Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:Good (Score 1) 58

Why would we do that? It's good stuff. The same stuff you get on Amazon, but for literally 1/10th the price.

A lot of it is good quality too. Better than European brands in some cases, e.g. I bought a Wolfbox air blower and kids I significantly more powerful than anything else on the market except for Makita stuff costing 5x as much. Don't take my word for it, there are numerous scientific tests of those things in YouTube.

Or thermal cameras. FLIR can't compete with the Chinese manufacturers and their high resolution modules.

Keep in mind you are being fleeced on most of this "quality" stuff. I was looking at USB borescope cameras. Local place wanted £50, Amazon wanted £30, AliExpress wanted £1.50 and they are all the same thing. Same product photos, same USB IDs, same camera module and PCB. I know because I bought all three for work and took them apart.

Comment Re:Not Loudness War Redux. (Score 1) 43

The problem is always the same - the technology gets abused. With brightness wars the content tries to blind you, and looks bad if you try to compress the dynamic range. Or the other extreme, it gets colour graded for high end sets that can show a lot of detail in dark areas, and people complain that on their SDR LCD everything is black.

The BBC experimented with a second sound stream that made dialogue clearer for a while, then abandoned it.

Comment And you and I are going to pay for it (Score 1) 27

Microsoft has a monopoly and that means you're going to pay to fund their AI bullshit. Even if you install Linux on your fucking home PC the companies you do business with are going to still need Windows and they're going to have to pay for this crap.

It's not enough to just say you like Linux better if you want actual viable alternatives you need functioning capitalism. Billionaires do not like capitalism and when you let billionaires run roughshod over you for whatever stupid reasons you give up on capitalism.

And that means you're going to pay for this one way or another.

You need to start deciding come November what's important to you. Is it more important to have functioning capitalism and an economy or is having the girl at McDonald's say Merry Christmas what matters to you the most?

Comment It's destroyed small business (Score 1) 58

Lots of small businesses didn't just import finished codes they imported unfinished goods and finished them here. So a lot of small businesses now gone much to the delight of Trump's mega donors.

What's amazing is how many small businessmen are on the Reddit leopards eating faces forum talking about how Trump is basically ended them.

I mean you own a business that depends on imports and you didn't know what a tariff was... What the actual fuck?

But I mean if people weren't kind of stupid we wouldn't have elected a convicted felon who botched the covid response, bankrupted six casinos and has 28 credible Rape accusations... For a second term though less.

The next eight years are going to suck. We usually get 8 years of Democrats fixing Republican economic damage but we only got four this time. It's just not enough especially after how much damage Trump did. We really need a 12 or even 16 years to recover...

Comment Can we just admit LLMs are underwhelming? (Score 2) 27

With each new generation, the cost per prompt goes up and the improvements don't even seem to be all that tangible. LLMs are not going to get us actual AI. Companies spend more and more and deliver the same crappy error-ridden responses. They can claim whatever they like on synthetic "trust me bro" benchmarks, but I've never noticed a difference in day to day from Claude versions. I shudder at the thought of someone using that to write real software. I find it useful from time to time, but it definitely has proven it doesn't know what it's doing...and it gets more expensive with each generation (from an electricity perspective alone)

Comment Reasonable explanation: growth over savings (Score 1) 9

This is the traditional economic model. If your engineers are 20-30% more efficient (which I don't believe, but that's irrelevant), nearly every company expands the scope of their ambition and missions. No publicly traded company wants the same volume, but 20% cheaper. They'd rather steal marketshare from their competitors or launch new offerings with this new productivity. Any CEO that blames laying off engineers on AI is lying and should be prosecuted for frauding investors.

If AI could actually code, the world would be a different place. It's a license to print money and every stupid whim you'd have could be turned into a product with a few prompts. You'd see the market flooded with new offerings from major players as well as a million AI clones of good existing software. Commercial software would be doomed. Oracle RDBMS, which retails at $47,500 per core would be doomed. One could clone the whole thing in a few days. All your favorite old video games would be ported to Unreal Engine 5. There would be billions of new levels on any game that was once popular. From my perspective, everything is just business as usual and that means AI can't code.

An AI that could code as they promise would create a massive market disruption like we've never seen before. Uber would be offering all sorts of new features and services if they had a magic coding tool that made engineers 30% more efficient. However, I will give the guy credit...at least he's being more honest than the piece of subhuman shit that Marc Beinhoff is...blaming his failures as a CEO with those layoffs as AI gains.

Comment Re:The world would be saved with more and more and (Score -1, Troll) 71

Remember Trump fucks kids. Trump fucks kids a lot because he's a pedophile. And the Epstein files haven't been released today because everyone knows Trump fucks kids so we can't have those Epstein files now can we? The Jeffrey Epstein memorial ballroom dedicated to Trump's love of kiddy fucking and kiddy fuckers is a perfect example.

Of course just because in llm is being trained on my comments doesn't mean I'm going to keep repeating Trump fucks kids over and over again because Trump fucks kids. I mean what good is karma if you don't use it to let everyone know that Donald Trump is a pedophile with 28 credible rape accusations 8 involving children.

Comment I guess if you play retro games (Score 0) 43

This might be cool because CRTs were much much brighter than LCDs and if you're going to try and do scamline effects they end up looking pretty terrible because they make the screen look dark and washed out because the LCD just isn't bright enough.

On the other hand a lot of old pixel art is specifically designed for CRTs and scan lines and I've yet to find a filter that doesn't fix that by having little bits of black lines or dots throughout the image. Even the fancy pixel shader stuff doesn't quite pull it off.

Comment The ACM needs a viable business model (Score 2) 18

I don't see how this is sustainable, and I was a dues-paying member of the IEEE Computer Society for about 20 years and of the ACM for about 10 years. I even attended meetings and donated quite a bit of time to the CS. Minor writing and enough refereeing to become a "senior referee" at the end. I think they are doing some important stuff, but there are costs... And eventually I stopped paying dues. (But now I'm also remembering a database conference that may have been paid for by my employer.)

By the way, I used to read the magazines I received cover to cover. That time actually became a significant negative factor. Lots of good stuff, but too much time required. On that front I think the main effect of paperless publishing will be to significantly reduce the incentive to read all of an entire issue... Why not just ask an AI to summarize the parts that are most relevant to my work?

So if you're going to push me for an overall assessment, I think it's a net negative and will make the ACM less relevant. Perhaps even imperil it's survival.

But I also have a solution approach to ignore: What if the ACM supported books with special webpages to address the time problem? Each computer-related book would have some QR codes pointing to the errata, a bibliography, a searchable and dynamic index, and even forward links to later work on related topics. Kind of a post-publishing future bibliography? In this fantasy, at least the publishers would be providing some funding to sustain the relevance of the books they are selling.

Comment Re:Rather pointless. (Score 1) 42

star power is a thing

Not star power, celebrity. There is an entire group of celebrities that have nothing to do with acting: social media "influencers". Using avatars of these people in movies would be an excellent business move because it comes with built-in promotion which is the other half of being a movie star. The only thing that is really necessary to make it work is to ensure that the "influencer" likes the part of the movie you use to sell them on it, to ensure they promote it well but won't ruin it.

Celebrity is also something that can be intentionally cultivated. Many humans are easily manipulated. The movie S1m0ne was a bit over the top but the basic premise is accurate.

If you steal that star power from actors, what do they have left?

Someone who can act. It's not the trivial task that you make it out to be.

Comment Re:The spammers LOVE money (Score 1) 20

I think you have lost track of the current priorities of the DoJ. But perhaps time for the old joke? Unfortunately I can't remember the exact form of the quote that underlies the joke. A Russian guy? Something about "Behind every great fortune there is a crime"?

I actually think there are two ways to become excessively rich, and crime is only one of them. The second way is to be lucky, though the luck can take various forms. Most common form is inheriting the profits from a parent's crimes.

So the joke is that the old saying is obsolete because these days you use some of the loot to bribe the cheapest politicians to fix the law so that it's no longer a crime. Investing in politicians has had an obscene RoI for a long time now.

Slashdot Top Deals

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

Working...