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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/)ME
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  • Why do people praising a thing you're saying is useless sound like someone listing it's good points in an advert? Gee tough question, could it be that they're essentially the same thing and the latter is explicitly designed to look like the former?

    Of course if you're going to dismiss something entirely then people who benefit from using it are going to give their opinion, that's what this is - a place to give opinions and talk about stuff.

    How else would anyone answer your question? You suggest that it has no use, people who use it regularly are of course going to point out the uses it has. And yes many aren't going to bother they're going to use the button that essentially says 'this is balderdash I don't agree'

    I have found many things ai is brilliant at, as a coding assistant it really is a game changer and within five years you'll be used to talking to your PC like they do in Star Trek and having it do all sorts of reality useful things that there are no options for in software made like we do now.

  • And there are plenty of ways to mitigate that such as having a window in which cancelled subscriptions can be reinstated.

    Making software and services awful because theoretically a bad user is going to misuse it is dumb, it's the very core of enshittification.

  • I know it's easy to see things that way but the reality is they're people and if we went to move into a better future then we're going to have to work out how to convince people to move forward with us.

    It saddens me how many purportedly on the left seem to want nothing but conflict and violence. It feels like they're working to try and make things worse simply so they can feel some foolish sense of pride at being right or play out some childish freedom fighter fantasy.

  • Think of the children being used to push an agenda that helps the very wealthy? Well I'll be, what a totally new and not at all predictable move.

    Ban all ai that aren't owned by rich people, make open source impossible, restrict everything that might allow regular people to compete with the corporations - only then will you children be safe!

  • This is basic math, articles are written in one language but there are lots of languages they can be translated into so if a site written in English has a Spanish, french, and Portuguese version 75% of that counts as ai translated garbage - because apparently having stuff available to non English speakers is a bad thing now?

    As for 'poorly' What's their mechanism for determinng it? How much is well translated or are they just assuming it's poor because it's possible it could be? Likewise what percentage is human translated and how do they determine that? Or is it another assumption to fit their narrative?

    Clickbait doomer nonsence.

  • Nothing to control the motor, nothing to control the heater, nothing to do timing or turn on and off water in and out?

    Even a really shitty one has door lock sensor, temperature sensor, turbidity sensor..

    Which means logic gates and transformers and things to shift voltages or control power flow.

    That's before you even get into the logic of controlled programs or advanced features like weight based energy saving.

    A micro controller connected to a few relays and sensors could replace all the complex stuff and it'd cost far less, plus it could tell you which sensor is out. Plus it allows you to do otherwise very complex things like reprogram the current job while it's running or to sync with other devices to limit max power load.

  • The rest of the money goes into fighting for software freedom, developing infrastructure tools and other things they're very open about.

    Personally I don't donate because I prefer to help small open source efforts where a little money makes a big difference, especially protects which I believe could help emerging open source communities grow or inspire more cc content. I'm glad Mozilla exist and that they get so much money from Google and donations

  • That's not really true though, the electronics is pretty complex and requires significant work to use different components - I'm sitting next to a pile of dissembled washing machines so i could talk you through a few of the complexities involved in reworking those if you like

  • Yeah but washing machines either use a really simple micro controller or a whole load of really complex voltage based logic and control board electronics that even the guy who designed it couldn't fix without a lot of writing notes and doing maths.

    There's more to go wrong on an old washing machine and each control board was unique to the machine so tracking down a replacement is hard - a nice simple raspberry pi Pico you can flash over WiFi would make it so easy to switch out one heater for another without too much thought about impedance or upgrade the turbidity sensor without desoldering resistors.

    Plus it gives you infinite control over the program cycles allowing you to update up the best wash method for your detergent and lifestyle.

    Of course you can only do that with an open source one. I think it's coming, year of the open source desktop kitchen work surface coming soon.

  • Ha, yeah sure, and trains will never go faster than 15mph.

    Natural language computing is huge at the moment because it's a huge and significant development in computing - yes there are lots of shitty ai girlfriend apps and the same goes for generative ai there are lots of shitty art apps but human language interfaces aren't going away nor are generative design tools.

    Even just the coding tools already available for free are a game changer, every single programmer I know and all the coding communities I'm in are using chatGPT regularly. When generative design gets into other areas such as cad and cam with natural language and problem solving (as in task based algorithms like the Go solver) then you'll start to see the how ubiquitous and significant these technologies are.

    I understand why you'd look at the first commercial computers and think that no normal person will ever have a use for them but look at where we are now. The same is true for ai, current stuff is amazing when carefully worked and it takes a lot to get it all wired in but as the ecosystem of code grows and training sets become better established everything becomes much easier which enables more effective use cases.

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