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☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ @ yogthos @lemmy.ml
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Science @lemmy.ml

What your snot can reveal about your health

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The AI We Deserve

Technology @lemmy.ml

McDonald’s AI Hiring Bot Exposed Millions of Applicants’ Data to Hackers Who Tried the Password ‘123456’

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Liberals are just stochastic parrots

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The Fermi Paradox

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China creates first cyborg bee with world’s lightest brain controller

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Ukrainian intelligence officer shot dead in broad daylight in Kyiv

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Jacques Baud: Europe Leading Ukraine Down the Path to Destruction

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Ukraine’s Corporate Carve-Up Collapses?

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250 million Indian workers and farmers on the streets in a national strike

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Japan vows resistance to US tariffs, raising fears of lasting rift in alliance

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Israel enforcing Gaza evacuations with grenade-firing drones

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Investors snap up growing share of US homes as traditional buyers struggle to afford one

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The Jank programming language

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Now available in tactical black

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Yemen sinks second Red Sea cargo ship in a week

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Big Tech, "Build in America", and Gas Turbines: everything costs twice as much and takes five years

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At least 31 workers rescued after tunnel collapse in Los Angeles: LAFD

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Over 2,000 senior staff set to leave NASA under agency push

  • seems fine for me, here's the content:

    Mainland China is on track to surpass Taiwan in semiconductor foundry capacity by 2030, according to a report from Yole Group, underscoring Beijing’s progress in its push for chip self-sufficiency amid ongoing US tech restrictions. The mainland’s share of global foundry capacity is projected to reach 30 per cent by the end of the decade, up from 21 per cent in 2024, the French market research firm said. Taiwan is currently the market leader with a 23 per cent share last year, while mainland China is already ahead of South Korea at 19 per cent, Japan at 13 per cent and the US at 10 per cent. “Mainland China is rapidly becoming a central player,” Yole Group said, attributing the shift to Beijing’s intensified efforts to build a self-sufficient domestic semiconductor ecosystem since Washington launched a tech war that aimed to curb China’s progress in critical areas such as chips and artificial intelligence (AI). Beijing has doubled down on its “whole nation” approach to its self-sufficiency drive. The state-backed China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, known as the “Big Fund”, has successfully fostered the development of key companies such as Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) and Hua Hong Semiconductor, two of the country’s leading wafer foundries. Domestic fabs are set to play a bigger role over the next few years, according to the report, which said local chipmakers accounted for 15 per cent of foundry capacity in 2024. That share will be “significantly more” by 2030, the report said. Chinese chipmakers have been investing heavily in expanding their facilities to meet surging demand from sectors such as automotive and generative AI. China was expected to start three new fab construction projects this year, one-sixth of the world’s total, according to a report published in January by US-based industry association SEMI. China’s self-sufficiency strategy, along with expected demand from automotive and internet-of-things applications, would help boost capacity by 6 per cent for chips made with process nodes between 8 and 45 nanometres, SEMI added. Despite the projected gains, the mainland still trails Taiwan and South Korea in advanced process nodes, which are crucial for producing high-performance chips with greater transistor density. SMIC, China’s top foundry, had difficulty advancing its process nodes from 7-nm to 5-nm, Canadian research firm TechInsights said in a report last month. Two years after its 7-nm chip first appeared in a Huawei Technologies smartphone, “SMIC’s 5nm process node remains elusive,” TechInsights said. The report came after it looked into the chip used in Huawei’s new laptop with a foldable display, which also used 7-nm chips from SMIC. Meanwhile, global leaders Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) and Samsung Electronics are locked in a race to achieve mass production at the 2-nm node level. TSMC was expected to reach that level this year, while Samsung has reportedly planned to reach the same stage in early 2026.

  • There are plenty of videos from Ukraine and Israel that you can watch online. These missiles can hit specific buildings.

  • Also notable how the Soviets were already doing the Virgin vs Chad Meme a hundred years ago

  • Pretty sure all the plans to mine the border with Europe aren't to prevent Russian invasion, but a flood of refugees from western Ukraine once the war ends.

  • I really don't. The purpose of the US military industrial complex is to soak up as much tax money as possible and put it back in the hands of the oligarchs. Stockpiling arms goes directly against this principle because it requires maintaining factories, and weapons stores, curating supply chains, hiring many workers, and so on. All of that translates into costs. A much better approach is to create projects like F35 which are built in artisanal batches over many years, and require expensive maintenance contracts for function. You can suck up billions for each toy you deliver, and you don't have to ramp up large scale production.

    Other statistic indirectly show just how pitiful the industrial base in the US really is. For example, only 192,474 of American students pursue engineering degrees our of 3 million total degrees, a mere 6.4%. Not only that, but only 37% of students begin an engineering career after completing an engineering degree. The number of engineers acts as a proxy for technicians, skilled workers, and a general industrial capacity.

    The lack of engineering talent is the reason Raytheon had to get retirees back to restart missile production.

  • Yup, it's frustrating that there's still no process that's easy enough for a non techie to go through easily.

  • I think that's exactly what's gonna happen in the long run. Right now we're in the hype phase of a new technology, but one the hype dies down we'll start identifying use cases where the tech actually works well. At the same time the tech itself is going to mature, and people will figure out how to work with it effectively.

  • Yeah basically, a turn key solution where your machine gets wiped and imaged with a Linux distro that does all the basic stuff most people need would be an ideal solution. A good way to look at it would be making sort of a Linux based console for non technical users as opposed to a general purpose computer. Tech people want the latter, but non technical users just want a reliable tool that can reliably handle a few tasks.

  • Indeed, it kills me how much perfectly hardware is constantly thrown out because Windows refuses to run on it.

  • I think the trick has to be that somebody who has a bit of technical skill sets the laptop up initially. I did this for my mom a while back, and once I set it up once, it just worked from there on. Non technical users tend to have a fairly small set of things they need to do like check email, browser the web, and play media. Once that's working, they never need to change anything. In fact, they don't want to change anything because they get used to the workflow, and they're comfortable.

    It would be great if people set up community centres where people can bring their old laptops, and somebody switches them over to Linux for them.

  • Where do you think 5% military spending is going to come from. It's gonna be funded by austerity and cuts to science.

  • I think if the proletarians were able to read it back at the start of the 20th century when literacy was far worse and information was much harder to access, there's little excuse for people not to read it today. It's the one proven way to improve conditions for the working majority. We are in a privileged position where all the theory and practice is available to us having been won by prior generations, and we're too lazy too bother learning it.

  • that's a very similar scenario now that you mention it