Comment I think I have dyslexia ... (Score 1) 13
Kioxia and Dell Cram Nearly 10PB Into a Single 2U Server
Kioxia and Dell Cram Nearly 10PB Into a Single 2U Server
It doesn't really do you much good to fit it into 2U if you need 20-30kW for that one box.
Exactly... that's why they used to teach how to balance checkbooks using the register that comes with a checkbook.
Which still do.
Same thing with those programs that can find all the subscriptions you forgot about... umm, how do you forget about the thing auto-withdrawing from your account?
Or auto-billed to a CC. People read and check their bank/CC statements - right?
(I don't have anything auto-deducted from bank accounts -- deposited: yes; manual ebill: yes, auto-debited: no)
You get in the driver's seat and it immediately feels more intuitive to control.
Also some continuity. I know they're adjacent model years, but my 2001 Civic Ex (135k miles) and 2002 CR-V Ex 62k miles) - both w/manual transmissions - have almost identical controls placement. But maybe that's common, idk.
You know it is easier to put out gasoline fire than lithium battery fire, right?
Yup, just smother it with a bunch of lithium batteries.
If you choose Datacenter, you might get both.
Ya, the way things seem to be going, my first thought was "nuclear datacenter" -- though getting enough water to cool it, or either, is a/the problem.
US car manufacturers are already subsidized, and their cars are still not cheap.
Apparently, the government giving money to U.S. companies seems to help their executives and shareholders, not their customers and consumers or even their rank-and-file employees. Go figure.
Politicians have to come up with some excuse to protect their auto industry donors and voters. Spying is simply the peripheral issue that lets them come up with a catchy soundbite while enacting protectionist measures. While such monitoring is an issue, this doesn't really address the core problem that your car phones home and stores a lot of data about what you have done and where.
All newer vehicles "spy" on their owners and that capability is apparently a bitch to disable, if it even can be. So instead of Chinese auto companies, we're stuck with all the other ones doing it. I feel so much better.
Ironically, the U.S. government seems okay with all the cellphones, tablets, etc..., many foreign made, "spying" on (almost literally) everyone.
China is a generation ahead in terms of EV and self driving technology.
They're driving a $30,000 car and it navigates around scooters and pedestrians with ease.
Yup. And some charge lightning fast, or support automated battery swapping, though the U.S. doesn't have those infrastructures. I know it's anecdotal, but I've read several articles and reviews that say some Chinese EVs are way, way ahead. Of course, banning them will protect other manufacturers from having to compete. They can stick their collective heads in the sand, like domestic auto companies did when Honda and Toyota started selling in the U.S. -- that turned out so well for them. U.S. consumers will be stuck with overpriced (for sure), possibly second-rate auto tech for years. Yay! Winning! Side note: Tesla will be fine as they make about 51% of their vehicles in China.
OpenAI Now Wants ChatGPT To Access Your Bank Accounts
Seriously, just no.
Asking ChatGTP questions about financial matters is one thing, giving it and OpenAI (or any of these companies), access to your financial accounts is another. You're being tracked and analyzed enough w/o also signing up (and paying) for this. Same concerns about using X as a financial platform.
As a side-rant about common financial sense... Ever see those commercials where the guy is in the store and checks the bank app on his phone to see if he can afford a new flat screen? Pro tip: If you don't know your current financial situation and have to check then and there, you can't afford it. (sigh)
What the hell does a rocket need NINE MEGAWATTS of electrical power for? That's powering-a-midsize-town amounts of electricity.
Recharging Teslas in Space?
Testimony from a disgruntled former Office Assistant -- who noticed they were opening an investigation, and offered to help.
Has this destroyed your life? I remember a few phone numbers, but that’s about it. It has not ended the world.
This is a weird analogy for everyone to pick. If i don’t have to remember the 4 arguments that I have to add to every single API call I make, that’s a win in my book.
Two memorized phone numbers will get me through the rest of my life without having to waste memory space on others. Claude allowing me to drop a metric fuckton of idiosyncrasies and syntax is of even more value.
I was just expanding on the original cellphone analogy, noting that the same sort of thing is older than that -- for the youngsters who never had a landline.
Being able to forget API information isn't necessarily a bad thing, depending on how much you forget. If you forget too much and you're totally reliant on the AI to do your job, then why does a company need you? Maybe we're not at that point yet, but that seems to be the direction these AI companies and their clients want to go.
It doesn't hurt to stay sharp and exercise your brain, even woth small(er) things.
Good point, and perhaps things like that are more a matter of how imprinted they are. Some of those phone numbers you remember were very important, and presented as such, so are probably stored as such. I imagine some phone numbers, even currently used ones aren't as memorable. Assigning them to speed-dial would probably make remembering them harder as you know you don't have to.
It is easier to write an incorrect program than understand a correct one.