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Posts
8
Comments
1,824
Joined
4 yr. ago

  • I'm not sure if this is what you're looking for, but for AI generated novels, we have Plot Bunni. That's specifically made to draft, generate an outline and chapters and then the story. Organize ideas... It has a lot of rough edges though. I had some very limited success with it, and it's not an editor. But it's there and caters to storywriting.

  • Fingers crossed, but we also know Lemmy might not be ready for that type of philosophy. I mean I still don't know what exactly happened, but lemm.ee wasn't successful in the end. And the underlying issues are still there. So the next admin team might face the same dynamics.

  • I don't think you need to worry about that too much. It's a very uncommon character trait for constructive people. Alike people who run a successful instance. Most of them are nice. And the very few who aren't, or are very agitated/argumentative will inevitably run into issues with other people as well... So there isn't much to loose.

  • As you said, it ain't easy. You wanted an example and I gave one of the major real-world ones. The strike had quite an impact and there's a lot of different things involved. Your article talks about it. Things went up to the supreme court. Contracts have been changed, amended, and rules put in place. Shows were delayed or even cancelled. But it wasn't winnig "the war".

    I'm not sure if some people are under the impression that workers rights or freedom is a one-time thing and then it's settled and alright... Because it's really not. This is a constant fight. We've been fighting it since the 1700s or so and it won't ever be over. The moment you stop resisting, someone is going to take your freedom away. And it's an everlasting struggle, for everyone. And so for the writers. They've tried to resist and immediately they're threatened again.

    It's the same for everyone. Delivery drivers might have been somewhat okay. Then Amazon got invented and they had to pee into bottles to keep up. I'm not sure if that has been settled. Then Uber and food delivery came and they're all subcontractors and severely struggle with that. And tomorrow someone else is going to make their lives hard.

    Fighting for privacy is the same thing. The moment we have some small victory, they try to push (for example) for internet surveillance a different way and it starts again. You decide if you want to fight or accept it.

    And philosophy hasn't settled this either, so yo can't say it's dumb. Some people say you have to stand your ground. Fight for your ideals and morals. For who you are or what you stive for. No matter if chances are slim. Some are pushovers. Some people need to pick their fights. And there are other opinions out there. But just that something sems inevitable, doesn't mean resistance is dumb per se. But I'll wholeheartedlyagree that some forms of fighting it are dumb, and people won't succeed with that.

  • I mean AI has an impact on the workplace. And on workers and human labour. So I think it is core business for unions. But I get what you say. It's difficult. I still think it's warranted to go on a writers guild strike like in Hollywood. Or be pissed if you're a freelancer doing art or design.

    Also that's exactly what unions are about. Imagine assembly line work. And people advocating that it needs some rules. And a bathroom break. We regularly complain about technology at the workplace?!

  • I doubt it. At least where I live it's not like that for Gen Z. And I mean you're somewhere between 13 and 28 yo. Your life isn't over at that point.

    And if you want my advice: Talk to people. You can simply both agree on having an open relationship. If you do it beforehand, it won't be cheating. And it'd be honest and respectful.

  • I'm not sure about the "one chance" thing. Who told you that? I know people who are married for the third time now. Or who had several partners over the years. That's very common. And while there is only one first love... You'll usally get many chances. Also as a perfectly average man.

  • I did some wardriving a long time ago but never used those internet connections. And I shared my connection before and had a Freifunk router. With the neighbours not so much. I'm mostly nice to them and ask before borrowing their stuff.

  • I downloaded an age-gated video yesterday and it worked. You need to use the --cookies-from-browser option or export them to a text file. And I had issues with yt-dlp finding the correct path, so I needed to manually provide it with the correct directory for my Chromium or LibreWolf. My command looks like yt-dlp --cookies-from-browser firefox:~/.librewolf/ ...

    It should be able to use Edge, at least according to the documentation you should be able to pass "edge" as the browser name without and additional info and it'll try to use them, unless your cookies are encrypted or you use profiles in your browser and it's not the default one.

    But there are several bugreports for similar situations:

    Maybe you want to install Firefox or something that works. Or if it's just one video, drop the link here and hope someone else downloads it for you.

  • I've been using the Gnome desktop as well on my Yoga convertible. Has some Android vibes with the menus and the app picker etc. And it works well since Firefox doesn't need any patches for scrolling anymore.

  • I mean sometimes we get that with other things as well. Like wasting cloud storage permanently. Or printing full color images on the expensive printer. Sometimes there are expensive supplies which shouldn't be wasted. Idk, kind of depends on the job. If you're a bartender or pizza chef, you'd also track the expensive ingredients and not serve an arbitrary amount. I guess AI is about the same.

  • Don't companies also limit the number of computers, staplers and pens in the office? ...It somehow has to be worth it. And they have different contracts available, you can set a limit with most APIs, bookkeeping can look up how much they paid... I think working somewhat efficiently is a normal part of doing business.

  • I think that's a size where it's a bit more than a good autocomplete. Could be part of a chain for retrieval augmented generation. Maybe some specific tasks. And there are small machine learning models that can do translation or sentiment analysis, though I don't think those are your regular LLM chatbots... And well, you can ask basic questions and write dialogue. Something like "What is an Alpaca?" will work. But they don't have much knowledge under 8B parameters and they regularly struggle to apply their knowledge to a given task at smaller sizes. At least that's my experience. They've become way better at smaller sizes during the last year or so. But they're very limited.

    I'm not sure what you intend to do. If you have some specific thing you'd like an LLM to do, you need to pick the correct one. If you don't have any use-case... just run an arbitrary one and tinker around?

  • Thanks! I've updated the link. I always just use Batocera or something like that, which has Emulationstation and Kodi set up for me. So I don't pay a lot of attention to the included projects and their development state...

    I didn't include this, since OP wasn't mentioning retro-gaming. But Batocera, Recalbox, Lakka, RetroPie are quite nice. I picked one which includes both Kodi and Emulationstation and I can switch between the interfaces with the gamecontroller. I get all the TV and streaming stuff in Kodi, and Emulationstaation launches the games. And I believe it can do Flatpaks and other applications as well.