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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)IM
ImplyingImplications @ ImplyingImplications @lemmy.ca
Posts
2
Comments
2,320
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Making great progress! Bill is such a great character. He's turned his town into a fortress occupied only by him. Sounds great until you realize he's been alone for years. It's less of a fortress and more of a prison and, with the way he talks to himself, you get the sense that the isolation is starting to wear on him. Even then, when given the opportunity to leave, he doesn't. He's going to die alone in that place because he sees trusting others as a weakness. Something he tries to impress onto Joel. But does Joel want to be like Bill? Does he want to be like Tess? Such a great chapter!

  • "A speed camera that has recently spent more time on its side or in a pond than it has upright and functioning has clearly fallen well short of addressing the dangerous speeding on Parkside Drive," Gholizadeh said.

    It has issued over 68,000 speeding tickets and generated over $7 million in fines to date, according to Safe Parkside.

    It has spent most of its time inactive and still generated $7 million in revenue?

    That's around $100 per person which is approximately the fine for going 17 km/h over the posted speed (17 × $3 per km/h over × 2 for being in a community saftey zone). The posted speed limit is 40 km/h. The average person is therefore going 57 km/h.

  • I'd say the story of part 2 explores a different theme. The writing and acting are still top notch, it's just not a theme people wanted to explore. The gameplay and scenery are arguably improved so I'd still recommend it.

  • It's mostly the training/machine learning that is power hungry.

    AI is essentially a giant equation that is generated via machine learning. You give it a prompt with an expected answer, it gets run through the equation, and you get an output. That output gets an error score based on how far it is from the expected answer. The variables of the equation are then modified so that the prompt will lead to a better output (one with a lower error).

    The issue is that current AI models have billions of variables and will be trained on billions of prompts. Each variable will be tuned based on each prompt. That's billions to the power of billions of calculations. It takes a while. AI researchers are of course looking for ways to speed up this process, but so far it's mostly come down to dividing up these billions of calculations over millions of computers. Powering millions of computers is where the energy costs come from.

    Unless AI models can be trained in a way that doesn't require running a billion squared calculations, they're only going to get more power hungry.

  • I did. I like to read opinions to see if any good points are raised. I don't see any valid points in this article. The author derives Carney's entire personality from a 5 minute photo op where a chef helps him cook some pancakes at the Calgary Stampede.

    The author suggests Carney is an angry authoritarian who hates working class people due to his behaviour in that photo op. Specifically, things like not picking up a pancake he dropped on the ground, and saying the reason he couldn't flip a pancake well was because the chef was making them way too big.

    I've seen many valid criticisms of Carney, but this article isn't one.

  • If you purposefully look for stuff to be mad at, you'll find it. Guy can't cook pancakes. It's a good thing PM doesn't mean Pancake Maker. Let's see the author of this article be the head of a central bank or negotiate a trade deal with the European Union.

  • I loved this game so much! You're in for a treat! Last of Us certainly has a way of making the apocalypse look gorgeous. All those reclaimed by nature cityscapes are amazing.

    If you like the scenery and gameplay of this one then you'll enjoy it in the second game too. Maybe lower your story writing expectations a bit though...

  • No. Canada has an agreement with the US that nobody entering Canada from the US will be seen as a refugee and will be deported back to the US. Vice versa is true with people entering the US from Canada.

    It's the Safe Third Country Agreement. They even have big red letters saying "yes this agreement is still in effect".

  • I can't find it on GOG's but I wouldn't be surprised if it's in most EULAs. I've seen emails saying "confidential, if you are not the intended recipient of this email you must delete it." There's no way to enforce that. Ubisoft isn't coming to your house to review the contents of your drives. I'm guessing it's to stop some loophole like "you said I can't resell your game so instead I sold my hard drive (that has the game installed on it)".

  • I know for sure Korean does this, though technically their writing system is a syllabary. Symbols representing vowel and consonants are arranged into blocks that represent a syllable.

    For example ㅈㅅ is short for 죄송합니다 meaning "I'm sorry". Talk about efficient shorthand! The first consonants of each syllable block are used to makeup the shorthand, the ending 합니다 is a polite conjugation which is ignored in shorthand. You can look up "korean texting slang" for more. It's apparently used a lot. The shorthand some might already be familiar with is ㅋㅋ which is "lol".

  • I just wanted to see if you'd actually go out of your way to fake a gimp screenshot. The guy has 17 fingers and 3 arms and the baby has 14 toes and one hand is meshing into the arm of the man. It's AI. The screenshot also doesn't have a layer for most things that would have layers like the text that says "Yoink" and for some reason the baby is half in one layer and half another. The checkered pattern in the layer view is messed up. Why would you go to such lengths to lie? Just say it's AI. It's obvious.

  • There are 14,000 games released on Steam every year. What percentage do you believe contain in-game purchases? It's quite literally just the giant AAA venture capitalist backed studios that do this. Just don't buy them.

    It's like saying if we allow AI art to continue soon there will be no more humans making art. People will always make art. People will always make games. If all the art you see is corporate slop that's a you problem.