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3 yr. ago

  • Hans Gruber is the antagonist in Die Hard

  • To be a bit more charitable, my reading of this article was not that Markdown is being mistaken for something like Word or TeX, but that Word is being mistaken as necessary or even desired for a lot of what it's used for when basic markup will do the job just fine.

  • I put all my apps on my home screen and I keep all non-FOSS apps in a single folder as a reminder to find replacements. The vast majority of my apps are FOSS at this point.

  • OP specifically mentioned not wanting claws.

  • Core technology advantages: integrating seven major features into one

    Compared with existing interface technologies, GPMI has seven core advantages: bidirectional multi-stream, bidirectional control, high-power power supply, ecological compatibility, ultra-fast transmission, fast wake-up and full-chain security, leading the comprehensive upgrade of audio and video technology.

    https://www-hisilicon-com.translate.goog/cn/White-Paper-Technical-Guide/white-paper/gpmi-innovation?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en

    "full-chain security"? Sounds like another proprietary tool for DRM. Hard pass. Fuck HDMI, too.

  • if you decouple your syncing tools from your browser, you'll be a lot less likely to be locked into a browser you don't like in the future.

  • It sounds like what they ultimately want is one place to look at both read-it-later stuff and starred RSS articles. My read is that they are proposing one way to do it, but ultimately it's not super workable that way. There are no clients I know of that are both RSS clients and read-it-later clients (using pocket, wallabag, or anything else).

    If OP wants one place to see both, their best bet is to find a read-it-later server that can generate RSS feeds, subscribe to those, and now everything is RSS and behaves the same. Wallabag is a great option for that and is self-hostable.

    This is exactly what I do and it works great.

  • It's even simpler than that: In the first instance a human learned a thing. In the second instance a bunch of humans wrote software to ingest art and spit out some Frankenstein of it. Software which is specifically designed to replace artists, many of whom likely had art used as inputs to said software without their consent.

    In both cases humans did things. The first is normal, the second is shitty.

  • Sorry, just to be clear, are you equating a human learning to an organization scraping creative works as inputs for their software?

  • uh sure. My point is that sharing weights is analogous to sharing a compiled binary, not source code.

  • The definition of "open source" AI sucks. It could just mean that the generated model weights are shared under an open source license. If you don't have the code used to train the model under an open source license, or you can't fully reproduce the model using the code they share and open source datasets, then calling a model "open source" feels weird as hell to me.

    At the same time, I don't know of a single modern model that only used training data that was taken with informed consent from the creators of that data.

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  • Invidious is switching to a new paradigm where the part that talks to YouTube will be split out into it's own service called invidious-companion. While not part of the current release, they have instructions for setting it up, and it's what I'm currently using. The only things that don't work right now are live videos and the Clipious Android TV app (the phone app works fine). If you don't need either of those things, I recommend starting with invidious-companion

    https://docs.invidious.io/companion-installation/

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  • My self-hosted Invidious instance is still going strong

  • Oh hey it's by that guy who gave my university $30m so the university could spend another $100m to make a building with his name on it while we had a ton of infrastructure in disrepair. nice.