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What I've seen in places that eliminated .01 coins is that the .05 coin begins to be the one that everyone hates. I remember walking around Amsterdam several years ago with pockets full of .05 coins, and the same thing happens now in Singapore. They tend to get dumped into self-checkout machines in grocery stores.


One reason I don't quite trust AI for OCR is that it will, on occasion, hallucinate the output.


All OCR is untrustworthy. But sometimes, OCR is useful. (And I've heard it said that all LLM output is a hallucination; the good outputs are just hallucinations that fit.)

A few months ago a warehouse manager sent us a list of serial numbers and the model numbers of some gear they were using -- with both fields being alphanumeric.

This list was hand-written on notebook paper, in pencil. It was photographed with a digital camera under bad lighting, and that photograph was then emailed.

The writing was barely legible. It was hard to parse. It was awful. It made my boss's brain hurt trying to work with it, and then he gave it to me and it made my brain hurt too.

If I had to read this person's writing every day I would have gotten used to it eventually, but in all likelihood I'll never read something this person has written ever again. I didn't want to train myself for that and I didn't have enough of a sampleset to train with, anyway.

And if it were part of a high-school assignment it would have been sent back with a note at the top that said "Unreadable -- try again."

But it wasn't a high school student, and I wasn't their teacher. They were a paying customer and this list was worth real money to us.

I shoved it into ChatGPT and it produced output that was neatly formatted into a table just as I specified with my minimal instruction ("Read this. Make a table.").

The quality was sufficient to allow us to fairly quickly compare the original scribbles to the OCR output, make some manual corrections that we humans knew how to do (like "6" was sometimes transposed with "G"), and get a result that worked for what we needed to accomplish without additional pain.

0/10. I'm glad it worked and I hope I never have to do that again, but will repeat if I must.


There was a good talk some years ago at some of the CCC events where some guy found out that scanners sometimes change numbers on forms.


It's David Kriesel's infamous talk about the even more infamous Xerox bug.

Talk: https://media.ccc.de/v/31c3_-_6558_-_de_-_saal_g_-_201412282...

Bug: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xerox#Character_substitution_b...


Sadly, I wrote this article about people who are coders, whom I would expect to know that I would prefer the text rather than a screenshot.


> ...I wrote this article about people who are coders ...

Maybe vibe coders. :) People who have never been in the opposite predicament.


OP here... this is priceless! True performance art. Well done.


OP here. You raised a point that I should have mentioned in the article: screenshots of web pages that don't include the URL. I'm perfectly fine with screenshots of browser windows, since the context is almost always relevant. The system I work on right now puts a lot of useful context into the URL, but it's almost never included in the initial screenshot, so I have to ask for that. Of course, I generally ask for it as text so that I don't have to try to type the whole thing without making a mistake.


I was content to write the original off as "to each his own", but this one I feel you on.

Maybe the problem is sharing without caring and/or without being aware.

Case in point, folks capture large blocks of text as you mentioned and paste it into slack which converts certain characters unless included in a code block. This can be much worse than sharing a screenshot.

Please know the best way to share what you are sharing when you share. I've had to come to expect this request will not be honored.

I also might be guilty of not honoring sharing with caring myself. For example, I didn't read this entire thread before posting; others may have made this exact point already.


OP here. My current team uses MS Teams. I've been teaching my colleagues how to create code blocks in Teams (basically, teaching them Markdown). It's there, but it's not readily discoverable.


Teams has really poor code block compared to slack or any other tool. You can feel the arrogance of the Microsoft PM each time you paste code or paste text that randomly render as html. Somehow, slack still has a better text input compared to teams.


BMI isn't a great predictor of health. Waist-to-hip ratio and body-fat percentage are probably somewhat better indicators.

https://www.yalemedicine.org/news/why-you-shouldnt-rely-on-b...


XferLang, a data-transfer and configuration language to serve as an alternative to JSON.

https://xferlang.org/

Most obvious features, at first glance, are no commas and no need for escape characters. Other useful features include processing instructions, extensible data-substitution rules, and support for comments. Currently only implemented in .NET; plans are to rewrite the core in Rust and provide language wrappers around that core.


Yes, this is a problem I see more and more often. Besides the fact that it's always a good habit to spell out an acrostic or abbreviation the first time it's used in an article, there's also the fact that this is, you know, the web, and it's very easy to make a link to a Wikipedia article or something that will explain the term, if you don't want to bother adding your own explanation.


The only killer app for me, when it comes to VR headsets, would be flight sim, and I have been too busy for the last year to even sim on my 4k monitor, so I haven't taken the headset plunge yet. Still, that's the only thing I can think of that would make sense for me. Maybe there are others.


It is a good use for VR, but I also imagine most serious flight sim users already use TrackIR which seriously hampers their adoption to VR. Im not sure if I was offered one or the other for free if I would even choose a VR headset despite being a much higher monetary value because TrackIR already works so good, doesn't restrict vision from my actual controls, and doesn't isolate me from other things that might be going on around me.


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