[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 5 points 3 days ago

LLMs are going to evolve into a position where being wrong sometimes and hallucinating sometimes won't matter, because organizations are already built to deal with it: managers.

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 11 points 4 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Half-Life and Half-Life 2 together created an almost embarrassing number of indelible moments.

I've just finished playing one of the newer Wolfenstein games, and while it was enjoyable enough in the moment and very capably-done, it had occurred to me that none of it was memorable the way so much of Half-Life was memorable.

Half-Life 2 somehow cranked that "memorability quotient" up to 11. "Do NOT go through Rav--- "

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If you're familiar with Rollie Williams' Climate Town, you may recognize this track as the theme song.

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My Pro 7 is making the sad-trombone "almost dead" sound quite a lot in the past few weeks, and the first time I heard it, I didn't know what it was. Because, although I've had the phone for 18 months, I'd never heard that sound before.

This article doesn't have much authoritative information, it's mostly recapping Reddit posts, I guess. But: Is anyone else here having the same issue?

...numerous reports point to an undiagnosed issue causing batteries in Pixel phones, including the new Pixel 10 series, to drain much faster than they did previously.

...one user claims it may be because of a GPS-related bug preventing the CPU from entering into a “suspended” state — also known as Doze specifically in Android’s context — when not being used. The user points out, “the Exynos baseband/GNSS module is caught in a persistent polling loop, causing a hardware interrupt storm even when the device is completely isolated in Airplane Mode with all radios manually toggled off.” This, in turn, keeps the CPU up and running, resulting in the drain.

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 38 points 2 weeks ago

It is a pastiche of [thing], more than an actual [thing] itself.

This is exactly what "AI" does, this is precisely what it's for

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 32 points 2 weeks ago

These aren't charges they're dismissing. They're dismissing convictions. Dismissing a conviction sounds a lot like a pardon. I didn't know it was legally possible for a prosecutor to do that.

These people were found guilty through due process. Now the DOJ is re-writing history.

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We're told that we don't have functional health care, cheap fiber broadband, or functional gun control – not because the companies with a stranglehold over these sectors have lobotomized government norms and ethics – but because of some sort of intangible, inherent, and largely mysterious failure of human collaboration.

This is something you'll see often. It's a rhetorical trick to deflect attention away from the fact that the extraction class and consolidated corporate power (who not coincidentally own the lion's share of modern media) have demolished the structural support pillars holding up a functional democracy.

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submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by WesternInfidels@feddit.online to c/music@lemmy.world

This was released as part of a compilation featuring acts with Bring On Bull Records called The Waaaaah! CD. That entire compilation is available in this YouTube playlist.

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 42 points 2 weeks ago

Even in pre-history, men were somehow convinced that what women really wanted was: bigger dicks. Bigger dicks than human men could possibly offer.

It's such a weird preoccupation, and it seems like it's got to be deeper than just a cultural thing.

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 31 points 3 weeks ago

Hey, could we automatically register everyone to vote at the same time?

I'm kidding. I know the answer is "no."

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 52 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Years ago I when I wrote software for a living, I had an argument with a colleague, and I tried to explain to him:

The "supported" closed-source library he wanted to use was pretty popular because it was marketed by a huge company with a marketing department, or because it had a first-mover advantage, or because there were training events and books built around it, etc.

The unsupported free open-source library I wanted to use was the most popular library of its kind in the whole world. And it got to that position without any of those advantages.

What does that suggest about their relative usefulness? The world of open source is closer to being a real meritocracy. The number one app or library is probably number one for non-structural reasons.

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Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 99 points 1 month ago

Q: So do you have any hobbies?

A: Well lately I've really gotten interested in routing VGA through unusual items!

Q: Ooooh, that's so hot right now

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In the last few days, Planet’s satellite imagery showed the aftermath of Iranian missile and drone strikes on US and allied bases in the region, including damage to the US Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain and to a $1 billion US-built early warning radar in Qatar used for tracking incoming projectiles. Planet said it wants to prevent “adversarial actors” from using its data for “Battle Damage Assessment (BDA)” purposes. In other words, the company doesn’t want to help Iran’s military know where it succeeded and where it failed.

We of the general public aren't hearing a lot about the success or failure of Iran's retaliatory attacks on US bases and logistics in the region, and this decision is putting us further in the dark.

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Cleveland Plain Dealer editor Chris Quinn argues that the future of newspapers is stories researched by humans, but written by AIs:

Like many students we’ve spoken with in the past year, this one had been told repeatedly by professors that AI is bad ... That’s backwards — and it seriously handicaps them as they begin their careers. I’ve written extensively about how we use AI to do more and better work. It has quickly become critical to everything we do, and to our success.

By removing writing from reporters’ workloads, we’ve effectively freed up an extra workday for them each week. They’re spending it on the street — doing in-person interviews, meeting sources for coffee. That’s where real stories emerge, and they’re returning with more ideas than we can handle.

Artificial intelligence is not bad for newsrooms. It’s the future of them. It already allows us to be faster, more thorough and more comprehensible. It frees time for what matters most: gathering facts and developing stories to serve you.

Anyone entering this field should be immersing themselves in AI.

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 27 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

If ICE is rounding up anyone who looks Hispanic, ignoring or dismissing their papers, then a new visa isn't going to help, is it?

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 33 points 2 months ago

It's not as if ICE is going to stop kidnapping people if they run out of lawyers.

Staying on and trying to make the system work sounds like the most moral option to me. It also sounds fruitless.

[-] WesternInfidels@feddit.online 25 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Something that jumped out at me: These guys had worked for CBP for ~8 and ~12 years, respectively.

These thugs, who wrestled an uninvolved bystander to the ground, then shot him in the back while he lay there helpless, were not panicky newbs. These were veteran CBP officers.

Is this just what veteran CBP officers are like?

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WesternInfidels

joined 3 months ago