

Them: you can’t just assume X.
You: you can’t assume ¬X.
They didn’t assert ¬X. You’re arguing with a strawman.


Them: you can’t just assume X.
You: you can’t assume ¬X.
They didn’t assert ¬X. You’re arguing with a strawman.
I’ll just send a picture:

This was before I added the netting. I use tomato clips to hold up the plants:

Then the netting just goes all the way around the outside hanging down from the top, and secured at the bottom with ground clips.
The netting isn’t big enough for squirrels to get through. It’s draped down from the trellising, and pinned down to the ground. There’s no way for the squirrels to get in unless they climb up and over, and they don’t seem to be able to figure that out.
Not sure what to do about the horn worms though.
I have a raised bed and just hang a loose net around the whole thing so the squirrels can’t get in. Otherwise those little buggers will take one bite out of each tomato and leave the rest for me to clean up.
You can get Teto plushies on amazon?! Naruhodo…


I just position mine so the end is how I want it, and sometimes that means the first bite is mostly bread.
Isn’t that what almost anyone would do?
I’ve seen some pretty silly AI blunders before, but this one seems rather harmless. You’re still going to end up at the setting you need to change to solve the problem, which to me falls squarely in the “close enough” bin.