When I was studying computer science I had a dual-boot setup on my laptop. I was never happy with a VM but it's not a lot of work to set up so you could try that first! With dual-boot I could still use Windows if I absolutely needed it for a course.
I can recommend the Arch Linux wiki, it has many articles and tutorials. It's only really useful if you are using Arch Linux or a distro based on Arch, e.g. EndeavourOS
The downside is, you will be spending a lot of time customizing your Linux and fixing problems. This can be very rewarding and a great learning experience but it also takes time and effort.
If you want to spend less time with your computer and more time talking to people offline or enjoying nature, installing Linux can be a bad idea.
Check out https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/
There is a list of books he wrote with free PDF and links to Kindle store. "Mencious Moldbug" is one of his pseudonyms.
True, but let's imagine newer Kindle devices or apps won't allow you to read the previously downloaded files anymore? And I'm aware DeDRM exists, but so do DRM-free book shops. It's not like I was okay to buy books from Amazon before, but now that they are getting rid of the download option, I will suddenly look for alternatives.
Some uh people I know are doing that, yeah. Wouldn't that violate ToS though?
I'm sure even without direct downloads, there will be ways to pirate Amazon books. I mean last time I checked, Netflix didn't let me download the video files but that doesn't keep people from pirating the content.
I would argue that people you are describing enjoying Tik Tok and being too lazy to look stuff up themselves, are not really engineers.
You could also frame it as, information technology got so mainstream, even people with no technical background whatsoever are part of it.
Engineers and tech nerds still exist, but they are a minority now.
I agree there is a lot of marketing BS around LLMs right now. But I would argue that they are quite useful for e.g. basic language and coding tasks and at least for me these are real-world use cases too.
The headline is misleading. By "real-world use" they mean using ChatGPT and Claude for street navigation in New York. Which is one very specific use-case.
I always thought cigarettes contain tar, as in the substance asphalt on the road is made from. It always felt weird to me, why would they put it in the cigarettes but I figured maybe they need it so the tobacco doesn't fall out or something.
When I was studying computer science I had a dual-boot setup on my laptop. I was never happy with a VM but it's not a lot of work to set up so you could try that first! With dual-boot I could still use Windows if I absolutely needed it for a course. I can recommend the Arch Linux wiki, it has many articles and tutorials. It's only really useful if you are using Arch Linux or a distro based on Arch, e.g. EndeavourOS