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Comment Re:PCs (Score 1) 82

Steve Jobs locked users into an ecosystem of proprietary Apple products and protocols. And he was a dead beat dad, had personal hygiene issues, stiffed employees (including Woz) and was an asshole to his subordinates. So he's not best role model. The best that can be said of Jobs and Gates is they both liked money a lot and weren't above being terrible people to attain lots of it. I suppose in retirement at least Gates is doing something with his money which is charitable in nature and clearly a serious endeavour.

Comment Re:Kryste! (Score 1) 64

Someone's personal backstory might explain someone's predilections, but unless they are incapable of knowing right from wrong they are culpable and they deserve whatever sentence the court throws at them. And they should count their blessings that woodchipper or mineshaft aren't sentencing options for such heinous crimes.

Comment Master criminals these are not (Score 1) 64

People condemn the dark web but in a way it's like a honey pot that catches a lot of criminals including some very sick people. That's because they're generally not security conscious and they do very stupid things with regard to revealing their IP address, making payments or whatever. And in the case of these perverts, for many it would not be hard to trace a blockchain to the institutional ledgers that received it in the first place. Maybe some people found a way to "tumble" their coins making hard to trace their identity. But clearly many did not and I hope they enjoy being the lowest rung in prison for a very long time.

Comment AI still outputs trash code (Score 1) 119

AI code generation can be very useful but unless someone understands the code to a degree of expertise they have no idea if it's trash or not and certainly no idea how to debug it. So yeah I'd say it's fine to ask AI questions and get it to generate boiler plate but only if you can understand what it's outputting and fix it or deal with edge cases. So it augments knowledge, it does not replace it.

What is worse is that when it's wrong it can be very wrong in obvious or non obvious ways. That is not surprising considering how AIs work (ingesting large quantities of data, training, and spewing out tokens based on probability and randomness). They can hallucinate and they can exhibit bias. I have to wonder where they even get their code samples from, but let's say somewhere like GitHub, then obviously they could be trained on some really terrible code and the farther from the beaten track you go, the worse it's going to get.

Comment AKA spending 2-3x markup on bitrotten junk (Score 1) 75

These refrigerators will be bitrotten or lobotomized in a few years when Samsung no longer bothers to maintain them. Services will be shut down, tokens & certificates will expire and vulnerabilities will be left unpatched. And then you're left with a fridge which might not even work properly as a fridge, let alone one which is allegedly "smart". It might even be compromised and / or bricked if you're extra lucky.

But hey in the meantime, you get to enjoy Samsung's dogshit cloud services, widgets and ads. And if that isn't worth spending 2 or 3 times as much on a fridge for then I don't know what is.

Comment Re:Awesome plan (Score 1) 76

While I don't know what question IBM is the answer to these days they do have a substantial portfolio of things to sell, both hardware and software and presumably their customers have very deep pockets and would very much like proper and prompt support. If they shed these jobs or outsource to some crappy Indian outfit then they're only hurting their own business.

Comment Re:Awesome plan (Score 1) 76

I bet the people there were much more proficient than those getting replaced. Of course there might be a lot of lifers there too. But they're still experienced and knowledgeable people.

I remember working for a US investment firm who outsourced work to India and I had to oversee people doing that work. Every single phone call with them was them asking "how do I do this?" rather than "I've been thinking about doing it this way what do you think?" - a sign of some independent thinking. It's like they were scared to submit their own ideas or simply had no clue. Then they'd be gone within a month or two to some other company because of their revolving door employment practices. It was a complete culture failure. It was clear they only outsourced because they thought Indian wages were 1/2 European and 1/3 US so what's not to like. Except for the work that took 2-3x as long to arrive and was so shitty quality it was terrible.

Comment Awesome plan (Score 4, Insightful) 76

Let's replace all the workers with knowledge, experience, cultural understanding, language skills, customer relations and career investment in IBM with people who have none of those things. Because they're cheaper. Some VP will get a bonus because of the money they've saved even though it will cost the company 10x as much in the long term.

Comment Well yeah (Score 1) 272

There is very little reason at all for any white goods to require connectivity. And the reasons that do exist are of such questionable value that they're outweighed by the risks to security, the retail cost and the lifetime of the product. Anything claiming to be "smart" or "AI" is a red flag. Just as bad are those with touchscreens and embedded browsers like some Samsung fridges. There is no way that those things with their useless features, ads and spyware won't be broken and bitrotten within 5 years despite costing 2x as much as a regular "dumb" fridge.

About the only appliances needing connectivity are robot devices like vacuum cleaners and mowers. But even those should not require cloud connectivity to function.

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