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☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ @ yogthos @lemmy.ml
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Socialism @lemmy.ml

How Sci-Fi Shaped Socialism

Programmer Humor @lemmy.ml

Peak UI Design

World News @lemmy.ml

Behind Trump’s Tough Russia Talk, Doubts and Missing Details

United States | News & Politics @lemmy.ml

Bankruptcies hit 15-year high. Industrials lead collapse. Fed boxed in on rates.

World News @lemmy.ml

China Emerges From Trade Chaos With Record Exports, Surplus

Technology @lemmy.ml

Supabase MCP can leak your entire SQL database

Technology @lemmy.ml

Huawei a private Chinese company that can't be manipulated is banned. TP-Link, a Chinese company that can't be manipulated is moving towards being banned. Starting to see a pattern here?

United States | News & Politics @lemmy.ml

When Democrats and Republicans Agree on Foreign Policy, Violence Often Results

Science @lemmy.ml

The talent gambit: how the US’ brain drain is China’s brain gain

General Programming Discussion @lemmy.ml

An app can be a home-cooked meal

General Programming Discussion @lemmy.ml

Replicube: 3D shader puzzle game, online demo

Technology @lemmy.ml

A team of construction workers in China operating excavators remotely

Technology @lemmy.ml

If there is a moment of origin for the China shock that has hit the United States, it is events around rare earths in the late summer and early autumn of 2010.

Science @lemmy.ml

Life found in underwater brine lakes

World News @lemmy.ml

Copper traders look to Chinese buyers in post Trump-tariff world

Technology @lemmy.ml

Kimi K2 is an open-source language model that directly challenges proprietary systems from OpenAI and Anthropic with particularly strong performance on coding and autonomous agent tasks.

World News @lemmy.ml

Chinese makers of air conditioners have witnessed explosive growth of exports to Europe, Southeast Asia and North America

Comics @lemmy.ml

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Summary

Socialism @lemmy.ml

Wonder what happened to every leader who tried to put the people first

Technology @lemmy.ml

China’s cotton topping robot promises full automated production of Xinjiang crop

  • Hating Russia is basically the sole requirement for advancing in EU politics.

  • The government doesn't just exist in a vacuum as you seem to think. It represents the interests of those who hold power in a particular society. In the US, it is the capital owning class, and these are the people who decide to cut your healthcare, to gouge you for education, and so on. The government simply exercises their will. Entire books have been written on the subject, yet here you are confidently attempting to debate a topic you clearly haven't spent even a few minutes thinking about.

    Also, if a large central government was the problem, then we'd see the same kind of shit happening in China that's happening under capitalist regimes.

  • We might just have to wait for China to definitively surpass the west, and act as an example of what could be.

  • Nah, they did it through the power of class dictatorship.

  • Don't forget overuse of antibiotics in commercial animal farming.

  • For the same reason Republicans haven't released the Epstien client list. Many of them and their donors are on the list.

  • the most self aware liberal

  • Great, now let's extend this logic to a solar system and see how that works.

  • Oh thanks, I love me some Red Sails. :)

  • Out of curiosity, what do you think the sentence "I'm home alone" means exactly?

  • One huge impact mass FOSS adoption would have is that there would be a lot less software and hardware churn. Commercial nature of proprietary technology is the main driver for constant upgrade cycles we see. Companies need to constantly sell products to stay in business, and this means you have to deprecate old software and hardware in order to sell new versions of the product.

    Windows 11 roll out is a perfect example. Vast majority of Windows 10 users are perfectly happy with the way their computer works currently, they're not demanding any new features, they just want their computer to continue to work the way it does currently. However, Microsoft is ending support for Windows 10 and now they're forced to buy a new computer to keep doing what they've been doing.

    This problem goes away entirely with open source because there is no commercial incentive at play. If a piece of software works, and there is a community of users using it, then it can keep working the way it does indefinitely. Furthermore, in cases where a software project goes in a directions some users don't like, such as the case with Gnome, then software can be forked by users who want to go in a different direction or preserve original functionality. This is how Cinnamon and Mate projects came about.

    Another aspect of the open source dynamic is that there's an incentive to optimize software. So, you can get continuous performance improvements without having to constantly upgrade your hardware. For most commercial software, there's little incentive to do that since that costs company money. It's easier to just expect users to upgrade their hardware if they want better performance.

    I would argue that non technical software users would be far better off if they had the option to fund open source software instead of buying commercial versions. Even having to pay equal amounts, the availability of the source puts more power in the hands of the users. For example, building on the example of Gnome, users of an existing software project could also pull funds together to pay developers to add features to the software or change functionality in a particular way.

    This is precisely what makes licenses like GPL so valuable in my opinion. It's a license that ensure the source stays open, and in this way inherently gives more power to the users.

  • me_irl

    Jump
  • Oh yeah, once you start seeing it, you realize that we're swimming in propaganda and people are simply regurgitating it uncritically like chatbots.

  • me_irl

    Jump
  • Reading Marx is like unearthing the Necronomicon in a university library, a forbidden text that lays bare capitalism's inner workings. But the true horror lies in realizing you're surrounded by people who treat exploitation as 'just how things work.' Suddenly the world reveals itself as a self-sustaining asylum, where the so-called 'rational' diligently reproduce the madness of the system.

  • I find hashtags are kind of essential for using Mastodon

  • yeah the headline is a little bombastic, but the article itself was interesting

  • seems fine for me, here's the content:

    Mainland China is on track to surpass Taiwan in semiconductor foundry capacity by 2030, according to a report from Yole Group, underscoring Beijing’s progress in its push for chip self-sufficiency amid ongoing US tech restrictions. The mainland’s share of global foundry capacity is projected to reach 30 per cent by the end of the decade, up from 21 per cent in 2024, the French market research firm said. Taiwan is currently the market leader with a 23 per cent share last year, while mainland China is already ahead of South Korea at 19 per cent, Japan at 13 per cent and the US at 10 per cent. “Mainland China is rapidly becoming a central player,” Yole Group said, attributing the shift to Beijing’s intensified efforts to build a self-sufficient domestic semiconductor ecosystem since Washington launched a tech war that aimed to curb China’s progress in critical areas such as chips and artificial intelligence (AI). Beijing has doubled down on its “whole nation” approach to its self-sufficiency drive. The state-backed China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, known as the “Big Fund”, has successfully fostered the development of key companies such as Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) and Hua Hong Semiconductor, two of the country’s leading wafer foundries. Domestic fabs are set to play a bigger role over the next few years, according to the report, which said local chipmakers accounted for 15 per cent of foundry capacity in 2024. That share will be “significantly more” by 2030, the report said. Chinese chipmakers have been investing heavily in expanding their facilities to meet surging demand from sectors such as automotive and generative AI. China was expected to start three new fab construction projects this year, one-sixth of the world’s total, according to a report published in January by US-based industry association SEMI. China’s self-sufficiency strategy, along with expected demand from automotive and internet-of-things applications, would help boost capacity by 6 per cent for chips made with process nodes between 8 and 45 nanometres, SEMI added. Despite the projected gains, the mainland still trails Taiwan and South Korea in advanced process nodes, which are crucial for producing high-performance chips with greater transistor density. SMIC, China’s top foundry, had difficulty advancing its process nodes from 7-nm to 5-nm, Canadian research firm TechInsights said in a report last month. Two years after its 7-nm chip first appeared in a Huawei Technologies smartphone, “SMIC’s 5nm process node remains elusive,” TechInsights said. The report came after it looked into the chip used in Huawei’s new laptop with a foldable display, which also used 7-nm chips from SMIC. Meanwhile, global leaders Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) and Samsung Electronics are locked in a race to achieve mass production at the 2-nm node level. TSMC was expected to reach that level this year, while Samsung has reportedly planned to reach the same stage in early 2026.

  • There are plenty of videos from Ukraine and Israel that you can watch online. These missiles can hit specific buildings.

  • Also notable how the Soviets were already doing the Virgin vs Chad Meme a hundred years ago