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Comment Re:Get smarter (Score 1) 72

These have existed for quite a while, and in fact I'm looking to convert all my radiators over to them. Thermostatic Radiator Valves (TRV) are a 'dumb' solution to this (i.e. not automatable, no app...but works fine) and there are automated versions of these as well.

Meanwhile most of the smart thermostats allow satellite thermometers and can control multiple heating zones.

Comment Step 3... (Score 2) 86

Step 1. Build a Reddit search solution so utterly useless absolutely no-one uses it
Step 2. Wait for Google to realise Reddit's solution is so rubbish that everyone's using Google for it instead.
Step 3. Profit...

Comment Re:Oh Now. Those dark arges are coming back.. (Score 1) 159

I had both. University link in the late 80s/early 90s, 14.4 Linelink E modem. Was just a lot more fun and a lot less corporate. Yes trolls existed but there were less or could be controlled with kill files in Usenet. Netiquette was still a useful word. Was just more fun.

Submission + - Tennessee Becomes First State To Protect Musicians, Other Artists Against AI (npr.org)

An anonymous reader writes: Tennessee made history on Thursday, becoming the first U.S. state to sign off on legislation to protect musicians from unauthorized artificial intelligence impersonation. "Tennessee (sic) is the music capital of the world, & we're leading the nation with historic protections for TN artists & songwriters against emerging AI technology," Gov. Bill Lee announced on social media. The Ensuring Likeness Voice and Image Security Act, or ELVIS Act, is an updated version of the state's old right of publicity law. While the old law protected an artist's name, photograph or likeness, the new legislation includes AI-specific protections. Once the law takes effect on July 1, people will be prohibited from using AI to mimic an artist's voice without permission.

Comment Circular? (Score 1) 121

So we submit the student's work to ChatGPT. Presumably the student is banned from using AI to help write the essay, but now ChatGPT adds this data to its model. So next time an AI-catching tool is used, it determines that the student used AI because it can be found in an AI model?

Comment Re:What do you find shitty? (Score 1) 98

It's definitely decreased in quality if you look at /r/all. I mean, /r/all was always a heavily mixed bag, but it's definitely worse now. Many many more bots, pointless inflammatory stuff, 15 variations of some anime thing...

If you go to the more focused groups though, the ones that don't hit /r/all...I don't see much difference.

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