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Comment Hour of mediocre (Score 4, Insightful) 31

Coding arguably requires talent - although Microsoft has been proving consistently for half a century that you can be a successful software company with piss-poor engineers.

But even if AI produced perfect code, then producing software essentially requires no talent. I'm not saying it's a bad thing in itself, but it moves the act of producing software squarely into the realm of everyday mediocre accessible to everyday talentless people.

And on top of that, the fallacy is that AI simply doesn't produce anywhere near anything that resembles perfect code. But of course, Microsoft is desperate to have you believe otherwise...

I'll just say this: I'm glad I'm at the end of my career as a software engineer, because I didn't spend a lifetime honing my skills to end up a mediocre types-question-guy.

Comment Re:Question (Score 3, Interesting) 164

Notre Dame was partially destroyed multiple times since 1163 and (luckily) repaired each time. It was also redesigned multiple times to avoid imminent collapse. Notre Dame's repair plan was external.

The wood needed for repairs required tall and straight trees, hundreds of years old, planted in special purpose forests. These forests are mostly gone due to other factors, and this time there was a scavenger hunt across the country just to find enough replacement trees. Previously, suitable old trees were plentiful. In terms of redesign, unforeseen extra buttresses were needed to reinforce the structure centuries later.

In space, there is no external repair plan and no redesign of unforeseen flaws. The density of particles is too low to collect material outside the space ship. Recycling has limited applicability over many cycles due to degradation. Carrying extensive repair materials also adds unacceptable mass, which reduces the top travel speed and increases travel time by centuries. Increased travel time means increased time for degradation.

The design needs to be complete and resilient from the beginning, not rely on future cleverness and external resources every 50 years or so to patch up unforeseen problems. Space is hard and we have never attempted something even remotely similar on such a timescale.

Comment Re:Question (Score 1) 164

What happens when the first generation of kids comes of age, notices they never gave consent to be confined to a ship for their entire lives, and decides to turn around?

Religion is a tried and true solution used by humanity many times previously to solve just that very same issue.

Personally though I think that the engineering problems dwarf the social ones. Humanity's longest lived buildings are only a few thousand years old, and they are basically ruins not fit to live in. We have no clue how to build anything that would stay intact and fit for purpose over 500 years.

Comment Re:The AI world is a study in contrast (Score 4, Interesting) 17

Not really, to be honest. A lot of the stuff that the scientists and engineers do with the tools could be done another way, and often has. The actual *excess* return on investment, once you remove what previous solutions achieved in the same space, is rather unimpressive and close to zero.

The world works by having each generation forget the past, and think they are clever reinventing things for the first time in a new way. *Actual* progress almost never comes close to the hype.

Comment Re:Clickbait headline (Score 1) 86

There's no if. The AI software offerings targeted to medium to large companies do not work in the way you think (or hope) they do. There would be no point in such piecemeal and security conscious integration. It doesn't scale. The proposition is to let the AI loose on internal documentation, and to connect AI with internal software services via RAG technologies. Dedicated attackers *will* get deep access through convoluted attacks.

Submission + - Debian 13 trixie arrives with RISC-V support and updated Linux kernel (nerds.xyz)

BrianFagioli writes: After more than two years (wow!) of development, Debian 13 âoetrixieâ has officially been released. The new stable version will receive five years of support from the Debian Security team and the Long Term Support team, continuing the projectâ(TM)s tradition of reliability.

This release includes updated desktop environments such as GNOME 48, KDE Plasma 6.3, LXDE 13, LXQt 2.1.0, and Xfce 4.20. There are over 14,100 new packages, more than 44,000 updated ones, and around 8,800 that have been removed as obsolete. The codebase now spans more than 1.46 billion lines.

Key software updates include the Linux kernel 6.12 LTS, LibreOffice 25.2, GCC 14.2, OpenJDK 21, PostgreSQL 17, PHP 8.4, Python 3.13, LLVM/Clang 19, GIMP 3.0.4, Apache 2.4.64, Nginx 1.26, MariaDB 11.8, and systemd 257.

A major change in this release is the official addition of riscv64 support, making it possible to run Debian on 64-bit RISC-V hardware. Debian 13 supports seven architectures in total. However, this release also ends i386 as a standard architecture and is the last version to support armel.

The Debian team has continued to improve reproducible builds, added 64-bit time_t support for dates beyond 2038, and optimized cloud images for Amazon EC2, Microsoft Azure, OpenStack, and PlainVM. For those who want to try it before installing, live images are available for amd64 and arm64 in multiple desktop environments.

Comment Re:Clickbait headline (Score 1) 86

I don't think the hallucination problem is the bigger one compared to jailbreaking. Hallucinations are garbage out type phenomena. Whereas jailbreaking are commandeering the AI type of phenomena. The business dream is to give AI direct access to internal information and independent agency to perform critical business operations. Those are the juicy targets of jailbreaking attacks.

Comment Re:The only thing smart-anything things do is (Score 3, Interesting) 57

The stress level measurement is what the smartwatch pretends to supply you - a feature that entices you to purchase the watch, if you're interested in knowing your stress level.

What's being monetized is the raw data - accelerometer measurements, O2, location... whatever the hell those things measure to do what they pretend to do - because a lot of really invasive and personal information can be inferred from those measurements.

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