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Main Paineframe posted:I googled "cake recipe" on my phone, picked the first result, and scrolled past 10 inline ads before I reached the actual recipe. Plus ads at the top and bottom of the recipe, fixed banner ads pinned to the top and bottom of the page so they were always in view, and a video ad that popped up pinned to the corner. 1. Post the link because my first cake recipe is: https://sugarspunrun.com/vanilla-cake-recipe/ and I see no ads or anything. There's a thing mentioning affiliate links, then a big picture of the cake, some words explaining it's better than cake from a box, and then the recipe and directions. 2. If you're seeing ads (in 2023) that's a You problem. Boris Galerkin fucked around with this message at 23:37 on May 26, 2023 |
# ? May 26, 2023 23:33 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 09:24 |
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Boris Galerkin posted:2. If you're seeing ads (in 2023) that's a You problem.
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# ? May 26, 2023 23:38 |
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Boris Galerkin posted:I’ve had this discussion with a friend irl before, but my take on the blog posts before a recipe are that they are good. For me as someone who cooks, when I see a recipe for x I usually already know how to cook x, or at least in general. I mean its a dish for baked chicken ziti or whatever, it’s not a mystery how to make it. What does matter to me is why I wanna make your baked dish over someone else’s. And if you spend a paragraph talking about how this dish is great with x drink or y occasion because z reason then that gets me interested. Boris Galerkin posted:My perspective is from someone who “knows how to cook.” I already know how to cook chicken, and I already know this dish uses various spices and herbs. For people like me we don’t really need a lot of detail on how to cook a drat chicken. Did an SEO write this?
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# ? May 27, 2023 00:06 |
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Boris Galerkin posted:1. Post the link because my first cake recipe is: https://sugarspunrun.com/vanilla-cake-recipe/ and I see no ads or anything. There's a thing mentioning affiliate links, then a big picture of the cake, some words explaining it's better than cake from a box, and then the recipe and directions. Here's what that page looks like without an adblocker: Three ads on the page, two of which will scroll along with the page so they're always visible, and a similarly-pinned share bar at the top. As for the square inline ad, there's roughly a dozen of those, many of them embedded in all the needless text about how it's better than cake from a box.
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# ? May 27, 2023 00:17 |
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Boris Galerkin posted:Can someone post one of these recipes with 10 pages of completely unrelated bullshit and ads before the recipe? Because all the ones posted so far seem to be a few paragraphs or a page or two of relevant information. Starting to feel like people are over exaggerating a boogeyman. First hit from "orange sour cream cake" Note esp. the paragraph on how inspiring citrus is. e: And the second hit. Arsenic Lupin fucked around with this message at 00:36 on May 27, 2023 |
# ? May 27, 2023 00:29 |
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Privacy Badger, uBlock Origin, and NoScript make websites far less annoying to visit.Professor Beetus posted:drat man, it's almost like this is 99% of google results when trying to look up a recjpe Or anything else for that matter.
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# ? May 27, 2023 02:05 |
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https://twitter.com/theothermoore/s...40post532119634
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# ? May 27, 2023 04:53 |
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Did they use ChatGPT do their "legal research"?
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# ? May 27, 2023 05:09 |
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OddObserver posted:Did they use ChatGPT do their "legal research"? This is what happens when you lean on a machine whose job is to make plausible sentences, rather then collate data.
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# ? May 27, 2023 05:12 |
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That lawyer must have used Bard even though it’s in beta. Shoulda forked for an OpenAI ChatGPT subscription.
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# ? May 27, 2023 05:21 |
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Boris Galerkin posted:1. Post the link because my first cake recipe is: https://sugarspunrun.com/vanilla-cake-recipe/ and I see no ads or anything. There's a thing mentioning affiliate links, then a big picture of the cake, some words explaining it's better than cake from a box, and then the recipe and directions. I use that site's recipe for Southern biscuits. Would recommend.
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# ? May 27, 2023 05:35 |
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Elon is having a great week https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/may/26/tesla-data-leak-customers-employees-safety-complaints quote:100,000 names of former and current employees, including the social security number of the Tesla CEO, Elon Musk, along with private email addresses, phone numbers, salaries of employees, bank details of customers and secret details from production quote:large numbers of customer complaints regarding the Tesla’s driver assistance programs, with about 4,000 complaints on sudden acceleration or phantom braking. quote:If such a violation was proved, Tesla could be fined up to 4% of its annual sales, which could be €3.26bn ($3.5bn).
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# ? May 27, 2023 09:28 |
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I think it’s safe to say that the average cookbook or excerpt thereof should have more than a perfunctory list of ingredients and basic directions, and also that (as with writing any sort of long-form content) a lot of people are just poo poo authors. The issue becomes that, with recipes, you might have a poo poo author who’s a really good cook, so you can’t ignore poorly-written stuff entirely. We lost the last guy who was great at both in Strasbourg nearly five years ago.
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# ? May 27, 2023 12:47 |
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Boris Galerkin posted:1. Post the link because my first cake recipe is: https://sugarspunrun.com/vanilla-cake-recipe/ and I see no ads or anything. There's a thing mentioning affiliate links, then a big picture of the cake, some words explaining it's better than cake from a box, and then the recipe and directions. Please tell me how to put ublock origin on my iPhone for when I’m outside of my PiHole
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# ? May 27, 2023 13:28 |
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PT6A posted:I think it’s safe to say that the average cookbook or excerpt thereof should have more than a perfunctory list of ingredients and basic directions, and also that (as with writing any sort of long-form content) a lot of people are just poo poo authors. The issue becomes that, with recipes, you might have a poo poo author who’s a really good cook, so you can’t ignore poorly-written stuff entirely. An ideal recipe should be: 1) a list of ingredients; 2) a brief step-by-step summary; 3) a detailed explanation of each step explaining the theory behind it. In that order. If you are already familiar with cooking the dish and just need to reference how much of a spice to put in or what order to cook things, you can get that information quickly from #1 and #2 without having to search through the entire recipe. If you are just learning how to cook and need to understand the basic techniques in a dish, you can get that information by reading the detailed description. Most online recipes reverse that order while adding in extraneous personal information (my grandma was eating this cake when the second plane hit the towers) or subjective descriptors that add no value (this is the yummiest cake I've ever eaten!). So you have to slog through a bunch of text before finding the one specific piece of information you are looking for. It's especially annoying if you're trying to do it on your phone while in the middle of cooking.
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# ? May 27, 2023 15:19 |
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Seph posted:An ideal recipe should be: 1) a list of ingredients; 2) a brief step-by-step summary; 3) a detailed explanation of each step explaining the theory behind it. In that order. Yeah everything's stretched out to create the maximum amount of time viewing ads, it fuckin' sucks. Like I'm not a god-tier cook but usually I just need to see part 1 to see what proportion of each thing makes up a dish/what order and then I can go from there, and it's always annoying that this is at the end online. Also wastes a lot of time when I just want a quick look at the ingredients themselves to see that I have everything or/and if we're cooking for guests to make sure it meets any dietary situations going on.
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# ? May 27, 2023 15:48 |
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F4rt5 posted:Please tell me how to put ublock origin on my iPhone for when I’m outside of my PiHole Tailscale. https://technicatgor.github.io/posts/UsingTailscaleForHomeLabVPNConnectivity/
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# ? May 27, 2023 17:00 |
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F4rt5 posted:Please tell me how to put ublock origin on my iPhone for when I’m outside of my PiHole You can use a different adblocker like 1Blocker or anything else. You can use Tailscale as described above, or for me I just use nextdns.io free tier to block ads at the system level. I get the complaints about recipes containing fluff (even if I am fine with it, I understand it can be annoying!) but I reiterate that seeing too many ads/having ads interfere with your cooking recipe in tyool 2023 is absolutely a "you" problem. Like looking at the screenshot above with all those ads just makes me wonder: why? Boris Galerkin fucked around with this message at 17:12 on May 27, 2023 |
# ? May 27, 2023 17:10 |
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Yeah 1Blocker is great for iOS/MacOS
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# ? May 27, 2023 17:15 |
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It wouldn't be an online tech discussion without a tedious nerd, dripping with smug superiority, endlessly discoursing on how you personally are doing something wrong.
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# ? May 27, 2023 17:55 |
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PT6A posted:I think it’s safe to say that the average cookbook or excerpt thereof should have more than a perfunctory list of ingredients and basic directions, and also that (as with writing any sort of long-form content) a lot of people are just poo poo authors. The issue becomes that, with recipes, you might have a poo poo author who’s a really good cook, so you can’t ignore poorly-written stuff entirely. Cookbooks don't really need much more than a list of ingredients and instructions. That's why people are buying the cookbook, after all - to learn how to cook stuff. But the difference between a cookbook and a recipe website is that people are buying the cookbook. Recipe websites, like most free web content these days, generally monetize via ad impressions and affiliate links, with a particular focus on monetizing users who came in via Google and are unlikely to visit any other pages on the website. That creates a completely different incentive structure for content. The priorities for a cooking website are to maximize the number of ads the user sees, create plenty of opportunities for them to see affiliate links, and push them to also look at other recipes on the site. That encourages a massive fluff section.
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# ? May 27, 2023 18:13 |
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Main Paineframe posted:Cookbooks don't really need much more than a list of ingredients and instructions. That's why people are buying the cookbook, after all - to learn how to cook stuff. Completely accurate. Plus the recipes for money sites go through the SEO to get to the top, unlike someone who just wants to share no-frills recipes and doesn't care about ads.
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# ? May 27, 2023 18:24 |
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a lot of modern cookbooks have huge glossy photos and tons of prose. these days a lot of them are semi-autobiographical like this is the 2022 winner of the james beard cookbook award for pastries and sweets https://www.google.com/books/edition/Mooncakes_and_Milk_Bread/R_sIEAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0 sure doesn't look like a list of ingredients and some instructions
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# ? May 27, 2023 18:37 |
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Mega Comrade posted:Elon is having a great week Don’t worry he’ll move Tesla to Florida if DeSantis is willing to protect SpaceX. https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/ron-desantis-signs-bill-elon-musk-spacex-spaceflight-liability-1234742632/amp/
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# ? May 27, 2023 18:42 |
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I guess this is where I am revealing how insanely boring I am (as if people didn't already know), but I use gantt charts in the kitchen and the cookbooks I own are books like Advanced Bread and Pastry, a 1000 page tome. It has great illustrations, too:
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# ? May 27, 2023 20:11 |
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GhostofJohnMuir posted:a lot of modern cookbooks have huge glossy photos and tons of prose. these days a lot of them are semi-autobiographical This is fantastic, and provides a lot of key background on the impetus for writing the book plus a rundown of relevant shops and styles, and even ingredient selection advice. quote:Cookbook sections in bookstores are packed with dessert books, like cookie tomes with recipes for short- bread and the absolute best chocolate chip cookies. But you likely won't find a recipe for Chocolate-Hazelnut Macau-Style Cookies (page 212), tender, beautifully pressed cookies that melt in your mouth, in any American cookbook. This is good! There's a lot of relevant information, ingredient selection tips, rundown of the subtypes of treats based on the kind of place you get them, etc. Another story about picky husband and busy kids going to soccer practice isn't anywhere as useful.
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# ? May 27, 2023 20:16 |
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Mooncakes and Milk Bread is a fabulous book, and I'm very glad to own it. The culture parts are interesting sit-down reads and are well separated from the recipes. IIRC it does follow the maddening current cookbook trend, putting page numbers in the side gutter instead of the corner.
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# ? May 27, 2023 20:23 |
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I don't want to download a big pdf, can you tell me what it says?
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# ? May 27, 2023 21:44 |
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Judge is exceptionally pissed at lawyers who submitted a brief written by ChatGPT, which has legal citations to decisions that ... have nothing at all to do with the case. It also comes out that the document, dated May 2023, is notarized with a stamp showing January 2023. A notary has to sign an oath saying "this person was right here with me and I watched them sign it." Lawyer then submits conversations with ChatGPT where he asked ChatGPT if it was telling the truth and it said yes. The judge has demanded that the lawyer produce the "wet book", which is the book retained by the notary of every stamp they've handed out. It's wet because that's the one you, the person asking for notarization, signed in ink. According to national treasure Courtney Milan, former Supreme Court clerk and law professor and current romance novelist, disbarment is definitely on the line.
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# ? May 27, 2023 22:13 |
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Some Leonard J. Crabs level of dumb-assery there.
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# ? May 27, 2023 22:19 |
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Courtney's thread starts here. https://twitter.com/courtneymilan/status/1662314610517774339
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# ? May 27, 2023 22:21 |
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https://twitter.com/apark2453/status/1662321729958744065?t=CngXC3FUs2HiaWPeZ0SJbw&s=19
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# ? May 27, 2023 22:24 |
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Arsenic Lupin posted:Judge is exceptionally pissed at lawyers who submitted a brief written by ChatGPT, which has legal citations to decisions that ... have nothing at all to do with the case. It also comes out that the document, dated May 2023, is notarized with a stamp showing January 2023. A notary has to sign an oath saying "this person was right here with me and I watched them sign it." Lawyer then submits conversations with ChatGPT where he asked ChatGPT if it was telling the truth and it said yes. It's not the decisions have nothing to do with the case. It's that the decisions are entirely fake. Both the citation to the decision and the "decision" the lawyer submitted when the judge asked if they were real and could the judge have a copy.
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# ? May 27, 2023 23:18 |
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A 7-2 decision, that completely overturned precedent localized entirely within your legal brief!? Yes! Can I see it? No.
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# ? May 28, 2023 00:20 |
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evilweasel posted:It's not the decisions have nothing to do with the case. It's that the decisions are entirely fake. Both the citation to the decision and the "decision" the lawyer submitted when the judge asked if they were real and could the judge have a copy.
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# ? May 28, 2023 01:56 |
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GhostofJohnMuir posted:a lot of modern cookbooks have huge glossy photos and tons of prose. these days a lot of them are semi-autobiographical Yeah, there's nothing wrong with a structure that gives you more than just basic instructions -- hell, even Joy of Cooking, which is about the most utilitarian cookbook imaginable, goes in-depth on certain things. And, seriously, read Bourdain's cookbook that he wrote on working at Les Halles. The recipes are arguably the least interesting, and least useful part -- but you learn a lot about techniques that can be used for cooking in general. This is arguably very different from baking, where things need to be precise, but it does apply to most non-baked-goods -- precise measurements and order of operations are not really that important as long as you understand how the dish comes together. The problem with the extra poo poo on most recipe websites, and indeed in most cookbooks, is that the authors aren't Anthony Bourdain and have nothing interesting to contribute beyond the recipes, which are often poo poo. PT6A fucked around with this message at 02:31 on May 28, 2023 |
# ? May 28, 2023 02:28 |
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PT6A posted:Yeah, there's nothing wrong with a structure that gives you more than just basic instructions -- hell, even Joy of Cooking, which is about the most utilitarian cookbook imaginable, goes in-depth on certain things. Yeah, this is a big part of the problem. The average recipe blogger is just another idiot like the rest of us, with neither an interesting life nor an experienced editor, so those ten pages of horseshit before the recipe are a slog instead of interesting. However, there's also a different issue, too: the expectation of what you're getting when you look up a recipe online, versus when you read a celebrity chef's cookbook, for example. I would venture a guess that the average person looking for a scone recipe on the internet just wants the recipe. They didn't go to MarthaMalonesFabulousScones.com to learn about Martha Malone's favorite flour (if I accidentally picked a famous baker here with my random name, I apologize); they went there because they don't know how much flour to add, and her blog was on the first page of results somehow. Meanwhile, when I see a Bourdain cookbook, I say "Oh poo poo, I read his other stuff and saw his TV shows and he's pretty loving interesting. Let's grab this and see what he's got cooking," and half the fun is reading his various witticisms about the time he spit-roasted a cobra while tripping balls as a dare. Martha can't compete, and I didn't want her to try in the first place. I wanted to know how much flour to add.
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# ? May 28, 2023 05:14 |
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Well someones never going to hear about Martha's famous seal tatar recipe which she learnt from her pet polar bear while they were both doing and trafficking large amounts of coke. My favorite thing about recipes is when they give instructions in a way that is both lengthy and still very confusing and vague, and don't include an ingredient list or amounts. Sure some stuff you can just add to taste but come on at least give ball park figures for the main ingredients.
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# ? May 28, 2023 06:01 |
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The worst is when they do provide amounts, but in arbitrary moon units instead of something I can quickly adapt to how many people I want to serve using the magic of simple maths and a kitchen scale.
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# ? May 28, 2023 08:18 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 09:24 |
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Go to the Chrome or Firefox store and download the Recipe Filter extension. It automatically strips out all the narrative bullshit and pops up the ingredients and the cooking steps. You're welcome.
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# ? May 28, 2023 08:39 |