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smoothbrain coldtakes
smoothbrain coldtakes @ canis_majoris @lemmy.ca
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2 yr. ago

  • Most of the people who argue that the new stuff is not serious enough would probably consider most if not all of those sillier episodes from the old days to be not worth watching. There's tons of DS9 watch orders that are like "Skip the Bajoran restoration, don't watch the Ferengi episodes, don't watch the Mirror Universe, etc"

    Some people just dislike fun!

  • The main thing that bugged me with M'Benga's daughter is that they've basically just retconned how many people understand the way they can use the transporter buffer that was seemingly novel to the TNG folk when they came across Scotty inside of one during Relics. Geordi was all like "what is going on with this transporter" but this season you have Chapel and M'Benga using it as an active stasis system for triage purposes. (Although now that I read what I wrote, that's just like two more people who know it, and using the Klingon war as a way to establish the knowledge is pretty good.)

    Just kind of seems like it would either be more widespread of a use-case in medical scenarios or have some kind of super major drawback in addition to storage capacity like general degradation. Then it would make sense that Scotty pulled another miracle and kept himself from degrading for 100 years.

  • I think the main split in the Trek fandom now is how serious a tone people tend to prefer. Most of TNG was professionalism porn, and most of the 90s stuff was generally serious. A lot of people got used to that, and whenever I talk to them about stuff like SNW or LD, their chief complaint is that "the characters act immature and are too quippy". To an extent, I can agree and see the point of view, but on the other hand, I really like it when Trek doesn't take itself too seriously.

    I like to argue that the TOS era was a less mature era of Starfleet in general which causes the familiarity with the bridge crew to be more socially profound as opposed to professionally based. To whit, I remember SNW directly addressing things like this wherein they discuss "General Order 1" being renamed "The Prime Directive" which I feel is evident of a maturing organization.

    Strange New Worlds doesn't take itself seriously unless it has to. It's been great about totally experimenting with the Trek formula to create unique, fun and memorable episodes. The plot devices are straight out of the 70's, with random space anomalies impacting the crew. They modernize the storytelling and keep up the pace, which is always just what the TOS era needed.

  • I've come to the conclusion that SNW is the entry point series.

    Do you like legal dramas? Perfect, here's a great LGBTQ allegory episode!

    Do you like goofy animation like Rick and Morty? Here's the crossover with Lower Decks!

    Do you like gritty serious war stories? We're still dealing with the trauma of the Klingon War!

    Do you like showtunes? Somehow we pulled that off too! (also Chapel's song is a straight banger)

    SNW is the show I'd introduce my friends to in order to get them into Star Trek as a larger thing. I think it's an easier entry point than any other series.

  • He's clearly plotting something. I'd watch out if I were you. I'd be really worried about regicide.

  • I've been looking for a new superauto and if Smeg is reliable I'm curious to look into some of the prices of their models.

  • It's already bullshit that Crave and Bell own the rights to a shit ton of stuff up here through being the main media conglomerate. I got Crave through Cogeco as a bonus to our cable package and honestly, anything that's worth watching on the service is likely either an HBO original or something that's worth permanently downloading.

    I actually can't even use the Crave browser client properly on most of my machines due to adblocking. In order to watch SNW last week I had to install Crave as an Android app through Windows Subsystem for Android in order to actually gain access to the library. At that point it's just worth it for me to straight up torrent it because it's just simply not worth the hassle on top of shifting media rights.

  • Terra Prime is an excellent series finale ;)

  • Yeah stringent moderation is great but you can do it without being absolutely terrible about every interaction. You can run a clean shop without needing to be a dick about everything. When every close is filled with malice and vitriol it doesn't benefit literally anybody. It's not healthy for the poster being vindictive, it's not healthy for the newbies getting into the business, and it's not healthy for the community overall when the normal thing is berating and belittling.

    Engineers are not good with customers...

  • I don't like the way that LLMs have gathered their information with zero credit to anybody. It's totally bullshit.

  • Oh yeah that's a great one, not sure why I missed putting it down. Good call!

  • What will happen long term is more specialized models for specific applications. MS already has coder facing resources through GitHub Co-Pilot, and they were the key funders for most of OpenAI's work with GPT so they have also deployed GPT4 inline for Bing, which I find actually pretty useful even though it's been neutered to all hell.

    The problem with GPT is the G. Generalized. We've been building more specific models though. Co-Pilot is already trained on the entire codebase and discussion boards on GitHub. Eventually that's going to be the tool you want to use over GPT because it's specifically designed for code above all else.

  • I like a lot of the procedural legal ones.

    Judgement - ENT

    The Drumhead - TNG

    Rules of Engagement - DS9

    Author, Author - VOY

    That being said I have a few others that are generally great.

    Q2 - VOY - I just love the fact that Keegan DeLancie is actually John DeLancie's son and he does a great job being a little shit Q.

    The Inner Light - TNG - self explanatory

    (this is cheating but) The Aenar 3-parter - ENT - Goddamn season 4 was so good, and I really wish we could see the Romulan war. I'd even settle for them doing an animated series with the cast's voices to avoid age issues.

  • It's not like ChatGPT is the only LLM. GPT is pretty broad and general. Remember that MS has Co-Pilot which is literally entirely built on GitHub's codebase knowledge. Different data sets will produce different kinds of useful predictors.

  • I've had great success with LLMs troubleshooting my code independently without needing to consult a peer.

    It's easier than looking on StackOverflow because it already crawled the answers there and it's been programmed to drop the sass unless you ask it to be sassy specifically. All the knowledge without the elitism.

  • Because the established elite on SO are fucking dicks. You can't ask a question anymore. It's literally impossible to open a new thread. Yeah, a lot of troubleshooting has been answered, but do you really think the burden should be on the new user to know literally every single existing thread on the site? No, that's absolutely absurd, and when some moderator or poweruser comes in and tells the newbie to go fuck himself for lack of research it's pretty obvious why nobody wants to use the platform when the moderatorship is basically actively antagonistic to anybody seeking information, which is literally the point of the site.

    I'm glad it's been crawled by GPT. I'm glad because the bot gives me no sass at all when I ask it to audit my code. It does it without any malice or bullshit and it saves me time from doing the research because everything is in the LLM DB already.

  • I like cement. Roman cement with quicklime. Shit cracks on the limestone flakes which erode and re-calcify within all the micro-fractures. Fuckin Romans were mad smart.