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450
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I thought we were finally agreeing fully! My understanding of the question is "what is the difference between a third (of a pizza, say) and a half?"

    1/2 - 1/3 = 1/6
    1/2 = 1/3 + 1/6
    a half is one sixth more than a third.

    btw, I fixed my Kagi screenshot since I'd missed a word from the question (reading comprehension's clearly not my strong point today)

  • Ah, you're right - I misunderstood jbrain's point to just be about the "relative to the original" understanding. Guess I'm no smarter than Google's AI.

  • Yes, and the Google AI response is correct (and quite clear) in what it says. edit: Thanks Batman. I mean that Google's understanding of the question is logical (although still the maths is wrong as you say (now I've re-read you)) and its answer explained the angle it was answering from.

    However, I think the reasonable assumption for the intention behind the question is relative to a whole. I had third of a pizza, and now I have an extra sixth of a pizza. It's subtle, but that's the kind of thing AI falls down on.

  • If programming.dev is down, it's helpful to be able to see @meta@programming.dev from other instances and check for planned downtime, etc.

  • Google's AI seems dumber than the rest, for example here's Kagi answering the same (using Claude):


    edit: typoed question originally

    Perhaps Google's tried to make it run too cheaply - Kagi's one doesn't run unless you ask for it, and as a paid product it'll have different priorities.

  • While I don't disagree, this article is pretty bad and unconvincing. Is it a draft or something dashed out to collect referral fees?

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Vulnerable: VHD PTZ camera firmware < 6.3.40 used in PTZOptics, Multicam Systems SAS, and SMTAV Corporation devices based on Hisilicon Hi3516A V600 SoC V60, V61, and V63

    It looks like they're using AI correctly: to identify patterns in huge amounts of data.

    I think they'd struggle to mention their own name more often in that article.

  • I think there's a lot of people who would be happy with a Chromebook in computer form, and those are also the market for Linux.

  • sweet stop

    I think you mean sweet spot. Now I'm wondering if it's a typo or an eggcorn.

  • That was pretty unreal to watch. So little drama, it was like it was a render.

  • btw, it's a rite of passage.

  • Not

    Jump
  • My (ISO) keyboards do, under the Esc key. I guess you're in North America (or Australia) and have an ANSI layout.

  • Because this is the internet, I can't tell if the whoosh goes to your downvoters or you. I think you were joking, but that second sentence makes me wonder...

  • I pay for Nebula - $30 a year which is about £22.50. That won't even cover two months of YouTube Premium (£12 pm), and there's not even the discounted yearly option in the UK.

    And "if you're not paying you're the product" is wrong - YouTube/Google would still be datamining my viewing habits to sell to advertisers.

  • 100% the second one. It's the idiomatic way to do this in Rust, and it leaves you with an immutable object.

    I personally like to move the short declarations together (i.e. body down with language_id (or both at the top)) but that's a minor quibble.

  • Only if enough people do it. Then again, loads scrapers outside of AI already pretend to be normal browsers.

  • The phrasing of "First actual case of bug being found" definitely sounds like it's a reference to an existing term. Nowadays maybe people would say "a literal bug lol".

    Edit: to be fair, OP doesn't say that Hopper invented the term