Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:So, it has had this much before w/o humans (Score 1) 135

Exploration may be worthwhile, but it is a totally separate thing and won't provide relief for climate issues. The only possible way it could help anyone on that front is that the select few that go are hard for the desperate starving people to follow. But you'd never be able to build a civilization at any scale there without also figuring out ways to make Earth way better. Any habitat you make that can survive on Mars you could make on Earth, any CO2 scrubbing you can do in a small environment you can also scrub that environment on Earth (problem is the scale is useless for atmospheric CO2).

Comment Re:So, it has had this much before w/o humans (Score 4, Insightful) 135

If we could "fix" the moon or Mars, then we could fix the Earth easily. Moon/Mars colonization is insanely harder than dealing with even the harshest likely Earth climate changes.

With a more energetic atmosphere, who *knows* what the weather patterns will be, what crops will be feasible, and how much plant life and animal life we can cultivate for food. There is some non-zero chance it somehow pans out with less drama than feared, but significant chance that humanity will suffer starvation and violence that dramatically harms our population. Seems like a bet we shouldn't be taking if we can help it.

Comment Re:Consoles are easy (Score 1) 43

On the system requirements angle, PC gamers generally don't care anymore, however, MS can certify a few standard tiers, say, 'xbox 2026', 'xbox 2026 premium', 'xbox 2026 ultra' and the software and hardware ecosystem follows those.

Microsoft can curate a store of games regardless of the nature of the hardware. The app stores choosing to let developers run wild has nothing to do with in-house hardware.

For the software modding and third party applications, they can have their software platform do this. Windows being open is a choice (and in fact one they wanted to roll back with 'S', but to no success. They could release/license out 'xBox OS' for this experience.

On the game discs, the consoles are largely killing this anyway, famously Switch 2 game cartridges are likely to be nothing more than a dongle and Sony selling variants with no optical media at all. Online entitlement is their direction, and the industry seems content to screw over second hand market (that's a bonus for them) and anyone with zero internet.

A GPU only costs as much as a console if you go for a GPU more potent than what goes into a game console. An xBox Series X equivalent GPU is like $250.

Most games that release for xBox release on Steam for PC as well. It's generally considered an easy port for bigger market reach. That's why pairing a game controller with a PC is so popular, and steam big picture mode.

I would not at all be surprised for the near future for 'xBox' to be Asus, Dell, Lenovo, etc devices under a licensing deal with perhaps restrictions around particular TPM endorsement keys and certified specification levels for performance and portability use cases.

Comment This was a non-story... (Score 2) 116

So the update states:
"Microsoft says it still has 1.4 billion monthly active users (Updated)"

The presumption was that some off the cuff blog that probably just wanted to keep it simple to one significant figure threw out a vague number and someone went and compared it against a more precise number and found a discrepency. Given the respective contexts one should not have expected it to be a precise comparison.

Comment Re:Portable hardware (Score 4, Interesting) 43

I think it's a reasonable extrapolation.

Microsoft's historical strengths have been associated with enabling third parties.

Nokia, Surface, and xBox seemed to be them pining for a more Apple-like model where they just call all the shots up and down the stack.

Given that Nokia is dead, Surface is kind of de-emphasized, and xBox has started to see use as a brand for PC gaming, accessories, and partners... It's not a huge leap that the'll just delegate the brand to the OEMs on hardware execution as the software stack hasn't really benefitted from a locked down hardware BOM in quite some time. Microsoft played with in-house hardware and didn't seem to have particularly impressive results while sort of risking alienating their partners that have driven their strength.

Comment Re:"Does not compute" moment with smoke and sparks (Score 1) 132

Further there was a paper about how LLMs were able to beat intermediate chess playing humans.

Then I dug in and they would do things like allow an LLM several rounds to correct a mistaken move (e.g. the engine would just make up a new bishop or make a piece move in an invalid way). If they had just given the LLM one and only one shot at each move, who knows how many games would have failed.

Comment Hollow word... (Score 1) 49

AI is obnoxiously overused in marketing and invites skepticism immediately as it strikes people as lazy marketing trying to cache in on a blatantly hyped phrase. It starts to smell scammy when all the scammers are right in the bandwagon of using it.

Further, it doesn't talk about *what* the product does, but just says it uses AI to do it. People want to know what is good about a product, and wouldn't care if it's done by some credibly "AI" approach, or a traditional programming, or a breed of super intelligent hamsters operating the device remotely from some operation centers.

Comment Re: "new technology" or "cutting-edge technologies (Score 1) 49

The point is 'new' and 'cutting-edge' are uselessly vague, but have long been a staple of marketing speak that people have pretty much tuned it out. They wanted a 'control' for a marketing word and those are pretty much best they could come up.

I would say the marketing issues aren't even about LLMs or any specific problematic experience, but being wary of an overused buzzword. It might have some further negative impression owing to the threat that AI is going to come for their jobs. I'd say it's a tiny fraction of people that actually have given an LLM a spin and found it less useful than everyone seems to act like it is, either they haven't bothered or they used it so lightly that it seemed vaguely credible.

Comment Re: Open Source (Score 2) 82

Also quite a bit more awkward.

RH was on a trajectory to decently compete with VMware as a decent virtualization platform on technical merit, but I think they found VMware being first meant there wasn't much interest in changing.

So they ditched RHEV and chased "cloud" with open stack... Except open stack was never that great, and the demand for a fully realized on premise "cloud" didn't follow from off premise cloud anyway...

So red hat changed to openshift and kind of sort of shoehorned VMs awkwardly to provide some whiff of continuity to customers otherwise abandoned for trying to adopt RHEV or Open Stack from red hat.

Proxmox I think it's on the best position for providing the old fashioned VMware user experience now (in some ways better).

Comment Oh look.. (Score 2) 44

Another company whose business strategy requires customers believe they have a handle on this 'AI thing' claim they have a handle on this 'AI thing'.

Maybe they do, maybe they don't, but it's hardly a trustworthy source of truth rather than just doing their marketing work for them by relaying their marketing effort as 'news'.

Comment Re:They will panic... (Score 1) 59

Also, the whole point of VMWare is to save money off of buying the hardware. If the price gets high enough that it's cheaper to just buy the hardware, what's the point of using it at all?

Well, actually hardware consolidation is a use case, sure, but I think nowadays it's more about redundancy, fault tolerance, rapid deployment/decomissioning. If you are doing it right, your "OS" boot volumes should be considered disposable, but a lot of shops do it wrong and want the OS volumes to be hosted in centralized storage, which is much easier with a virtual machine approach (yes you can SAN/iSCSI boot, but it's not very appealing).

Of course your first point stands, that VMWare has competition with adequate capability and until now vmware could largely get by because the customers are too lazy to move and the price wasn't enough to make them look hard at options. It's not like mainframe style lock in where the porting effort is supremely daunting, though what you say about they don't need it to last too long for it to have been worth it also stands.

Comment Re:greedy fucking liars!! (Score 1) 59

Of course, the nice meaty IBM locked in ecosystem is far stickier than VMWare.

That replacement for a mainframe, can it run exactly the same software? Generally not, it has to be ported, and porting is risk.

For VMWare, the replacements can run the same exact applications (the processor architecture and software stack have nothing to do with vmware's part of the solution). A customer may be *somewhat* stickier as they bought into vmware-centric solutions with partners, but as they migrate to newer hardware platforms, they can comfortably look at alternatives without terror that their applications are doomed if they try.

There's some friction against migration of course, but no where near what mainframe enjoys.

Comment Re:Translation (Score 1) 59

Reading into the article and his choice of words, sure some get some negotiated break, but the key is his use of the phrase:
complaints "don't play out"

What he means is that the customers complain, but the complaints are invalid because the customer isn't using as much of the feature set as they *could*, and so the complaint has no merit because they are getting what they paid for even if it's useless to them.

He then goes to either fabricate or cherry pick a few examples of what a customer might say when they recognize what fools they have been and how much more they could get out of their vmware purchase.

Slashdot Top Deals

A meeting is an event at which the minutes are kept and the hours are lost.

Working...