Less compatible than XP for sure, but home software wasn't actively trying to target 2000 as a platform. I ran it from beta until XP's release and found it much more stable than the 9x track.
It was notoriously buggy and didn't offer any reason to upgrade. Everyone stayed on 95, 98, 98se or migrated to Windows 2000. XP offered a compelling reason to upgrade with improved directx support and the rebase onto 2000 tech.
I beta tested 98, 98SE, ME, 2000, XP and a few other things.
I can tell the difference between a good basic pair of headphones and garbage pretty easily. There's a noticeable difference between basic cans and higher end cans too but it's a 15-20% improvement for a 500-10000% price increase.
If someone's happy with older airpods then more power to them, I don't need much more than a pair of Sennheiser HD598s myself. Would I take HD800/820s if offered for free? Absolutely. Will I pay $1600+ for them, not today.
Lemmy's in a pretty good place these days, if there's any hangup to more adoption it's the hurdle of understanding federation as a concept and the big time sink of building your subscription list at the beginning. As much as I hated Reddit's default list of subs I kinda think Lemmy could use something similar to help onboard new users more effectively.
If it makes you feel better I haven't met a grad student in the last 20y who wasn't on some psychiatric medication. Basically everyone I knew in school was on antidepressants at the very least and the majority of undergrads were taking stimulants.
You can access Gmail over IMAP and pull down messages locally. If you do this; Back. Up. Your. Mbox.
Also, fun fact, you can move messages from a local mbox to Gmail while preserving read status and original dates if you want to add old email to Gmail for some reason.
+1, your list of browser extensions, list of plugins and list of available fonts are also available to anyone trying to fingerprint you. This idea that NAT will somehow obscure you enough to be anonymous online is security voodoo.
I assume it's a way to build a training dataset to fine tune a model over time. If they pay creatives for 2y while feeding the AI at some point they'll no longer need humans in the loop (outside of spot checking or go/no-go judgements.) That's how I'd get this off the ground anyway.
I've been waiting for this to happen. We've seen an absolutely huge increase in the number of readers who expect books to be a collection of specific tropes showing up in various scifi and fantasy book communities asking for book recommendations that match a chosen hyper specific trope collection. I'm not sure when this started but I've noticed more of it every year for a while.
I've been expecting someone to start churning out AI produced content (books, short videos, generated game plots) in the same collection of tropes style since generative AI really caught on back in ~2022. It's amusing as hell that trashy-short-soap-opera-on-tiktok is where it really gained a hold first. I think we're going to see a whole lot more of this across every form of media soon and I hope the flood doesn't draw too many users away from legit content creators who work hard to produce their own content.
By that point I'm pretty sure we'll have an effective compact model that can run locally and transcribe downloaded videos on reasonable hardware. Or you can just sic a paid model like chatgpt on the task. The corporate Internet is entirely focused on subscription service models now, unless you run the model yourself on local hardware you're going to end up paying someone somewhere a service fee.
Edit: y'all need to learn about minified models designed to run on edge hardware, they're a thing and often work shockingly well.
I mean, the horror of having to tick a box to use rotating v6 addresses. These are all solved problems, they're not a flaw worth ignoring the entire ipv6 protocol over. Most major operating systems have moved to stable privacy preserving addresses by default, that's true, but it's not all that difficult to turn on address randomization and rotation either. And, hell, if you're that married to NAT as security just use NAT66 and call it a day, nothing about NAT is exclusive to ipv4.
Pro tip, LLMs do an excellent job summarizing YouTube videos now. I've never liked YouTube content, the incentives for creators are perverse and discourage conveying accurate information simply in favor of drawing out every video to maximize ad opportunities. About 95% of the content I might have been interested in could have been better conveyed in a 1-2 page blog post and read in 2 minutes instead of stretched out into a 15 minute video. Having a robot summarize that content is so much less irritating.
Less compatible than XP for sure, but home software wasn't actively trying to target 2000 as a platform. I ran it from beta until XP's release and found it much more stable than the 9x track.