Comment Re:Oh noes, that would suck. (Score 1) 55
Getting their jobs sent to American AI won't be noticeably better for American workers than getting their jobs sent to Chinese AIs.
Getting their jobs sent to American AI won't be noticeably better for American workers than getting their jobs sent to Chinese AIs.
According to an AAIB Field Investigation report (pg. 4), two samples from the intake were tested and found to have a glass transition temperature of 54.0C and 52.8C
So some idiot printed them in PLA. PLA is great but is very much NOT temperature resistant. It has been known to sag in a hot car.
Doctors are not memorization machines.
That's exactly what they are, and most of them are very good at it. Medical school is heavy on memorization.
The good ones know they can't memorize everything and look stuff up when it's not something they see regularly. Medical school tends to discourage this for historical and placebo effect reasons.
Now look at the ratio of human driven cars vs. Waymo cars.
The problem was using a cheap substitute part. I'm guessing an injection molded ABS part would also have failed in that scenario.
CF-ABS is NOT like fiberglass at all. The CF is chopped into fine bits. They lend some stiffness at room temperature but not strength to the part. Certainly the carbon fiber bits don't lend any heat resistance.
That's why I suggest a mitigation to the increases for industry based on local employment. Data centers employ very few people per-Killowatt and so contribute a lot less to the local economy compared to those other industries.
It would make sense in conjunction with an employment based mitigation. Data centers employ very few people once operational (they're not called lights-out facilities for nothing), so no mitigation. Major manufacturer provides many steady jobs, more mitigation for them.
Of course, things get complicated. There are mini data centers being set up in people's back yards where the waste heat warms the home owners house. That doesn't employ a lot of people but gets effectively double use of the energy for at least a good part of the year, offsetting other energy use, so it should see some form of mitigation as well.
The bigger question though is how long until the data centers are abandoned? The big AI companies and their investors are operating at a loss as they jocky for market share and train ever larger models. But will people actually find the AI useful enough to pay for it once the investors start demanding their ROI? Will managers come to realize that they might be better off hiring people suffering schizophrenia with frequent psychotic episodes?
Subaru do a lot of things well - they're masters of all-wheel drive - but this is nuts.
I bought a VW Taos earlier this year with the usual trial subscription to Sirius XM. I was going to pull the plug when it expired but Sirius XM offered me a steep discount if I re-upped, so I did. They did it so readily that I wonder how many people are paying full price...
The bulk of my listening is two channels, Hits One and The Pulse.
...laura
End to end encryption, for a toilet? Frankny I do not want a TOILET to connect me "end-to-end" with anybody. They're doing it wrong.
Time to pull up the sheet on IOT. Not only has it gone up it's own backside, now it's trying to go up ours too.
How about "hit", the most common word used to express the concept.
Stability is relative. Compared to reinstalling Win9X so often I only recently forgot my most-used 98SE product key, Win2K was a breath of fresh air, especially for dual CPU rigs formerly afflicted with NT 4.0.
There may be a silver lining.
Desperation will ensure sales to the only customers (PC building enthusiasts) who will still care about traditional removable RAM.
Normals never install an OS, never open their computers, and never install internal hardware upgrades. People who do are "techno-divergent".
Apple demonstrates soldered RAM and storage are no barriers to consumer sales with zero need for a hobbyist market.
Ancient Slashdotters remember COAST (Cache On A STick) and why it went away.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Today we have ROAST (RAM On A STick) which only exists for customers who cannot afford to max out RAM on computer purchase, there being no (conventional user to whom computers are magic) downside to max RAM.
Being able to buy a PC with a cheap spinning rust hard drive and the least offered amount of RAM then binning those and maxing out with aftermarket parts (mostly Crucial RAM in my and many others case) was great while it lasted but the vast majority of PCs go from womb to tomb without upgrades and will in future.
That's actually a good question. Inks have changed somewhat over the past 5,000 years, and there's no particular reason to think that tattoo inks have been equally mobile across this timeframe.
But now we come to a deeper point. Basically, tattoos (as I've always understand it) are surgically-engineered scars, with the scar tissue supposedly locking the ink in place. It's quite probable that my understanding is wrong - this isn't exactly an area I've really looked into in any depth, so the probability of me being right is rather slim. Nonetheless, if I had been correct, then you might well expect the stuff to stay there. Skin is highly permeable, but scar tissue less so. As long as the molecules exceed the size that can migrate, then you'd think it would be fine.
That it isn't fine shows that one or more of these ideas must be wrong.
Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!