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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/)OJ
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2 yr. ago

  • Who's job is it to teach common sense? If you find the future generation lacking, that's probably your fault.

    When I was a teenager, my dad gave me shit for not knowing how to change brake pads, and my response was "Who was supposed to teach me?". Like, it's not like I could afford a car working weekends, and he was always too busy to have me around whenever something went wrong. So next time he changed the brakes, he actuality taught me.

  • Ive changed my entire work flow because of this. On my laptop I use paperWM for infinite horizontal scrolling/tiling and "vertical" workspaces for organizing windows. Instead of minimizing windows, I just switch workspaces. Windows that need to be next to each other are on the same workspace, anything else is treated like a full screen app. It's a little weird, but for productivity with a TouchPad it's been an absolute game changer. Ican have a workspace dedicated to programming, obe thats just documents, one for each of my courses, one thats discord and music players, etc.

    For a normal mouse, it's a kafkaesque nightmare.

  • At one point I laid out the plan to isolate my trigger foods, but I've never been in a stable enough place that I can be picky eating. Working roasting shifts, moving around etc, makes it a pain to take care of my diet. I'm closer now to stability, but I'm going to university 30-40 hours a week and working 35-45 hours on top of that. Eating is more of a calorie thing than a thing i plan to do.

  • Man, in the eighties, the rapid development of Japan technologically and in corporate culture, we were convinced everyone was going to be working for some branch of Mitsubishi.

    It was actually scary how fast they were developing tech, and how fast it was overcoming domestic appliances.

  • Isn't that what the Order of Odd Fellows is?

    I love secret societies because they always remind me of LARPers. I used to go to this comic shop that held a Vampire:The Masquerade LARP thing, and they would all act secretive and sneaky, and come in the backdoor and things.

  • I'm not entirely sure.
    A non-probabilistic algorithm, probably. Something that didn't rely on the liklihood of association, and instead was capable of context and rationality.
    Something that wouldn't have a system capable of saying "Put glue on your pizza" because it would know that's a silly thing to say to a human. A system that, when asked "Whats a good caustic detergent " wouldn't be able to respond "Any good caustic detergent is a good caustic detergent " because duh. Something that doesn't require thousands of hours of training to update and instead is capable of ingesting and rationalize new information on the fly.

  • I'm not convinced that it's anywhere near an AGI, I'm convinced after combing through papers and code, that it's an amazing parlor trick.

    I'd love to be proven wrong, but everything I've seen and everything I've used in my studies ( using DNN to simulate neurodivergence and spinal disgenesis, which is kinda AI adjacent) leads me to believe that the current part won't lead to anything but convincing parlor tricks.

    The argument could be made that if a trick is convincing enough, does it matter if it's intelligent or not.

  • GW2 is the first MMO i out over 2k hours into. It's a shame that the last few years have felt pretty meh. I haven't been playing seriously since PoF, life got busy, and the narrative just wasn't hitting with me. Also the desert maps weren't that great imo. I guess i have more problems than I expected with it.

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  • I could agree with this if there was a movement to produce domestically, then tariff imports. What I'm seeing is a tariff in an effort to drive domestic production and I just don't see that environment being a good investment without significant government subsidies.

    The US wanted more Silicon foundries so they're dolling out big bucks to make it happen, once you're producing domestically, you tariff similar imports to drive sales of local goods.

    I mean, I'm not an expert in macroeconomics by any means, so it's possible that I'm way off and the tariffs of cheap imports will start to drive multinational conglomerates to take a hit on cash flow and invest in domestic production. That's a big leap of faith to take when you have a hungry nation though.

  • This semester i took a basic database course, and the prof mentioned that LLMs are useful for basic queries. A few weeks later, we had a no-computer closed book paper quiz, and he was like "You can't use GPT for everything guys!".

    Turns out a huge chunk of the class was relying on gpt for everything.

  • Real talk though, I'm seeing more and more of my peers in university ask AI first, then spending time debugging code they don't understand.

    I've yet to have chat gpt or copilot solve an actual problem for me. Simple, simple things are good, but any problem solving i find them more effort than just doing the thing.

    I asked for instructions on making a KDE Widget to get weather canada information, and it sent me an api that doesn't exist and python packages that don't exist. By the time I fixed the instructions, very little of the original output remained.

  • After my mom died, my dad sold her China to her friend for a nickel. Which is great, because I would have just taken it to the VV Boutique and donated it.

    I kind of miss some of the things my mom had around the house my whole life, but also I'd I kept it all, there wouldn't be room for my stuff. And I'm not putting Trypticon in a box so I can display some Franklin Mint goose plate.