip on one side and a pointed tip on the other, so I think it would be better to use a round one. I think it would be better to use a round one.
mizutanias I suddenly saw a clear file and thought "I remember when I used to get angry at this..." and I drew it. I think that if you think about it, there are a lot of things that just happen to be out of my world from the "common sense" of the person who made them. Even the common sense of the absolute majority doesn't apply to everyone.
mizutanias I'll also lower the citation for the universal design version here https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GJ0x8XmaAAEuNu7?format=jpg&name=small#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GJ0x8XnbcAAML1B?format=jpg&name=small#.png
I hope you will use this universal clear file!
Easy to open on either the left or right side.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GJ0x8XmaAAEuNu7?format=jpg&name=small#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GJ0x8XnbcAAML1B?format=jpg&name=small#.png
mizutanias Since so many of you are reading this, please read this comic about a minority with autism spectrum disorder. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FsqXBIzaAAEaEv_?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FsqXCCnacAELGOQ?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FsqXCG6akAAJMAt?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FsqXCKbaAAABUjB?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png
Actually, about 1 in 10 people have some element of autism, and it is not a disease, just a slightly different brain functioning.
I'd be happy to let you know what the difference is.
(1/2)
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FsqXBIzaAAEaEv_?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FsqXCCnacAELGOQ?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FsqXCG6akAAJMAt?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FsqXCKbaAAABUjB?format=jpg&name=900x900#.png
From the reactions I've seen, you can ignore the words of those who get hung up on such details! There are two schools of thought, the "lefty" school and the "righty" school, and it is natural to care for the ease of use of the person to whom you are handing it regardless of whether he/she is left-handed or right-handed! I am reminded once again that people's values are so diverse and difficult to understand.
mizutanias It may not matter, but the boss who warned me about this is male. I saw quite a few quotes that I would have thought were female (like "this is why Obahan is..."), so I added that I hope the assumptions about men and women will change as well.
In some cases, I draw animal characters in order to eliminate preconceived notions of gender and age.
mizutanias Since it's still growing, I'll leave you with some recommendations for left-handed people. Raising self-esteem amazon.co.jp
A famous doctor who has seen 10,000 people's brains teaches how to utilize 120% of your "chosen talent.
A famous doctor who has seen 10,000 people's brains teaches how to utilize 120% of your "chosen talent.
mizutanias The reactions were varied and interesting, so I put them together in a NOTE. Interesting to be exposed to various values|Mizutani As
@mizutanias
https://pbs.twimg.com/card_img/1782207617227759616/P2VFcpsn?format=jpg&name=medium#.png
nakamura I wrote this article for a laboratory about how master's degree students are not appealing to the people who can appeal to job hunters because, unlike undergraduates, you are more likely to see people who are really great at what they do, even though they have developed a lot of skills. I wrote this article for a laboratory because I thought that master's degree students are not appealing to the people who can appeal to them in job hunting. Since everyone in the lab is doing the same thing, you have to look for things that others aren't doing, but that's not the case.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fz0_pMdaAAA11pU?format=png&name=900x900#.png
chiemi_wtnb This is really what I mean. Nakamura Lab is really doing it right and it's pretty amazing, but even if they don't, this is what happens if you regularly publish papers as a regular master's student. Seriously, you can sell yourself at the highest value.... I think so from a university faculty member's point of view, but come to think of it, I've never asked him about it in an agile community or something. ---
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