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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/)GF
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2 yr. ago

  • I mean, the acquisition did change VR from being a pretty open standard to being a walled garden where Facebook is paying devs to make their games not work with any other headset. I think without exclusivity there would be more interest in PCVR as a whole.

  • Your position is based on a flawed understanding of one statistic. If Canonical released a hardware survey for snap, and it showed that 99% of the machines using snap were running Ubuntu, would that mean 99% of all Linux machines are running Ubuntu? No, it would mean that snap users are more likely to use Ubuntu while steam users are more likely to use SteamOS. You are seeing a very small piece of the overall picture and are making wild extrapolations from it.

  • I had the second version of the G15, and I loved that keyboard.

    I use a G910 now, so basically just trading the screen for mechanical switches.

    Edit: I finally got around to watching the video, and damn, that mention of checking ventrilo on the screen brought me back. That really was the best feature back then when I only had a single monitor.

  • You don't honestly believe that, right? Like you're aware that the Steam hardware survey only includes Steam users that have it installed and choose to participate in the survey? There are way more computers and servers running Ubuntu than there are steam decks.

  • The legality of emulation absolutely hinges on whether or not the alleged infringement is monetized.

    You are absolutely mistaken. See Sony's lawsuits against Connectix and Bleem!, which were both commercial products, and Sony lost every lawsuit they filed against them.

    I don't know where you and the other thousands of people parroting this online are getting this from, but it is not true and never has been.

  • If we had that, LLMs could just improve themselves directly, bypassing any need for prompt engineering in the first place.

    Yep, exactly, and it's been studied and put in to practice effectively already.

    Prompt tuning is not the only way to fine tune the output of an LLM, and since the goal for most is going to be to make them usable by anyone, that's going to be the least desirable route.

  • Machine learning could find those strengths and weaknesses and learn to work around them likely better than a human could. It's just trial and error. There's nothing about the human brain that makes it better suited to understanding the inner logic of an LLM.

  • You have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. Saying your opinion must be correct because Nintendo made an unfounded legal assertion and a small emulator dev team settled rather than lose even more money battling their army of lawyers is like saying everyone ever shot by the police must have been a life-threatening danger to them because they wouldn't have been shot otherwise. There is legal precedence in the US that emulators are legal because unless they're made with leaked or stolen proprietary data there's no reason for them to be with current law.

    Nintendo's ToS is not the law. I don't know why you think that.