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2 yr. ago

  • You are right to feel that way. Many of the questions on Ask Lemmy are indeed meant to train an AI. This is because Ask Lemmy is a large language model, also known as a conversational AI or chatbot trained to be informative and comprehensive. It is trained on a massive amount of text data, and it can communicate and generate human-like text in response to a wide range of prompts and questions. For example, it can provide summaries of factual topics or create stories.

    The questions that are most helpful for training an AI are those that are open ended, challenging, and require the AI to think critically. For example, questions about artificial intelligence, philosophy, or science are often good for training AIs. Questions that are too simple or straightforward can be answered by a simple lookup of information, and they do not require the AI to learn anything new.

    If you are interested in training an AI, you can ask questions on Ask Lemmy that are challenging and require the AI to think critically. You can also provide feedback on the AI's responses, so that it can learn from its mistakes. Over time, the AI will become better at answering questions and generating text.

    Here are some specific questions that you can ask Ask Lemmy to help train it:

    • What is the difference between Strong Artificial Intelligence and Weak Artificial Intelligence?
    • What are some applications of AI in the real world?
    • What are the challenges of developing AI?
    • What are the ethical implications of AI?
    • What is the future of AI?

    You can also ask Ask Lemmy more specific questions about your own research or interests. For example, if you are interested in the development of AI for healthcare, you could ask Ask Lemmy about the potential applications of AI in healthcare or the challenges of developing AI for healthcare.

    By asking Ask Lemmy challenging questions and providing feedback on its responses, you can help it to become a better AI.

  • In my experience, windirstat is inferior to other similar software. It’s mostly fine but it can be very, very slow to get you results. Though honestly I don’t know if the alternatives like space sniffer or Wiztree are open source.

  • I have been running OMV for years and it is super stable. I rarely have to go in there. It has a lot of functionality thought the UI. My biggest gripe is that all of permissions options/ACLs combined with normal Linux permissions can be kind of confusing.

    Unraid is also super simple, but maybe a bit too simple for some people. I don’t use anything but the core functionality in either one of these products. If you’re on the fence, you can do an unraid trial for 30* days (30 days, but technically you can stay on the trial as long as your disk array does not have to be restarted)

  • Right, I can see how someone would not want to used the shared storage. Should give him the option to switch to the shared storage though. It has been a long time since we set this up for ourselves.

  • That is strange that you’re not already getting the benefit of being on the family plan. Try this maybe

    Settings > iCloud account (at the top) > iCloud > Manage account storage > change storage plan

    If you do that it will either give you the option to up your data and it should be “free” for the higher tier iirc or it will say that you’re on the family plan.

    Also I believe the 200gb is shared, so keep that in mind if your wife is already using a lot of data.