Almost certainly. Ankles also rely upon hyaline cartilage (as opposed to fibrocartilage). I found this out when I had microfracture surgery for a bad ankle injury.
Looking forward to this therapy. My fibrocartilage is wearing out!
Here for the same question! Broke my left ankle three times as a football (soccer) playing youth who cared not for rehab! Now stuck with limited range of monitor and arthritis in my foot / ankle.
To you and anyone else who's struggled with the roller coaster of rejection and not feeling good enough I highly recommend stopping what you're doing right now and watching Jonah Hill's incredible movie, "Stutz" https://www.netflix.com/title/81387962 . As someone who recently went through a barrage of rejections and self doubt this movie blew me away and offers practical "tools" that may help.
I've been reading about CAST (Causal Analysis based on Systems Theory) and noticed some interesting parallels with mechanistic interpretability work. Rather than searching for root causes, CAST provides frameworks for analyzing how system components interact and why they "believe" their decisions are correct - which seems relevant to understanding neural networks.
I'm curious if anyone has tried applying formal safety engineering frameworks to neural net analysis. The methods for tracing complex causal chains and system-level behaviors in CAST seem potentially useful, but I'd love to hear from people who understand both fields better than I do. Is this a meaningful connection or am I pattern-matching too aggressively?
I do AI/ML research for a living (my degrees were in theoretical CS and AI/ML and my [unfinished] phD work was in computational creativity [essentially AGI]). I also do SRE work as a living.
and yeah that's a useful way of characterizing some of the behaviors of some kinds of neural networks. There's a point at which the distinction between belief and "frequency (or probability-amplitude) state filter" become less apparent, though, that's more of a function-of-medium vs function-of-system distinction.
However, systems like these can often become mediums, themselves, for more complex systems.
Additionally, a system which has "closed-the-loop" by understanding the medium and the system as coupled as "self" and separate from the environment along with a direction/goal is a pretty decent, if imprecise, definition of a strange loop. Contradiction resolution between internal component beliefs gives a possible (imo, highly probable) mechanistic explaination for the phenomenon of free energy minimization in such systems. External contradiction resolution extends it to active inference.
With the LG I'm about a meter or less away from screen and use window management tools to pull focus to the center lower section for any focused work. I run Win 11 from an RTX3080 card with a 2.1 HDMI cable. 3840x2160 120Hz.
For gaming I just use windowed mode and use the full width of the 65" but just the lower half usually for COD or FPS games. I don't notice any eye strain or other issues but do run everything I can in dark mode including using the browser with the Dark Reader extension.
Not for my use case. Even as someone who's been active in the AR/VR industry for 10 years plus, it's more comfortable for me to look at a screen than it is to wear glasses. I've tried working in xreals, quest 3, with virtual desktop, etc. They're pretty good - just not as good as a monitor or in this case TV. I'm confident over time things will improve and eventually might be on par but there's plenty of use cases where you might want a screen and that will likely persist. Thanks for the question!
I wonder if it's expecting a default resolution (like for a Mac Book pro?). I'm seeing the same issue of the coordinates not working on Win11 for a 3840x2160 display.