The Palomar Lights

(comics.phillyharper.com)

28 points | by tardismechanic 2 days ago ago

13 comments

  • alwa an hour ago

    I got the overarching sense of an LLM making drama out of confusing or insignificant things. Some specific LLMisms that irritated me—beyond the creepy soulless AI cartoons—included:

    > Fifty minutes. In the cold. Night after night, for seven years.

    > Three pinpoints of light. One photographic plate. Vanished within fifty minutes.

    > No university, no lab, no funding. He pulled down the dataset, wrote his own code from scratch, and ran every test independently.

    > one telescope, one mountain, one drawer of plates.

    > Different telescope. Different continent. Same signature.

    > Signed and numbered. Just 150 copies. When they’re gone, they’re gone.

    > […]the wider corpus this comic was built from. The science holds because the receipts hold.

    > The Palomar Lights — a story told in data, glass, and light.

    • data-ottawa 17 minutes ago

      I just read a pre-LLM thriller written almost exactly like this. This is dialed up to eleven, but this is a fairly common writing style.

      It switches my brain into skimming mode very quickly, as it reads quite padded.

    • postepowanieadm an hour ago

      Maybe it's me not being a native speaker, but that seems okish?

      • zimpenfish 44 minutes ago

        It's not technically wrong but the super-short abrupt sentence format of "A. B. C."[0] is weird if you repeat it.

        You can get away with it once or twice as a kind of rhetorical flourish but if you keep doing it, it starts to sound like a one-trick pony (or a clanker.)

        (IMHO, obvs., I'm not the King of English.)

        [0] e.g. "Three pinpoints of light. One photographic plate. Vanished within fifty minutes."

  • showerst 2 hours ago

    There's a wikipedia page with a few more details / rebuttals from various sources - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aligned,_Multiple-transient_Ev...

    • garciansmith an hour ago

      An infinitely better source than the OP "article," which is just an AI-slop comic.

  • egypturnash an hour ago

    I can't decide if this is AI imagery or not and I hate this world.

    The absolute amateur hour choices going on in the lettering is tipping me towards AI, this is lettering by someone who thinks they know what "a comic" looks like and used "comic book" fonts but has zero idea of how word balloons actually work. Piss-poor internal margins, balloon tails that point nowhere near their supposed speaker, balloons that are weird-ass hybrids of captions and dialogue that have a tiny little vestigial tail that points nowhere in particular, captions and balloons crammed into odd corners of the panels with no concept of overall compositional flow.

    Oh and now that I look closer at some panels, yeah, it's AI.

    As always when someone shits in my eyes with a bunch of AI imagery, I'm just gonna assume the script is also the result of pointing one slop machine or another at the Wikipedia article and telling it to generate text rather than any sort of human understanding and summarizing going on here. I hate this fucking future.

    • whywhywhywhy an hour ago

      It very obviously is AI imagery

      • egypturnash an hour ago

        I guess I'm doing a good job of pruning my inputs, the vast majority of the imagery I see online is from human artists whose work looks largely the same as it did before all these slop machines got popular, so I don't have as finely tuned a slop detector as you must.

        (Although really "I followed a link from HN" is depressingly correlated with "the images in it are slop".)

  • moralestapia an hour ago

    "Let's say ET sent something two hundred thousand years ago and forgot a can of Coca-Cola in space... and at some point we see these little glints."

    HAHAHA

    I had to leave my office because I burst in uncontrollable laughter.

    It's good to see that someone so smart also has a great sense of humor.

  • itsthecourier 2 hours ago

    so it seems something was orbiting before satellites and for some reason very closely to atomic bomb test dates

    • dylan604 an hour ago

      Maybe the observers recognized that the ape men had figured out how to harness the power of the atom and that it was only a matter of a short amount of time before they ruined the experiment and decided to leave

    • postepowanieadm an hour ago

      The Manhole Cover!