US officials struggle to quash Hurricane Helene conspiracy theories
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    I've got some. My friend at FEMA was literally on the phone with me when his boss called - this was the night before it made landfall, their biggest concern was the mountains in South Carolina, because they're entirely not equipped to deal with a storm like this

    He was also pissed that Vermont pushed their paperwork through just before for incidents months ago, and they were all already swamped because of the end of the fiscal year, and the flurry of changes that come with the

    So all in all, they knew exactly where would be hardest hit, acted preventively, and were on 24/7 call (which they don't get paid for, which is bullshit). Mainstream media (from what little I saw myself and my father passed on second hand) was worried about Georgia

    They were zeroed in on the biggest disaster region, and acted days in advance. Those are the facts I saw.... I'll know more when my friend has time to chat

    7
  • This researcher wants to replace your brain, little by little. The US government just hired a researcher who thinks we can beat aging with fresh cloned bodies and brain updates.
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 50%

    The body. It's feeding you vast amounts of information every moment, it's the one making decisions, you're the AI assistant providing analysis and advice

    If you clone a tree, you get a similar tree. The branches aren't in the same place. If you clone a human, why would the nerves be laid out the same way? Even if it's wired up correctly, without a lifetime of cooperation why would your body take your advice?

    Imagine you wake up. Red looks blue. Everything feels numb. The doctor says "everything looks good, why don't you try to stand up?". You want to cooperate with the doctor, but you don't stand up. You could move, but you don't. Rationalizing your choices, you tell the doctor you don't feel like it. You feel your toes, you shift to get away from the prodding of your doctor, but you just can't muster the will to stand

    Imagine you wake up. Your sight is crystal clear, you feel your body like never before. The doctor says "don't move yet". With the self control of a child, you rip out the itchy IV to get the tape off of you. The doctor says something in a stem tone, and you're filled with rage. You pummel the doctor, then are filled with regret and start to cry

    Emerging science suggests this kind of situation could lead to brand new forms of existential horror

    0
  • It’s Time to Stop Taking Sam Altman at His Word
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    Generative AI is definitely useful - it's mighty putty. It fills in gaps and sticks things together wonderfully. It let's you easily do things near impossible before

    It's also best used sparingly

    1
  • Gender
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    I realized the concept was making me hold myself back. Want to know my pronouns? That's a you problem. There's only one third person pronoun I'll accept when I'm standing right there, and it's "my client"

    15
  • OpenAI is now valued at $157 billion
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    That's because we're using it wrong. It's not a genie you go to for answers to your problems, it's mighty putty. You could build a house out of it, but it's wildly expensive and not at all worth it. But if you want to stick a glass bottle to a tree, or fix a broken plastic shell back together, it's great

    For example, you can have it do a web search, read through the results to see if it actually contains what you're looking for, then summarize what it found and let you jump right there to evaluate yourself. You could have it listen to your podcasts and tag them by topic. You could write a normal program to generate a name and traits of a game character, then have the AI write flavor text and dialog trees for quest chains

    Those are some projects I've used AI for - specifically, local AI running on my old computer. I'm looking to build a new one

    I also use chat gpt to write simple but tedious code on a weekly basis for my normal job - things like "build a class to represent this db object". I don't trust it to do anything that's not straightforward - I don't trust myself to do anything tedious

    The AI is not an expert, I am. The AI is happy to do busy work, every second of it increases my stress level. AI is tireless, it can work while I sleep. AI is not efficient, but it's flexible. My code is efficient, but it is not flexible

    As a part of a system, AI is the link between unstructured data and code, which needs structure. It let's you do things that would have required a 24/7 team of dozens of employees. It also is unable to replace a single human - just like a computer

    That's my philosophy at least, after approaching LLMs as a new type of tool and studying them as a developer. Like anything else, I ran it on my own computer and poked and prodded it until I saw the patterns. I learned what it could do, and what it struggled to do. I learned how to use it, I developed methodologies. I learned how to detect and undo "rampancy", a number of different failure states where it degrades into nonsense. And I learned how to use it as another tool in my toolbox, and I pride myself on using the right tool for the job

    This is a useful tool - I repeatedly have used it to do things I couldn't have done without it. This is a new tool - artisans don't know how to use it yet. I can build incredible things with this tool with what I know now, and other people are developing their own techniques to great effect. We will learn how to use this tool, even in its current state. It will take time, its use may not be obvious, but this is a very useful tool

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  • US couple blocked from suing Uber after crash say daughter agreed to Uber Eats terms
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    Because Disney didn't own the restaurant, it was a private restaurant renting a building in a shopping center owned by Disney

    Disney was just the landlord in this situation, and so they honestly had nothing to do with it

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  • Anon finds the culprit
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    Oh, the metaphor goes further. We're not the pilot of the suit, we're not the hardware, we're not the OS of the suit, we're the AI assistant

    We speak for it with the other AIs, we get called up to handle things we don't have learned behaviors for, we analyze and provide feedback - we give advice and it feels like we're making decisions, but we're not

    4
  • Anon finds the culprit
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 90%

    Once again, the science piles up behind my "we're just LLMs running on the mecha suit controlled by bacteria" theory

    45
  • The games industry is undergoing a 'generational change,' says Epic CEO Tim Sweeney: 'A lot of games are released with high budgets, and they're not selling'
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    That's not what I'm mad about. I'm mad that it won't ever work - Ubisoft isn't trying to figure out why their games are failing, they're trying to figure out how to keep the stock price projections up

    Hence this article, which is signaling to wall Street "we're going to make layoffs and hire cheaper, less experienced people". They'll probably do it by closing studios and buying up new ones - that's pretty much their standard operating procedure. They buy up a studio, take their IP to add to the pile, then turn it into a formula and churn out games until the players lose interest in the IP

    What's the problem? They're too damn big. What's the solution? Block them from acquiring more studios and they'll die without leaving a swath of destruction on the way down. Ideally split them up. Do the same with Microsoft and EA, and we could save the gaming industry overnight (granted, more like over the course of a few years)

    Voting with your wallet doesn't work because to the leadership of a Corp, sales aren't what matters. Stock price matters, which is only tentatively linked to how profitable the company is, which is only tentatively linked to the quality of their products

    1
  • The games industry is undergoing a 'generational change,' says Epic CEO Tim Sweeney: 'A lot of games are released with high budgets, and they're not selling'
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    It undoubtedly burned out hundreds of game devs who wasted years of their work and improved nothing about the industry

    Mission accomplished?

    2
  • The games industry is undergoing a 'generational change,' says Epic CEO Tim Sweeney: 'A lot of games are released with high budgets, and they're not selling'
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    Well I wouldn't say it's important, because it doesn't change anything

    I would definitely say it's a waste of money to buy their bad games. They deserve to fail. I'm not happy about it, because I want good games, not for IP to be stretched so far I no longer care about it

    But it's important to understand that AAA gaming is an oligopoly and not buying their games won't change that. It will not improve gaming. Ubisoft will close another dozen studios, buy 13 more, and learn all the wrong lessons (see current situation)

    "Voting with your wallet" does not give you any control, just like recycling does not save the planet. It's a myth to redirect our attention

    Structural problems can only be solved structurally.

    1
  • The games industry is undergoing a 'generational change,' says Epic CEO Tim Sweeney: 'A lot of games are released with high budgets, and they're not selling'
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    They just ascribe a different metric as to why it failed

    Yeah... That's my point. They will never say "our game failed because it was overly formulaic, unpolished, and our customers are getting sick of our bullshit"

    It doesn't fit on the spreadsheet. They will never come to the correct conclusion. They structurally cannot

    1
  • The games industry is undergoing a 'generational change,' says Epic CEO Tim Sweeney: 'A lot of games are released with high budgets, and they're not selling'
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 90%

    Motherfucker... How many times do you you have to fail before you listen to your customers, who are screaming what they want?

    This is why voting with your wallet is nonsense. They'll never learn why they failed, only that they did

    9
  • a few centuries
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    That's like 30 years after the concept was first understood. Even now the concept is downplayed so people don't reject it outright

    And even today, almost no one truly understands the implications of exponential growth... I'd give them full marks

    3
  • .dev It's time to return to the roots, to the C programming language.
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    Why do you think C is the one true language? It's a tool.

    There's a single very simple answer to "what tool should I use?". Use the best tool for the job

    The job is the objective - what are you trying to accomplish? What are your priorities? What compromise is best between time, cost, and quality? What are your abilities? What's in your toolbox right now, and what could you obtain within the time frame?

    For you, the best tool might always be C. I don't know how you've specialized or what you do, but C is powerful. Maybe you have an orderly thought process code meticulously, maybe you struggle to learn new languages. Maybe there's just no better option for the jobs you take on

    For me, C is rarely the answer. Not never, but outside of school I can count on one hand how many times I've chosen it. I code intuitively and feel how the code fits together, I can pick up languages on the spot and switch even more easily. But I'm not meticulous, it's against my nature. I make mistakes frequently - but I learn by doing, and I don't need to understand to start doing

    All that said, why do we keep making languages and frameworks? Because as programmers, we build the tools. We can also share them without losing them. The perfect tool for one job won't be the same for any other job, but a pretty good tool for many jobs is a valuable tool

    The trade-off with our tools is between power, versatility, and cost (generally being time). We all want powerful and versatile tools - but our time is limited, and so we can't afford the cost

    Ultimately, I think you've correctly spotted a recurring problem but misidentified the cause. The cause isn't the tools, it's the fact that the cost is someone else's time. And the fact we have no way to translate money into their time

    A corporation can fund a team to continuously develop a tool they rely on. An individual can't - we could chip in a few bucks here and there, but we use a lot of tools. We don't know good tools from bad ones until we use them, we don't know what tools are used to build the ones we need either.

    So everyone and their mom wants to build a service to fund work on their tools. I hate services, I don't want to give them my data or my money - I want tools that will work on my devices, not because I don't want to deny them pay for their work, but because I pick up, drop, and modify tools all the time

    That's the real problem - if I could donate x dollars a month to support the tools I use, I would. If I could choose for us all to pay more taxes to support the tools we all use, I would take that deal. Hell, I'd go through the effort to generalize my personal tools

    Instead, the only real profit to be had in OSS comes from companies, because they can afford to fund them directly, or services, which individuals tend to hate but companies barely notice. The tools aren't the problem - the economics are the problem

    1
  • What a prompt
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    It's actually really fascinating - cats seem to rapidly learn culture while they're weaning

    Cats in Japan are very friendly and trusting of humans, cats in America are more cautious and wary

    Japan has folklore about multiple variations of cat yokai that range from fickle trickers to malevolent supernatural ones. Cats are considered good luck, killing them invites bad luck. They have euphemisms like being in no position to refuse even a cats help, and their presence being a good omen

    America has folklore about cats being bad luck, and tied to witchery. We still use euphemisms about skinning cats, letting them out of bags, swinging them, etc. Killing cats wasn't abnormal behavior even a century ago

    And apparently, if you bring a female Japanese cat to America, it'll take several generations for the descendents to localize to the culture. They even meow differently

    2
  • Conspiracy Theorists and Vaccine Skeptics Have a New Target: Geoengineering | Around the country, people with a deep distrust of government want to preemptively ban the use of aerosols to reduce heat
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    They're trying to make this the new recycling aren't they... Pitching an idea that seemingly would work, and feels like we're doing something without actually addressing the problem

    When the media starts over focusing on something odd, it's because billionaires have an agenda

    1
  • Top EU Court’s Advisor Explains Why Video Game Cheats Are Not Copyright Infringement
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    Of course, you have to wait until the movie company decides to sell approved sunglasses for an additional free. Or get written approval beforehand

    It's also copyright infringement for your life experiences to influence your understanding of the film in ways not intended by the copyright holder. Especially if you think it was bad.

    Anyone you share these unapproved opinions with is a potential sale, adding full ticket price + digital rental to the damages

    1
  • AMD's High-End X670E Motherboards Limiting Gen5 SSDs To Gen1 Speeds, Users Unable To Boot Into Windows After Restart
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    I thought the same thing. It's a full answer - it's not just "it's the motherboard", it's "this is what is happening, we've reproduced it, and this is how you'd go about fixing it"

    1
  • Capitalism rule
  • theneverfox theneverfox Now 100%

    End state? That'a just stage two. The end state is when we all are sworn to our individual masters on penalty of death/disemploymeant, or when we've had enough and do something different

    1
  • Between wanting to do more with local LLMs, wsl annoyances, and the direction tech companies have been going lately, I think it's time I start exploring a full Linux migration I'm a software dev, I'm comfortable in the command line, and I used to write the node configuration piece of something similar to chef (flavor/version agnostic setup of cloud environments) So for me, Linux has always been a "modify the script and rebuild fresh" kind of deal... Even my dev VMs involved a lot of scripts and snapshots. I don't enjoy configuration and I really hate debugging it, but I can muddle through when I have to Web searches have pushed me towards Ubuntu for LLM work, but I've never been a big fan of the window Managers. I like little flourishes like animation and lots of options I can set graphically, I use multiple desktop multiple monitors I've tried the one it comes standard with, gnome, and kde (although it's been about 5 years since I've last given them a real shot). I'm mostly looking for the most reasonable footprint that is "good enough", something that feels polished to at least the Windows XP level - subtle animations instead of instant popups, rounded borders, maybe a bit of transparency here and there. I'm looking at Ubuntu w/ - kde w/ plasma (I understand it's very configurable, I don't love the look and it seems to be a bigger footprint - budgie (looks nice, never heard of it before today) - kylin (looks very Windows 10 which is nice, a bit skeptical about the Chinese focus) - mate (I like the look, but it seems a bit dubiously centralized) - unity (looks like the standard Ubuntu taken to it's natural conclusion) - rhino Linux (something new which makes me skeptical, but pretty and seems more like existing tools packaged together which makes me think the issues might not impact actual workflow) - anything the community is big on for this, personally I'd pick opensuze, but I need to maximize compatibility with bleeding edge LLM projects My hardware and hard requirements are: - nvidia 1060ti - ryzen 5500u - 16g ram - 4 drives nearly full, because it's a computer of Theseus running the same (upgraded) vista license that came with the case like 15 years ago - multi desktop, multi monitor - can handle a lot of browser Windows/tabs - ideally the setup is just a package mana ger install script with all my dependencies - gaming support would be nice, but I'll be dual booting for VR anyways I've been out of the game for a while, I'd love to hear what the feeling is in the community these days (Side note, is pine as cool a company as it seems?)

    35
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