@bluegreensea.bsky.social
93 followers 290 following 41 posts
Information architect. Pacific Northwest. Mountains, outdoors, speculative fiction, craft beer, and all that. There's no I in team, but there is in Iron. And IA! Son of the NFC North.
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bluegreensea.bsky.social
My career path has taken me away from chemistry but arrow pushing on a whiteboard - or hood sash! - is something I really miss
bluegreensea.bsky.social
You're correct, of course. That was my after work happy hour trying to make some jokes.

I can accept that the Tigers aren't as good as they looked during the first half and were due for some regression, but the past month really is inexplicable.
bluegreensea.bsky.social
It started with the Lions vs. Commanders in the playoffs last season. That was a "same old Lions" game if I've ever seen one!

It continues with the Tigers this season. We can't have nice things.

(Although I still believe in the Lions this year)
bluegreensea.bsky.social
This is a really key point!

It's framed as a UX problem - users will be unsatisfied if they're told the uncertainty in the answer from an LLM, but the real problem - from the perspective of LLM developers - is that people would stop using them!
cacheblaster.bsky.social
Also:
"In short, the OpenAI paper inadvertently highlights an uncomfortable truth: the business incentives driving consumer AI development remain fundamentally misaligned with reducing hallucinations."
bluegreensea.bsky.social
Well, corned beef on rye with swiss cheese
bluegreensea.bsky.social
And a couple of relatively young receivers make the list, which says...something...about all those quarterbacks
bluegreensea.bsky.social
I 100% agree.

When I use AI tools I always use dry, precise technical/scientific prose and I get the same kind of results. I've wondered if being boring and precise when you interact with an LLM is the key to avoiding the weirdness that makes for popular social media posts. It seems to be for me.
bluegreensea.bsky.social
I love this post, 100% agree, etc. But what a comment on the world we live in that when I click on the link I have to watch 20 seconds of the Geico gecko before I hear Angus Young's guitar.
bluegreensea.bsky.social
You've probably been asked this already, but are you going to highlight the #0 jersey number on September 4? That would be a tough one!
bluegreensea.bsky.social
I read this very chapter last night!

Falling for this kind of scam is fortunately not one of my personal bad habits, but I recognized myself in a few of the other "Reducing the noise" checklist items.
Reposted
theiaconf.bsky.social
That’s a wrap on #IAC25! 💙

We’re so grateful for everyone who joined us this year — in person and in spirit.

💬 What was your favorite moment?

Share your highlight and let’s keep the IAC community conversations going.

#IAC25 #UX #IA #ContentDesign #DesignCommunity
A blackboard with the heading “Share Your IAC Love” displays colorful sticky notes with handwritten messages from attendees of the 2025 Information Architecture Conference. Notes express gratitude, inspiration, and joy
bluegreensea.bsky.social
I think this is a very underrated reality. Fans seem to think you can just trade back at will.
Reposted
theiaconf.bsky.social
🔹 Introduction to Knowledge Graphs for IA Practitioners | Pre-IAC25 Workshop with Bob Kasenchak and John Tulinsky @taxobob.bsky.social @bluegreensea.bsky.social

👉 Learn how to apply knowledge graphs to scale IA strategy

Learn more: www.theiaconference.com/sessions/mak...
Reposted
cenmag.bsky.social
Lactate legs: Fans drew the structure of lactic acid on the road during the 2024 Il Lombardia cycle race. Tadej Pogačar, the cyclist pictured, rapidly overcomes the adverse effects of glycolysis. cen.acs.org/biological-c...
Lactate legs: Fans drew the structure of lactic acid on the road during the 2024 Il Lombardia cycle race. Tadej Pogačar, the cyclist pictured, rapidly overcomes the adverse effects of glycolysis.
Reposted
barryp.bsky.social
What do you mean it's Opening Day and the NCAA Tournament and there are no sports on for three more hours
bluegreensea.bsky.social
Hey #IA practitioners attending the #IAC25, or any of our fans in Philly, join me and @taxobob.bsky.social for a workshop on Knowledge Graphs - what they are, and why you should care about them!

@cacheblaster.bsky.social @hapax001.bsky.social
Information architects John Tulinsky and Bob Kasenchak are presenting a workshop about knowledge graphs on April 30, 2025 at the upcoming IAC conference
bluegreensea.bsky.social
I'm not very active, but I'm (John Tulinsky) here as well: @bluegreensea.bsky.social
bluegreensea.bsky.social
I love those!

More realistically there *must* be reform of the onside kick rule. An untimed play where the "kicking" team has to gain 20 yards, whatever.

Compared to the current rule there needs to be a higher probability of success, and also available at any time during the game.
bluegreensea.bsky.social
So one might conclude that yards per target allowed to opposing tight ends has a low correlation to team success?
bluegreensea.bsky.social
100% agree, but it's not like baseball or tennis where you have a clear line and a bunch of precisely located high-tech cameras. There's got to be a better way, but it seems inherently a much harder problem, with the ball buried in the middle of a bunch of very large humans.
bluegreensea.bsky.social
Colton, are sending a subtle message to Lions fans? :)
bluegreensea.bsky.social
I would have sworn that Brady dominated Manning. Example the millionth why you shouldn't trust gut feelings and "what you remember"
bluegreensea.bsky.social
That's what I meant in my other comment. Something as basic as the exact position of the line of gain is fuzzy.

Of course that also means, as you (or maybe one of the other LG&M bloggers) said last week, it looks exactly like corrupt officiating would look .
bluegreensea.bsky.social
I'm surprised to see so much NFL Bluesky saying it was obviously a bad call. I mean, this isn't particle physics, there are a lot of built in sources of error on a call like that.
bluegreensea.bsky.social
I'm a Michigan native now living in Seattle, and that struck me as an odd choice. Hank Fraley has obviously done a great job with the Lions offensive line but I wouldn't have thought of him as an OC candidate. Is it because the Seahawks just need to do something about the offensive line?