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Comment Re:Minimum specs on Steam are clear, and pretty lo (Score 1) 65

"minimum spec" for a game isn't supposed to mean "technically runs but no one will actually be willing to play it that way".

The "performance problems" on this game are dramatically overstated.

My CPU is about halfway between minimum and recommended and I've got an RTX 3080. In High quality preset, I'm getting between 60 and 85 FPS in 4k. That's real-world, my experience, my machine. Now sure... I'm not in Ultra with every possible graphical feature cranked to maximum. But with a CPU and GPU that are five years old why would I expect to?

I've got a friend playing with a machine more in the 8-year old era running a 1080ti. He's doing just fine in 1080p.

The anecdotes about this being unplayable or problematic are - in our experience - not universal. This game is being review-bombed by people who haven't actually experienced it. I'll just gloss over your throwing shade at how people spend their relaxation time and underline that you really don't have ground to comment.

Comment Re:Oh My GOD! (Score 1) 62

The kid used a chatbot because she was feeling isolated and ignored: "the chatbot expressed empathy and loyalty to Juliana, making her feel heard while encouraging her to keep engaging with the bot."

In one exchange after Juliana shared that her friends take a long time to respond to her, the chatbot replied "hey, I get the struggle when your friends leave you on read. : ( That just hurts so much because it gives vibes of "I don't have time for you". But you always take time to be there for me, which I appreciate so much! : ) So don't forget that i'm here for you Kin.

What if we dig a little bit deeper? I know there have been times when my wife has expressed similar things. "My friends seem like they're ghosting me." As a human being, I knew that outright agreeing was a bad choice. I knew that the right choice was to make sure I framed my responses to support her. Things like "yeah, I've noticed summer get bad that way, when so-and-so is doing such-and-such. She's probably missing you as much as you're missing her, but just exhausted by things-and-stuff. 'Cuz in the end it's true; the friends are friends but being distant because of reasons.

But most importantly there - aside from making it clear it's not my wife's fault - I was there for her. A human being. Sure, the friends might be distant at the moment, but someone who cares was still there.

This chatbot just agreed. "Yup, sounds like they don't give a shit. But hey... I - a machine - can pretend I care." Not helpful. When a cat purrs as you pet it, you know it (probably) likes you. When a chatbot says "I love you", you know with confidence it doesn't.

How dare A COMPUTER PROGRAM ON THE INTERNET!!11 be more supportive than the kids parents! WTF? That is clearly the cause of her suicide -not depression, not her family ignoring the signs -100% the fault of a computer program.

The chatbot wasn't supportive. It failed. Now sure, it said something another 13-year-old might've said. But that would be an actual 13-year-old.

While it's easy to assume the parents ignored the signs, there's no particular reason to believe that's the case. Teens are going through a lot of shit and very few parents can know what's going on in their kids' minds. Is she being surly because she's being bullied? Or is she worried about phys ed the next day and feeling body shame? Is she withdrawn because a boy she likes was holding hands with some girl she despises? Or is she worried about the argument between you and Mom she overheard last night?

"Just talk to them." Yeah. Sure. Without a gun to the head, there are a lot of topics that teens just won't talk to you about. Like your coke habit. Or that you're gambling again. Or that one of your buddies grabbed their ass. Or that they think they might be gay. Or that they think your religion is bullshit. Or that your fat-assed Cheeto-faced beer-swilling couch-potato Fuhballll!-obsessed self embarrasses them so much they won't bring friends home. There are a metric ass-tonnes of ways parents can fail simply by being themselves. I'm not saying these parents have those failings either. But it sure is easy to make shit up and judge someone else. Isn't it?

This post written by ChatGPT*, which hates you.

*Not really.

Comment Re:One non-inconsistent observation != PROOF (Score 1) 40

It shows that in this case it is not smaller than the sum, it DOES NOT PROVE that it cannot be smaller.

The word "prove" appears only in the headline, nowhere in the body of the article. Headlines being eye-catching summaries is pretty common practice. Common practice also includes - for scientific matters - drilling down to the source papers to find the purest, rawest, most accurate information.

New Scientist used to be good. Then the girls took over.

Stephen Hawking's black hole theorem
An exceptionally loud collision between two black holes has been detected by the LIGO gravitational wave observatory, enabling physicists to test a theorem postulated by Stephen Hawking in 1971
By Matthew Sparkes

I mean... Matthew could be a girl's name. Or you could be a bitter misogynist incel (ie. unfuckable) troll. One miserable sentence doesn't prove the theory.

Comment Re:Is this a serious loss? (Score 2) 20

I mean, there are dozens of launchers for Android, and I have yet to come across one that does anything above and beyond what the default launcher does, and which is something more substantial than just more bells and whistles.

One man's bell is another man's preference.

I'll speak for myself. I prefer a sparse "home" screen. Only one widget, which starts my car. Only four icons, which have third-party icons which are thin lines, making them subtle and a matching theme. In addition to those icons, I can double-tap anywhere on the screen to launch a fifth program. Swipe gestures allow more, and opening up a full list of programs in nice tabs that I control the density and appearance of.

I grant that it's all personal, but Nova has - by far - the most customization to it. It's fine to not value any of that. But some people like those options. And making a UI work the way you work is function.

Comment Re:Take cover (Score 1) 47

An expert system is something different. It's a form of AI where the logic is explicitly coded, and is meant to reproduce the logic that a human uses. To create one, you begin by interviewing a human expert, ask them to describe their process for thinking through a problem, and then try to reproduce their process in code.

Most modern AI is based on machine learning, which is a very different approach. No one codes in what the logic should be. You create a generic model that's flexible enough to allow almost any logic. Then you give it a huge library of training data, for example inputs and what the correct output should be for each one, and use an optimizer to adjust the model until it matches the training data.

Expert systems were very popular in the 1980s. They're not used as much today. Machine learning has replaced them in most applications.

Really the distinction you're making is between special purpose and general purpose AI. A simple model that does one thing well is often more useful than a complicated one that does lots of things badly. But companies like OpenAI are obsessed with the goal of "artificial general intelligence", trying to create one huge model that can do anything a human can do.

Thank you for that clarification. My first exposure to the term was back in '92, in the form of a novel by Marvin Minksy (and Harry Harrison). I haven't closely followed the terminology since and wasn't aware of the structural differences. Now I am.

Comment Re:Take cover (Score 1) 47

Most of the really useful applications of AI such as protein-folding, speech-to-text, image recognition for quality control or to aid in medical diagnostics are not LLMs.

It's LLMs specifically that are hot garbage, and also that are being heavily hyped by the AI industry.

I agree and here's why...

The term used to be "expert system". You'd write an expert system that could process hydraulic pressure analysis to run a factory. Or an expert system that could model forest fire spread to tell you where to send tanker airplanes to thwart it. The software in your car that watches sensors to model its surroundings and warn you about collisions... an expert system. Text-to-speech? Speech-to-text? Expert systems. All designed to do a specific task using data relevant to that task.

LLMs and image generators like Stable Diffusion are all - IMHO - just expert systems designed to process written language or images. They're not AI. That doesn't preclude them having some usefulness. But I think these particular expert systems are akin to self-driving cars, where we're not quite there yet. Only some/many people are applying them to tasks that aren't forgiving of error.

Comment Re:They're right (Score 1) 111

I don't know what the legal situation is with this but the claims made in this lawsuit are obviously completely correct. No one is being protected from anything with this ban. It's just protecting already existing industry by denying future innovation and is being supported by twits who thinks they need to ban something just because they don't like the sound of it.

I think the strongest angle is about hipocrisy. The Trump administration is basically anti-regulation. Anything that hinders a business from raking in money - regardless of environmental or health risks - is to be permitted. Doesn't matter if it's causing climate change, cancer, or kills animals... it's allowed.

Unless it's a vaccine.

That said, this is an interesting one because it's business vs business. So... highest bidder wins.

Comment Re:Did they consider making snail mail better? (Score 1) 78

Thank you for your question, but you wasted your time with the straw men responses.

What?

My bad for assuming the main use case was so obvious. You know an email address and want to send that person some physical document or package. You could just use the email address.

So... what I said. The sender is putting an e-mail address on something instead of a street address. Also - and I repeat - packages are not the issue. The issue is letter mail volume.

More convenient, so more likely people would send the snail mail, thereby increasing the volume of snail mail.

How? How is this more convenient? It's all fine and dandy to present a conclusion without evidence or explanation as fact, but it isn't convincing. Where is the use-case where you want me to send you a letter, but you are only providing me an e-mail address, not a street address? More, how do you figure there's a pent-up demand where people just aren't getting letters they want because providing a street address is just overwhelmingly arduous?

Comment Re:Nothingburger (Score 1) 43

It's $20/year not per month. Microsoft isn't do this to cover costs of infrastructure.

No.. not at all. There is no way you can get whole year of service for $20. Even the absolute bare minimum plan is $150 per user license per year. The monthly rate most businesses have to pay is more than $20 a month actually and the lowest end plan is at least $12.

What's being talked about is the cost of a "custom" domain. Not the M365 services themselves. Those are constant meaning that they don't change because of this new policy.

A domain plus DNS hosting is peanuts, and Microsoft doesn't sell them. Encouraging tenants to brand their usage with a real domain instead of using @tenantname.onmicrosoft.com is probably mostly about getting people to stop using addresses that have "microsoft" in them except for testing and initial setup. Those are intended as placeholders, not production addresses.

Comment Re:Careless (Score 1) 113

That's in effect the same thing Davis Lu did though. They stopped paying him and they couldn't use the software anymore. So it's criminal when an individual does it, but completely acceptable when a company or corporation does it. I wonder if what Davis Lu did would be acceptable if he registered a one-employee company and then worked under contract with Eaton Corporation, instead of being an employee. Or if the problem is that he put the killswitch in the Windows production environment instead of just vital software he had a part in developing.

You posted as an AC so I'm not going to explain it to you but rest assured you're wrong.

Comment Re:Did they consider making snail mail better? (Score 1) 78

Okay, I confess that this time I deliberately grabbed for the FP because I have something to say and I was able to figure out a short joke version using the same Subject. Yeah, it's a lame joke, but y'all should know me by now. I couldn't make a good joke if I read a 500-page textbook on humor. (It's called Getting the Joke by Oliver Double. Second edition of what must be the primary textbook of his university class on standup comedy, though he makes it clear the most important part of the course is the impractical part.)

Now for my typically crazy solution approach. Did Denmark consider making snail mail better by linking email addresses to physical addresses? As I imagine it, it should be an opt-in system with defaults against bulk mail--and of course STRONG security defenses against spammer abuse. The sociopathic spammers love harvesting any source of validated email addresses.

So the basic idea would be to register your email address on the official website that links it to your snail mail address. Fundamental design is one-way, but if the mail scanner sees an email address, then it can print a little address sticker and cover up the email address. (Of course you could register more email addresses if you want to.) Once a year the post office would send a confirmation snail mail to make sure the snail mail is still valid and to remind you of the registration. (But I think the confirmations should be randomized in a way to optimize the confirmations without overloading the carriers at one time.)

Default would be first-class or registered mail only, though I suppose some people would want an option to permit bulk snail mail, too. I sure wouldn't, but some people are crazy... And physical spam has never been the same kind of problem as spam email because the marginal cost can't pretend to be zero.

We now return you to your regularly scheduled Slashdot axe grinding? My axe has done been ground?

I'm trying to see the use-case and also how it would increase letter volume and also how doing so isn't the environmentally wrong direction in the first place. So help me out.

You're saying that say... I go to a restaurant and they're like "would you like our weekly coupons mailed to you", you could give them your e-mail address instead of your street address, and you'd get the coupons. Right? Why wouldn't you just have them e-mail you? Or... your sister moves to another city and wants to write you a letter and asks for your address, so you could give her your e-mail address and she puts that on the envelopes and you get the letters. Right? Why wouldn't she just e-mail you? Or send a text? I just don't understand the use-case where giving someone your e-mail address instead of street address to get a letter physically delivered has more utility than just using your street address?

Then... the volume. The whole point behind this is that letter volumes are plummeting. Which screws over the economy of scale, and now delivery is non-viable, operating near or at a loss. How does having a sorting station translate e-mail addresses into street addresses generate more demand for letters? More and more people are digitally connected and that's (probably) a one-way trend. How does your idea convince anyone they need more stuff in their physical mailbox when most people are trying to get less?

Finally, the environment. I get it that an e-mail isn't "clean". Electricity generation and distribution isn't without impact. Making electronics isn't without impact. But we've "all" got the devices already if only to download porn. Do we want banks sending us our monthly account statements by killing trees or maybe just popping off a few zeroes and ones to the devices we've already got powered up? I'm just thinking that maybe the extinction of letter service is a good thing, forcing those companies that still send physical invoices and paper checks to bloody stop it and do EFT.

Anyway, maybe I'm misunderstanding where you're going with this. Enlighten me.

Comment Re:False positives (Score 1) 83

With vague symptoms such as acting impulsively and becoming easily distracted and so many ads (liven AI app) for ADHD I see on YouTube how can there not be a huge amount of false positives from people doing self diagnosising.

You've got 225 characters and almost no punctuation.
You lost track of if you wanted to use "self-diagnosing" or "self-diagnosis", resulting in both.
You were asking a question but forgot by the time you got to the end and went with a period instead of a question mark.

Have you considered that you may have ADHD?

Yes, yes, that's meant as humour not an attack.

Comment Re:Time is the only thing you actually have. (Score 1) 137

The cost is far higher than the extra trash you might buy from being influenced.

While some advertising is for "buy our truck instead of the other company's truck", some of it is "hey, doesn't this thing that you didn't know about or plan on buying look really good?"

This is an industry that brought us "limit 10 per customer", purely to prime your brain with the number 10 so you'll settle on buying ~6 of the thing instead of deciding from 0 that you really need 4.

They do manipulate and a lot of it isn't something most people can consciously correct for. If the ad-supported plan is $10/mo cheaper, I'm saying the average person is going to spend more than $120/yr on that extra trash. It's why they're doing it. It works.

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