Comment Re: Cloud computing is one the dumbest ideas ever (Score 1) 63
And further tilt the balance towards on-prem.
And further tilt the balance towards on-prem.
I'll be sure to tell my very real clients their infrastructure doesn't exist.
All these people can teach is direct knowledge. What the machine would need is insight. But LLMs cannot do insight.
While in some field, this may even work for a limited time, longer-term this will fail except for very simple things.
At the rate the shutdown is going, perhaps we should take a cue from the billionaires and just stop paying.
The problem is that as soon as you prevent some groups from voting, that possibility will get abused some time later and hence that makes things worse.
A successful democracy requires an educated, tuned in populace that can be bothered to learn the issues and vote accordingly.
Sure. But nobody knows how to create that. And those on power often have motivation to work in the opposite direction. I think the first rule would need to be that anybody that wants power is to be regarded as unfit and needs to be prevented from ever getting power. But how would that work in practice?
So those funny things that look like desktop machines are not? and there's no LDAP or domain controllers involved?
That's funny because the places I'm familiar with have desktop machines, domain controllers, often a NAS or two, and a router with a firewall.
Not that many smart people agree that Democracy is a problem.
Oh, Democracy _is_ a problem and not stable and also subject to manipulation. But we still have not found anything better.
Cloud servers may have more than one user running things on the same CPU. God only knows who the other users actually are. In a corporate environment, everyone running jobs on the server works for the company. It doesn't reduce the risks to zero, but it does reduce them a lot.
Indeed. Lots of high-IQ idiots around. And they are doing damage.
Funny thing, "underperformers" have to eat too.
Thanks for the insightful post. And to build on your survival instinct misadaptation point, consider that our preferences were tuned through evolution or a scarcity of certain things (salt, sweet, fat, excitement, novelty, startling, etc) and work against us when there is abundance of those things made possible by modern technology (e.g. ultraprocessed foods, algorithmic feeds, several scene changes a second in Videos, etc). See:
https://www.healthpromoting.co...
"Dr. Douglas Lisle, who has spent the last two decades researching and studying this evolutionary syndrome, explains that all of us inherit innate incentives from our ancient ancestors that he terms The Motivational Triad: the pursuit of pleasure, the avoidance of pain, and the conservation of energy. Unfortunately, in present day America's convenience-centric, excess-oriented culture, where fast food, recreational drugs, and sedentary shopping have become the norm, these basic instincts that once successfully insured the survival and reproduction of man many millennia ago, no longer serve us well. In fact, it's our unknowing enslavement to this internal, biological force embedded in the collective memory of our species that is undermining our health and happiness today."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
"Supernormal Stimuli: How Primal Urges Overran Their Evolutionary Purpose is a book by Deirdre Barrett published by W. W. Norton & Company in 2010. Barrett is a psychologist on the faculty of Harvard Medical School. The book argues that human instincts for food, sex, and territorial protection evolved for life on the savannah 10,000 years ago, not for today's densely populated technological world. Our instincts have not had time to adapt to the rapid changes of modern life. The book takes its title from Nikolaas Tinbergen's concept in ethology of the supernormal stimulus, the phenomena by which insects, birds, and fish in his experiments could be lured by a dummy object which exaggerated one or more characteristic of the natural stimulus object such as giant brilliant blue plaster eggs which birds preferred to sit on in preference to their own. Barrett extends the concept to humans and outlines how supernormal stimuli are a driving force behind today's most pressing problems, including modern warfare, obesity and other fitness problems, while also explaining the appeal of television, video games, and pornography as social outlets."
https://tlc.ku.edu/
" "We were never designed for the sedentary, indoor, sleep-deprived, socially-isolated, fast-food-laden, frenetic pace of modern life." - TLC Principal Investigator Stephen Ilardi, PhD"
And to take that even one step further, see my sig: "The biggest challenge of the 21st century is the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity."
"Your mother was a hamster, and your father smelt of elderberrys!" -- Monty Python and the Holy Grail