Needless to say i'm talking about the oversimplified and misleading version of the Schrödinger's cat paradigm, where he is both dead and alive until you watch it.
I don't have a job but i follow theater courses at an academy. And my improvisation is both funny and awful until i show it to others.
In programming there is also the Heisenbug: as soon as you try to observe the bug, it disappears or changes its behavior.
It's mostly because many observation processes are invasive and change the nature of the system under test
Site reliability engineer here, your application is both alive and dead until the monitoring server pings its health status API.
As a bicyclist, I see that we have Schrödinger's Cyclist: Too poor to be able to afford a car like "normal" people, but also a rich elitist who can afford to commute by bike.
Also, Schrödinger's Bike Lanes: A conspiracy by car-hating politicians to punish drivers, but also an amenity that only rich elitists get in their neighborhoods.
For work I use a database written in COBOL. Reports are simultaneously running and frozen until I either get the report results or sufficient time has passed that I'm certain the system has crashed.
"The Computer never makes a mistake" is true and also probably responsible for people believing LLM-hallucinations uncritically
llm's are dangerous and should never be used; but an overwhelming majority use it nonetheless.
As an animator, the client simultaneously knows everything about what makes a good animation, colour theory etc. and is utterly incapable of doing it themselves or providing any specific feedback beyond "I don't like this" or "make it feel more pink but don't actually make it pink."
This state persists until you introduce an invoice for all the extra work it'll take to redo all the stuff they agreed to two weeks ago, and then the waveform collapses and suddenly everything you sent them in the first place is fine.
Well, I work as a bartender, and here in Finland it's strictly against the law to serve alcohol to, or even allow a "visibly intoxicated person" to enter the premises (a law which almost every bar breaks at some point, intentionally or no), and I think I've witnessed multiple times myself how a customer's level of intoxication reveals itself only after you have served a drink to them and they've payed for it. Could it be called a Schrödrinker's cat?
The contrast is either too little or too much and I won't know unless I look at the drawing again the next morning
I guess the best one for me may be elite university students are “just smarter” than others until I have to read their term papers.
For some reason it’s always the non-native English speakers who write well.
Autonomous vehicles are at times both amazingly advanced and bedshittingly idiotic.
I've ridden ~25k miles in them for work, and I trust them more than 95% of the drivers on the road. But I've also experienced them acting in ways that are still quite far from the way humans would.
Schrödinger's fatigue crack. With old enough steel, you don't know if there is a crack propagating until you see it.
Another good example is reading book reviews then reading the actual monograph. Sometimes there’s just nothing there
We know that you're here, in this thread. Don't tell us what you're doing right now or we'll collapse the universe.