#superbowl recipe
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Chili Dog
#chili dog#hot dogs#food#Food Blog#recipe#recipes#delicious#yummy food#ground beef#superbowl#appetizer
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Vegan Mozzarella Dippers
#avantgardevegan#savoury#dinner#lunch#snacks#cheese sticks#mozzarella sticks#mozzarella#cheese#recipe#recipes#vegan#vegetarian#cheesy#super bowl#superbowl#body ch3ck#th1nsp1ration#thin$po
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In honor of all the impending Super Bowl parties, here's my take on the famous Buffalo Chicken dip!
Buffalo Chicken Dip Recipe
2-3 cups shredded chicken, fully cooked
1 8oz pachage or cream cheese
1/2 cup of shredded cheese of choice (I used a mix of colby jack, sharp cheddar, and mexican)
1/2 cup hot sauce of choice (Frank's Red Hot is a popular choice; I used Crystal)
2/3 cup of blue cheese (ranch dressing can be substituted)
Salt and pepper to taste
Onion powder or flakes to taste
Mix together in an ungreased quart sized baking dish sized 9x9 to 10x10 or equivalent. Ceramic works best.
Bake in oven at 350 degrees for 20 minutes
Don't forget some tortilla chips!
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5 minute avocado dip for your superbowl party
Recipe https://bit.ly/3xnjWCV
Guacamole is simple and easy to make, fresh and flavorful, chunky and creamy dip or spread prepared using very basic ingredients in less than 5 minutes.
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Starting Line-Up of Super Bowl Sweets! - Pizzazzerie
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A must have for your Super Bowl party!
#foodblogger#therecipetobeornottobe#foodporn#foodie#foodista#foodlover#instafood#foodgasm#food recipes#recipes#recipe#pigs in a blanket#appetizers#dough#phyllo#cooking spray#hotdogs#party#superbowlparty#superbowl#musthave#crowd pleaser#easyrecipes
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While watching the two best teams compete in the Big Game can be fun, let’s be real, the best part of that day is the food! Whether you think football and chili go hand-in-hand, or you want a snack feast, an assortment of great food is essential! To help you prepare, here are 15 Recipes Perfect for Game Day!
RECIPES: https://www.flavorfuleats.com/15-recipes-perfect-for-game-day/
#snacks#foodie#easyrecipes#homecooking#foodblogger#homemade#recipes#appetizers#dip#chili#superbowl#gameday#recipe#foodies
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Super Bowl Recipes to Make Your 2024 Party a Memorable Occasion on Sunday
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Game Day Superb Owl Party!
Superb Owl Chili Con Carne Game Day Superb Owl PartyGame day’s coming up soon, better get ready! Let’s have a Party, a Superb Party, a Superb Owl Party, a Super Bowl Party! Chili’s a perfect game day dish! Recipe: Superb Owl Chili Con Carne Connect with us and Like on Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/zioskitchen/ The Grape Gourmet• health • wellness • culture • flavor • a Mo’zArt Production
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#beer#chili#cooking#culture#family#Food#game day#health#love#recipe#spicy#superbowl#toronto#travel#wine
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Baked Brie Puff Pastry
Full recipe on LTG
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What kind of bubble is AI?
My latest column for Locus Magazine is "What Kind of Bubble is AI?" All economic bubbles are hugely destructive, but some of them leave behind wreckage that can be salvaged for useful purposes, while others leave nothing behind but ashes:
https://locusmag.com/2023/12/commentary-cory-doctorow-what-kind-of-bubble-is-ai/
Think about some 21st century bubbles. The dotcom bubble was a terrible tragedy, one that drained the coffers of pension funds and other institutional investors and wiped out retail investors who were gulled by Superbowl Ads. But there was a lot left behind after the dotcoms were wiped out: cheap servers, office furniture and space, but far more importantly, a generation of young people who'd been trained as web makers, leaving nontechnical degree programs to learn HTML, perl and python. This created a whole cohort of technologists from non-technical backgrounds, a first in technological history. Many of these people became the vanguard of a more inclusive and humane tech development movement, and they were able to make interesting and useful services and products in an environment where raw materials – compute, bandwidth, space and talent – were available at firesale prices.
Contrast this with the crypto bubble. It, too, destroyed the fortunes of institutional and individual investors through fraud and Superbowl Ads. It, too, lured in nontechnical people to learn esoteric disciplines at investor expense. But apart from a smattering of Rust programmers, the main residue of crypto is bad digital art and worse Austrian economics.
Or think of Worldcom vs Enron. Both bubbles were built on pure fraud, but Enron's fraud left nothing behind but a string of suspicious deaths. By contrast, Worldcom's fraud was a Big Store con that required laying a ton of fiber that is still in the ground to this day, and is being bought and used at pennies on the dollar.
AI is definitely a bubble. As I write in the column, if you fly into SFO and rent a car and drive north to San Francisco or south to Silicon Valley, every single billboard is advertising an "AI" startup, many of which are not even using anything that can be remotely characterized as AI. That's amazing, considering what a meaningless buzzword AI already is.
So which kind of bubble is AI? When it pops, will something useful be left behind, or will it go away altogether? To be sure, there's a legion of technologists who are learning Tensorflow and Pytorch. These nominally open source tools are bound, respectively, to Google and Facebook's AI environments:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/18/openwashing/#you-keep-using-that-word-i-do-not-think-it-means-what-you-think-it-means
But if those environments go away, those programming skills become a lot less useful. Live, large-scale Big Tech AI projects are shockingly expensive to run. Some of their costs are fixed – collecting, labeling and processing training data – but the running costs for each query are prodigious. There's a massive primary energy bill for the servers, a nearly as large energy bill for the chillers, and a titanic wage bill for the specialized technical staff involved.
Once investor subsidies dry up, will the real-world, non-hyperbolic applications for AI be enough to cover these running costs? AI applications can be plotted on a 2X2 grid whose axes are "value" (how much customers will pay for them) and "risk tolerance" (how perfect the product needs to be).
Charging teenaged D&D players $10 month for an image generator that creates epic illustrations of their characters fighting monsters is low value and very risk tolerant (teenagers aren't overly worried about six-fingered swordspeople with three pupils in each eye). Charging scammy spamfarms $500/month for a text generator that spits out dull, search-algorithm-pleasing narratives to appear over recipes is likewise low-value and highly risk tolerant (your customer doesn't care if the text is nonsense). Charging visually impaired people $100 month for an app that plays a text-to-speech description of anything they point their cameras at is low-value and moderately risk tolerant ("that's your blue shirt" when it's green is not a big deal, while "the street is safe to cross" when it's not is a much bigger one).
Morganstanley doesn't talk about the trillions the AI industry will be worth some day because of these applications. These are just spinoffs from the main event, a collection of extremely high-value applications. Think of self-driving cars or radiology bots that analyze chest x-rays and characterize masses as cancerous or noncancerous.
These are high value – but only if they are also risk-tolerant. The pitch for self-driving cars is "fire most drivers and replace them with 'humans in the loop' who intervene at critical junctures." That's the risk-tolerant version of self-driving cars, and it's a failure. More than $100b has been incinerated chasing self-driving cars, and cars are nowhere near driving themselves:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/10/09/herbies-revenge/#100-billion-here-100-billion-there-pretty-soon-youre-talking-real-money
Quite the reverse, in fact. Cruise was just forced to quit the field after one of their cars maimed a woman – a pedestrian who had not opted into being part of a high-risk AI experiment – and dragged her body 20 feet through the streets of San Francisco. Afterwards, it emerged that Cruise had replaced the single low-waged driver who would normally be paid to operate a taxi with 1.5 high-waged skilled technicians who remotely oversaw each of its vehicles:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/03/technology/cruise-general-motors-self-driving-cars.html
The self-driving pitch isn't that your car will correct your own human errors (like an alarm that sounds when you activate your turn signal while someone is in your blind-spot). Self-driving isn't about using automation to augment human skill – it's about replacing humans. There's no business case for spending hundreds of billions on better safety systems for cars (there's a human case for it, though!). The only way the price-tag justifies itself is if paid drivers can be fired and replaced with software that costs less than their wages.
What about radiologists? Radiologists certainly make mistakes from time to time, and if there's a computer vision system that makes different mistakes than the sort that humans make, they could be a cheap way of generating second opinions that trigger re-examination by a human radiologist. But no AI investor thinks their return will come from selling hospitals that reduce the number of X-rays each radiologist processes every day, as a second-opinion-generating system would. Rather, the value of AI radiologists comes from firing most of your human radiologists and replacing them with software whose judgments are cursorily double-checked by a human whose "automation blindness" will turn them into an OK-button-mashing automaton:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/23/automation-blindness/#humans-in-the-loop
The profit-generating pitch for high-value AI applications lies in creating "reverse centaurs": humans who serve as appendages for automation that operates at a speed and scale that is unrelated to the capacity or needs of the worker:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/04/17/revenge-of-the-chickenized-reverse-centaurs/
But unless these high-value applications are intrinsically risk-tolerant, they are poor candidates for automation. Cruise was able to nonconsensually enlist the population of San Francisco in an experimental murderbot development program thanks to the vast sums of money sloshing around the industry. Some of this money funds the inevitabilist narrative that self-driving cars are coming, it's only a matter of when, not if, and so SF had better get in the autonomous vehicle or get run over by the forces of history.
Once the bubble pops (all bubbles pop), AI applications will have to rise or fall on their actual merits, not their promise. The odds are stacked against the long-term survival of high-value, risk-intolerant AI applications.
The problem for AI is that while there are a lot of risk-tolerant applications, they're almost all low-value; while nearly all the high-value applications are risk-intolerant. Once AI has to be profitable – once investors withdraw their subsidies from money-losing ventures – the risk-tolerant applications need to be sufficient to run those tremendously expensive servers in those brutally expensive data-centers tended by exceptionally expensive technical workers.
If they aren't, then the business case for running those servers goes away, and so do the servers – and so do all those risk-tolerant, low-value applications. It doesn't matter if helping blind people make sense of their surroundings is socially beneficial. It doesn't matter if teenaged gamers love their epic character art. It doesn't even matter how horny scammers are for generating AI nonsense SEO websites:
https://twitter.com/jakezward/status/1728032634037567509
These applications are all riding on the coattails of the big AI models that are being built and operated at a loss in order to be profitable. If they remain unprofitable long enough, the private sector will no longer pay to operate them.
Now, there are smaller models, models that stand alone and run on commodity hardware. These would persist even after the AI bubble bursts, because most of their costs are setup costs that have already been borne by the well-funded companies who created them. These models are limited, of course, though the communities that have formed around them have pushed those limits in surprising ways, far beyond their original manufacturers' beliefs about their capacity. These communities will continue to push those limits for as long as they find the models useful.
These standalone, "toy" models are derived from the big models, though. When the AI bubble bursts and the private sector no longer subsidizes mass-scale model creation, it will cease to spin out more sophisticated models that run on commodity hardware (it's possible that Federated learning and other techniques for spreading out the work of making large-scale models will fill the gap).
So what kind of bubble is the AI bubble? What will we salvage from its wreckage? Perhaps the communities who've invested in becoming experts in Pytorch and Tensorflow will wrestle them away from their corporate masters and make them generally useful. Certainly, a lot of people will have gained skills in applying statistical techniques.
But there will also be a lot of unsalvageable wreckage. As big AI models get integrated into the processes of the productive economy, AI becomes a source of systemic risk. The only thing worse than having an automated process that is rendered dangerous or erratic based on AI integration is to have that process fail entirely because the AI suddenly disappeared, a collapse that is too precipitous for former AI customers to engineer a soft landing for their systems.
This is a blind spot in our policymakers debates about AI. The smart policymakers are asking questions about fairness, algorithmic bias, and fraud. The foolish policymakers are ensnared in fantasies about "AI safety," AKA "Will the chatbot become a superintelligence that turns the whole human race into paperclips?"
https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/27/10-types-of-people/#taking-up-a-lot-of-space
But no one is asking, "What will we do if" – when – "the AI bubble pops and most of this stuff disappears overnight?"
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/12/19/bubblenomics/#pop
Image: Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg
CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
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tom_bullock (modified) https://www.flickr.com/photos/tombullock/25173469495/
CC BY 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
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Hot Honey & Basil Pepperoni Pizza Dip
#pepperoni pizza#pizza dip#i love pizza#pizza#honey#basil#food#Food Blog#recipe#recipes#delicious#yummy food#superbowl
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Korean-Style Hot Chick'n Sandwich
#savoury#lunch#dinner#burger#burgers#chicken#vegan chicken#vegan burger#korea#korean#slaw#gochujang#mushroom#mushrooms#fried mushrooms#mushroom burger#superbowl#super bowl#food#recipe#recipes#vegan#veganism#healthy food#healthy eating#clean eating#health#wellness#fitness#fitnessmotivation
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LUNCH
Tomatoes with yellow bell peppers and sweet onions, olive oil,cider vinegar, cilantro, cumin
Pita burger w shawarma seasoning
just mix ground meat (or impossible) w shawarma seasoning, stuff in pita and pan fry until crispy
White bean hummus w half sharp paprika
In a pot, cover dry white beans with water, add 1/2 tsp baking soda. Bring to boil 2 min, cover, take off the heat and let rest 1 hour. Drain and rinse a couple of times, removing any loose beans skins. Cover with fresh water and simmer 2 hours.
Mash w fork. Add tahini, garlic, salt, olive oil, cider vinegar, lemon juice and paprika to taste.
nomnomnom
10/10 am recommending
#pita burger#tomato salad#salsa#hummus#white bean hummus#lunch#dinner#picnic#superbowl snacks#delicious#food#recipe#comfort food#recipes#yummy#excuse me that is my emotional support lunch#areyas
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Stuffed Ziti Fritta is crispy, cheesy, and packed with amazing flavors. This Olive Garden copycat recipe has Italian seasoned breaded pasta tubes, filled with cheesy deliciousness and fried until golden brown!
#ziti fritta#olive garden ziti fritta#olive garden copycat#copycat recipe#stuffed ziti fritta#finger food#appetizer#superbowl food
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