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Alyx Woodward (she/her)
Alyx Woodward (she/her)
@alyx_woodward@universeodon.com  ·  activity timestamp 2 weeks ago

I learned about #computers and #programming when I was younger for a specific reason: I was into math and science, and these days it's basically impossible to separate the study of mathematics and the practice of science from *personal computing*, or "microcomputing" as it used to be called.

These days it's taken for granted that you'll be doing all your data collection and numerical analysis and so forth on a computer, using some mathematical or scientific #software packages. Microcomputers are likely to be how a person in the laboratory interacts with scientific instrumentation.

(cont'd)

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Alyx Woodward (she/her)
Alyx Woodward (she/her)
@alyx_woodward@universeodon.com replied  ·  activity timestamp 2 weeks ago

Insidiously, more and more of the routine functions of scientific experimentation have been computerized and even *automated*, and that's actually very bad for #science. The overuse of #software and computer simulation in science is driving a wedge between the scientists and the direct perception and observation of the physical world which is the bedrock of the scientific method.

If some *computer program* is doing all the actual observing and interpretation of data and so forth, then how much confidence and trust can one place in the scientist's conclusions based on that computer work? If there's some terrible error or systemic bias being imposed by the computer processing, how is anyone going to know, especially with opaque corporate software?

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Alyx Woodward (she/her)
Alyx Woodward (she/her)
@alyx_woodward@universeodon.com replied  ·  activity timestamp 2 weeks ago

Honestly I'm extremely worried about the state of U.S. #science, because of decades of computerization. "Science software" doesn't actually have to be written by people who understand science *at all*, so how can any honest scientist actually _trust_ such software? On what possible basis can such trust in scientific software reside?

Corporate #software has effectively exempted itself from needing to work properly. Merely by using the software, usually you're also tacitly agreeing (via dodgy "end-user license" terms) that the software vendor isn't responsible for a defective or malfunctioning product. _Caveat emptor_, they say: let the buyer beware. (And if you don't like it then go write your own software, you ungrateful n00b!)

(cont'd)

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