Daylight saving time has started. Here's how to adjust.
Nice explanation. For future advances, part of it could be solved by photonics, getting rid of most of the interconnects. Massively parallel simple computations could be carried out on a photonic neuromorphic substrate, making NNs use orders of magnitude less power.
In the age of WFH and ordering stuff online, DST is an anachronism pushed by retailers who worry that not enough people will visit their physical stores after work. Similar to the "8 hours of sleep" pushed by company towns wanting 8-8-8 work shifts.
At least in Europe we have until March 30... and there's hope it will end in 2026.
They are examples of a simple prompt you can put into an AI, to get similar results.
One is little more than random noise. You can put this comment into an AI prompt, in the presence of a legal witness, and when people start liking the output, say "aha!".
The second is an automated process of canning food, that the artist used to can his own feces. Yes, they were real, about half the cans have exploded after being exposed in places when the sun would heat them up, which was part of the artist's plan. Another piece by the same artist is Fiato d'Artista, a balloon blown up and sealed by the artist, that over time has deflated. The "art vs. automation" of both, fall heavily on the automation part.
The last can be generated with a single sentence prompt to any image generating AI.
The interpretation you make up to justify a piece, is independent from the means used to generate it... so you have to choose:
- The interpretation is the art, making all tools a valid option, including AI.
- The piece itself has to embody some interpretation, making the examples into "not art".
There is no "safe" store of value, it always depends on demand; there is no single item with a constant demand. One would think that air, water, food, housing, etc. should be always in demand... but reality is showing how people are willing to sacrifice those for something else all the time.
Bitcoin transfers cost pennies on the Lightning Network. An argument can be made, that SEPA transfers cost exactly 0... also an argument can be made, that SEPA didn't go all the way down to 0, until cheap crypto transfers became a thing. But SEPA is an Euro thing.
China, I think the powerhouse of an economy that it has will make it awfully enticing for investment orgs
China has a 100% intervened market, there is exactly 0% security that any investment won't go to 0 in an instant, by decree. There is a reason why Chinese people invested 30% of GDP in the housing market, allowing scammers to build ghost towns they never planned on completing... and then it all went crashing down.
The US sees the Euro as a competitor of the Dollar; for the US to buy a strategic reserve of EUR, it would definitely mean recognizing defeat.
They don't need them anymore.
- Before: Phone bot farm
- Now: Manus AI
It's back up and working fine:
This anti-AI propaganda talking point is getting old.
Value each artist's input at what it is: if there is no input, then it's slop; if there is input, value the input.
Some works of art, long predating AI, for your consideration:
Same misunderstandings as usual:
crypto transactions can be done anonymously
Except for a couple "anonymous coins", no they can't.
KYC+Blockchain = full traceability.
asset with little proven real-world application that regular old U.S. dollars can’t already account for
Close. Consider the following scenario:
- USD is a US government IOU, same as every other fiat currency.
- Fiat money's value depends on the trust in the credit it represents.
- Trump&co are destroying USA's trust worldwide.
- External countries like China, have huge amounts of US credit... have given a lot to the US in exchange for a pinky swear.
- The US keeps emitting USD credit by manipulating interest rates, hoping to attract investors and greed/trust.
But what if the US were to default on its obligations instead, break trade agreements, break defense agreements... what would be a safe store of value then?
- Gold, will say some... but there is not enough gold to go around to represent all the credit currently tied in money, that was the reason to abandon the gold standard in the first place.
- Others will pick the Yuan, after all it's the second largest economy GDP PPP... but really? Does anyone trust China? I doubt so.
- Euro seems much more trustworthy, but it will take long after Trump has utterly trashed the US economy, for the US to recognize defeat.
That leaves little more than fantasy money, with the stablest of them being: Bitcoin.
Not sure if sarcasm, or propaganda. When you get propaganda articles written in a similar tone, it's hard to tell 🤷
using natural language and instincts to create code.
After decades of seeing job offers like "Idea guy, looks for technological partner to write code for startup"... I can't but smirk at the vision of an "idea guy" having an LLM write some code, then convincing some investors to finance the sham.
This will be the new COBOL, a natural language any businessman can write by themselves 🤭
I think automation only cares about increasing the output, not about the effort or exclusivity of the input.
Since you propose reviewing history, let's do it together:
- Artists used to perform for a single patron, getting paid for each performance.
- Amphitheaters allowed multiple patrons to attend each performance.
- Recordings allowed performances to be reproduced over and over.
- Copying allowed millions of patrons to reproduce the same recording multiple times, independently of each other.
...and now neural networks are suddenly the preposterous advance? Nonsense.
Luddite propaganda is corporate propaganda is elitist propaganda, a step back towards less efficient ways of reaping the benefits of labor so it can be more easily controlled and restricted, an elitist approach where artists perform at the whim of someone wealthy enough to be able to afford them.
If you want to discuss the fair compensation for labor, we can start talking about total production, compensation inequality, an UBI system, or whatever. Don't come in blindly claiming that cutting down technological labor amplification, is the only way to get paid enough to live... or that getting paid is even required to live in a post-scarcity world, much less that artificially imposed scarcity is something positive.
When I get a web search brain implant, I might stop relying on memory. Or better not.
Blindly rejecting technology and automation, for some misguided interpretation of ethics like "work gives a man dignity", or Gen 2:15, is the feudal corporate propaganda, to put it mildly.
Half of the moderation tools points, seem to be about downvotes... but Beehaw has no downvotes. How would that work?
No... it's more the strawnan gaslighting to insult people without arguing any point. See ya.
Agreed, but my point is that stating "x-core CPU, y-core GPU, z-core NPU", is basically non-information.
- CPUs run general logical processing
- GPUs run integer/float matrices
- NPUs run minimal effort matrices for inference
I'd like to see the TOPS for each of those, instead of a "core count" that tells me nothing about actual performance. Even the TOPS are orientative... but would be a good start.
Is AI handing out destructive advice to medical professionals, though?
It seems to me like it's still working as a summarizing service, taking in vast amounts of information sources that no human would be able to process in a lifetime, and handing out recommendations about which paths a doctor might want to pursue further.
We live in a world where information generation has long ago vastly surpassed anyone's ability to grasp it all, long gone are the days of polymaths like daVinci, or even Euler. International communication has outgrown human ability around the 18th century, and we've gone multiple orders of magnitude farther in the Internet age.
Just like Google was barely enough to search for information, we're now at the point where AI summaries are barely enough to surface data that would otherwise remain hidden.
I agree that these summarizing services need oversight to avoid malevolent and irresponsible uses or manipulations, and I think recent EU AI legislation is on the right track to tackle that.
The systems will require improvements and refinements over time, but that's kind of expected.
Hm, I've heard "Animal management" as the general term, with "husbandry" focusing on the breeding and artificial selection, with all the ethical issues around that.
Anyway, it's kind of off-topic, isn't it?
Cars replaced horse carriages, fridges replaced ice sellers... new technologies keep replacing old professions. We're at a large job replacement point right now with AI, new skills will be required, but we're yet in uncertain times as to what those skills will exactly look like.
Not sure which "corpo propaganda" were you referring to, and maybe it's just me, but the whole post feels hostile.
M3 Ultra chip with 32-core CPU, 80‑core GPU, 32-core Neural Engine, 512 RAM
That RAM is nice, but core count doesn't say much at this point: there are different cores with different architectures, multithreading, pipelining, caches, speeds, etc.
I'd rather see a TOPS comparison:
- M3: claims 18 TOPS
- M4: up to 38 TOPS
- nVidia H100: up to 3900 TOPS/TFLOPS (INT8/FP8)
Meta is claiming to have 350,000 H100s, to put things into perspective.
Horse husbandry is also a major craft and fine art
Is that what you call tying a female horse's legs to a fence so she doesn't kick the stallion being forced onto her??
According to the laws of debate... you can go find the videos on YouTube on your own, I'm not linking to them.
Seriously, what is this opinion post even about?
The irony is that people still live according to solar time, no matter what the clock says. It's most notable in Europe, where we use the same time zone from 9W all the way to 30E, or 2.5 solar time zones... but then breakfast, work, and dinner times across different countries, match the solar.
There was a nice graph with all the countries, that I can't seem to find now, but let this one serve for illustrative purposes: