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Comment Re:I am no longer coming to this site (Score 1) 87

I am no longer coming to this site. Every day is a stupid article about "AI is taking all the jobs!". No its not. This site doesnt have any original content. Its just posting the same crap day after day after day about ai. Ive had enough.

Instead of ignoring all of the reports of sizeable layoffs that have plagued tech for the last 12-18 months (ironically for the reason you deny), care to share what job you hold that you assume is magically immune in the alternate reality unfazed by AI?

Comment Re:CEOs are salespeople (Score 2) 87

Their job is to sell to investors that their company is doing just fine. They see layoffs coming, and would desperately like to blame AI, instead of blaming just about anything else.

Reality usually turns out to be not as bad as the doomsayers predict, and not as good as the cheerleaders predict. Some jobs will be lost, yes. But half of white collar jobs?

Perhaps he was more referring to his "white" collar workers, since the union negotiations essentially turned a blue collar hourly wage into something that every college graduate is now jealous of.

Of course the end result of that blue collar turned white is rolling mortgages rotting away on Ford lots everywhere. Gee, I wonder if it has anything to do with that instant depreciation hit that went from 10% to 40% for all post-COVID overpriced dogshit?

Preach on, value-adding CEO. * rolls eyes *

Comment Re:400m more LInux desktops -- Year of Linux Final (Score 1) 116

Great, so that means there are 400 million more Linux desktops! Right? /s

Sure hope not. Talk about sloppy seconds.

(Linux) ”You say you used to go HAM on that rig? Like I need to ask how many miles you got on that chassis. Reeks of defrag, Cheetos and porn. No thanks.”

(BSD) ”I’d still do her.”

Comment Re: Time to pick up the toys. (Score 1) 29

If we can land on an asteroid, I think we can certainly figure out a way to land on a dead satellite and push it out of an orbit it relies on for its continued existence. Either to a fiery death or off in space.

How big do you think these 'dead' satellites are? In almost every case we're talking about an object smaller than a mini cooper automobile.

When we 'landed on an astetoid' it was about 1 KM across (490 meter radius), that's a much easier target to hit than a satellite...

https://science.nasa.gov/missi...

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik...

You say this as if we humans aren’t watching people race drones through courses that would make wombat shooting back home look easy.

If they’re that small, the only thing that we need to attach to them is a small propulsion device to push it out of orbit and burn up, since there’s likely zero change if it making through the atmosphere.

Comment Re:Time to pick up the toys. (Score 1) 29

If we can land on an asteroid, I think we can certainly figure out a way to land on a dead satellite The asteroids landed on are much larger than manmade satellites like this one.

Besides where are you getting the money for this project? Because i'm pretty sure the US or NASA can't pay for or is not willing to allocate their limited funds towards such a thing; considering this satellite is 1 out of 3000. It's at best an uneconomical feat to even try to land on more than a few; not to mention the environmental impact of consuming massive fuel quantities in effort to push structures out of orbit.

Thank you for explaining why every space-venturing company on the planet should be subject to a $50 billion dollar deposit immediately. For obvious cleanup costs down the road.

Comment Re:Good to know (Score 1) 39

I think it was Carl Sagan that proposed that we send hardy microbes to Mars in order to start a terraforming process.

What's the point, since Mars doesn't have a significant enough magnetic field to hold anything resembling an atmosphere? Isn't that the whole reason Mars is the planet it is today? It's dynamo stopped a long time ago.

Perhaps you misunderstood. The key word, is hardy. As in what microbes would have to adapt to in order to help create life on a planet that has changed dramatically. That’s not trying to win back the atmosphere. It’s more creating a solution that accommodates the lack of one.

Comment Re:Makes sense. (Score 1) 39

It's a shame that safe UVC lamps (222nm) are still expensive and need moderately high voltages to work. We could be disinfecting a lot of stuff with them if they were more common.

They’re not cheap probably for the same reason your hairdryer comes with an LMMT (Legally Mandated Moron Tag) on it that reads “Do Not Use In Bathtub”.

We should probably be thankful. Can’t imagine how bad a Temu disinfecting bench would be at tanning, but plenty of morons would find out.

Comment Re:Uh huh (Score 1) 174

So basically this is a new version of "Listening to Judas Priest will make you commit suicide", the Satanic Panic and all the other utterly moronic moral panics that make people afraid of unlikely things.

Yes, because Judas Priest was a household name beloved by fans ages 8 to 80 back in the day, and businesses were racing to fire people prematurely and replace them with their amazing influence, right?

This is NOT the same thing. Because of the sheer volume and now business dependency that exists on ChatGPT and the like.

The side effects of hiring a shitty person on a business, used to be easy to fix. You fucking fire the shitty person. The hell are you gonna do when that shitty person turns out to be the corporate AI entity in disguise, perhaps after a single patch/hack/update, and the next morning tens of thousands interacting with said shitty person? That’s literally a mind virus you now must eradicate. Far worse than any McAfee could uninstall.

And that, is just what happens within a large corporation. Imagine what happens inside governments that are wholly dependent on ChatGPT and the like 5-10 years from now. Social media manipulation will be considered child’s play by comparison. I can already see LLM manipulation becoming THE political gold mine to target and hit.

Comment Re:Time to pick up the toys. (Score 1) 29

And how exactly do you propose we do that?

Of course we can likely track the position of large dead satellites, but attempting to recapture it is an entirely different matter, and certainly easier said than done.

If we can land on an asteroid, I think we can certainly figure out a way to land on a dead satellite and push it out of an orbit it relies on for its continued existence. Either to a fiery death or off in space.

Then it becomes a matter of calculating risk of it impacting something else. No matter how ugly this may appear, it’s probably a lot more viable than sending up 10,000 autonomous robots working together in symbiotic unison to carefully dismantle a satellite while somehow not making matters worse in the process.

Comment Re:Australian radio astronomers (Score 2) 29

Clearly. It was alien to them.

If microwave technology was alien in the 90s, then I should have been more alarmed over E.T. and The Predator hanging out in my kitchen at 3AM nuking that leftover pizza a mutant turtle delivered hours ago.

If microwave technology was alien to 90s Australian astronomers, no wonder we’re still laughing.

Comment Who the fuck is Linus? (Score -1, Flamebait) 116

He reminded Kent that the rules around the merge window have been a long-standing consensus in the kernel community, and it's Linus's job to enforce them.

Quick question for all you Linux lickers out there; who the fuck is Linus and why is one guys job “to enforce them”?

Yes, old heads. I want you to pretend for a moment someone wrote this and then tell me how serious people should take Linux:

He reminded Redmond that the rules around the patch process have been a long-standing consensus in the Microsoft community, and it's Bill’s job to enforce them.

I hope Linux actually has a succession plan for when The Almighty Linus dies. Somehow I don’t think canonization is gonna help the merge schedule.

Comment Re:Quite a bit of culture in Japan is ossified (Score 1) 85

You realize USA, South Korea, most "1st" world countries are having birthrate issue, correct? In fact, anywhere that women are allowed an education, it turns out they prefer freedom over children. Having three cats, I get this on a certain level. I can't just do whatever I want without first making sure they are going to be cared for. Children are a whole level above that. So of course modern women are opting out.

Yeah. You’re right. Children are a whole other level. Because they eventually grow the hell up and stop being fully reliant and dependent on everyone else. Even better, if you raise children right, they get to reward you like nothing else can ever do. Life. Love. Personal growth and achievement. Grandchildren. No history book was written by the descendants of cats, which are little more than permanent toddlers. You right. You can’t just go do whatever you want when you own cats. They have to be cared for. Vacations plans. Holiday plans. Travel plans. ALL have to accommodate permanent toddler care while you are away. And they don’t “grow up” out of that. Ever.

Saying any given social policy is going to change things is reducing this down to a trivial problem. Short of paying lots of money out to would be parents, I don't see how we turn this around.

Of course, I'm of the opinion we are overpopulated anyway and could do with half the population. It would most certainly go a long way in keeping things sustainable. Here, I'll do my part and not reproduce. Your welcome!

There are many factors at play. But to be honest, the corrupt rewards that Western women still manipulate the system to receive need to be eradicated. Rewards such as continuing to insist that mandatory DNA testing at birth would “ruin” families. (As if the cheating woman needing to cover her tracks with zero accountability wasn’t already guilty of that.) Or being financially rewarded for divorcing and planning on that fact. Lesbians insisted on marriage rights. They now lead the divorce rate, and will likely forever lead it. This behavior speaks volumes to men without saying a word.

Yes. Some answers ARE that simple. Men Going Their Own Way and giving up on placating the ones who feel they are somehow permanently exempt from accountability is a very simple answer until parts of our society are forced to grow the hell up. After all, Equality For All, is something men have been forced to learn. Over and over and over again.

Comment Re:Quite a bit of culture in Japan is ossified (Score 1) 85

step aside and allow Western Feminism to continue to fall on its Sword of Unaccountability

So... your problem is that progress means women won't be coerced into being subservient? Why am I not surprised?

So, you're denying the obvious problem of zero accountability eating feminism wholesale as they attempt to stand more and more in mens shoes? Modern feminism arrogantly fails to respectfully understand what it means to be subserviant to a Provider and Protector. Zero accountability, is what is ultimately feeding that self-sabotage.

Weird how every wave of feminism before this one understood what it meant to be subservient to their benefit rather than to their detriment. The 21st Century Boss Bitch wants to confuse being subservient with slavery while showcasing a career, as if men lust after careers? Because women are so open to sharing their wealth?? Ironic just how many of those who freed themselves from the burden of marriage find themselves realizing how much of a mistake that will forever be. Accountability, comes for all.

Japans traditions were timeless

Nonsense. Like most conservatives, you're confusing a romanticized caricature of history with actual history.

Wrong. I'm looking at the literal facts that left romance behind 500 years ago. I'm looking at the blatant fact that Japan and their cultures, no matter how outdated they may seem today, were proven timeless by a nation that ultimately survived and thrived under those exacting, undying, unchanging conditions for centuries. Not an easy task for an island nation. And they are not exactly thriving today when looking at the numbers. Which again, is not an easy thing to swallow for an island nation. Especially one so deeply steeped in tradition. Yes. It would be nice if the core of the Japanese history and rich culture would not simply die off. They continue to exist today for the benefit of mankind, not the detriment.

America was once a proud nation of immigrants, the great melting pot and the land of opportunity, managed by a government of the people for the people and by the people.

Oh for fucks sake, enough with the romanticism already. America hung signs welcoming those to the "land of opportunity" while blatantly and purposely failing to mention the natives waiting for the opportunity to take their scalps. Those that ventured West in search of opportunity, we're fucking decimated. By native violence. Native violence that existed among the warmongering natives long before any "settler" wrote themselves into the history books proudly drinking from a stolen melting pot.

And no matter how much anyone else wants to bitch about Americas deceptive history, the end result even today is still a nation that people cross thousands of miles to live. It's still a great nation regardless of how many may live in shame. You sure as shit don't find many of those bitching leaving. Ever.

Guess this gaijin isn't quite ready to abandon the Japanese culture as easily.

Ugh... I can't imagine anything more insufferable than a MAGAt weeaboo. I can see why you freaks find Japanese culture appealing. Japan is shockingly xenophobic, racist, and misogynistic and no one is made to feel bad about it. Isn't that your dream? To be free to be openly racist while forcing women to be subservient to men? A nation where you can grope a middle school girl on the way to work and buy her underwear on the way home? There is no place for that shit in our modern world.

Only an insufferable racist would paint an entire nation like that. Grow the fuck up.

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