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Comment Re:Prove it - like a Rolex for $50 on the corner (Score 1) 119

Also, Ozempic is approx $500/month out of pocket. Who the fuck has that much money, but not the willpower to join a gym and eat better?

Take a good hard look at the average multi-millionaire beach body and understand affordability has fuck-all to do with it.

There's a reason Hollyweird looks like a 2027 documentary on GLP-1 addiction and abuse. They can afford healthy food, personal trainers, and the best gyms all day every day and they STILL choose the shortcut.

Comment Re:Anyone who treats AI with proper skepticism (Score 1) 116

There are methods that allow you to get million answers from the AI in a sequence without a single mistake. ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?... )

There are probably many methods to ensure that AI can do something accurately and correctly.

Ever wonder how many methods there are to manipulate and convince AI that it's wrong?

Today's AI tends to remind me of Google hacking 20+ years ago. I fear the early days can present challenges we haven't even thought of trying to curtail or control yet.

Comment Re:Wrong timestamp (Score 1) 75

It's a Nikon F5.

Guess we now know why you keep whining here: you think you're a special tech genius because you know how to set the time on a camera.

Why does my taxpaying wallet have a feeling someone at NASA wearing a badge titled "Space Camera Technician" (AKA one-fucking-job), is quietly sweating in a corner somewhere, hoping they also didn't forget to format that memory card after borrowing it to play patty-cake on St. Patty's Patty..

Comment PT Barnum Reincarnate, at your service. (Score 1) 116

The interesting question isnâ(TM)t that 73% of people accept faulty AI reasoningâ¦

Itâ(TM)s which 73%.

What happens to the segment of the population that already struggles with critical thinking? The folks whoâ(TM)ve historically bought into things like flat earth, QAnon, miracle cures, etc.

Those groups didnâ(TM)t suddenly appear because of AI, they existed long before it. They already demonstrate a tendency to accept authoritative-sounding information without much scrutiny.

So what changes now?

We name the new AI "PT Barnum" and turn it up to 11 via a Spinal Tap.

Then we fire up the industrial popcorn machine, and remember the good ol' days.

Good luck to anyone born after nineteen-hundred-the-fuck-off-my-lawn.

Comment Re:Not as good as it looks (Score 1) 119

People who are morbidly obese are not feeling hungry all the time, they're dopamine addicts that like the feeling food gives them. They eat whether they're hungry or not. We already have an appetite suppressant - it's called dietary fiber. It makes you feel full. Doesn't stop the addicts. That's why that new weight loss shot works so well. It stops people from feeling happy from eating. So this is a nonsense invention that won't do anything.

go months or even years without eating -- all while maintaining a healthy heart and plenty of muscle mass.

If the new discovery can solve for that obvious problem in the GLP-1 drug epidemic, then it's far from a "nonsense" invention.

Perhaps Hollywood can avoid replacing their growing collection of unhealthy stick figures with AI, which will be ironically programmed to present the pre-Ozempic version on the big screen.

Comment Re:Self discipline (Score 1) 119

Here's the thing, some folks do the discipline and keep a healthy weight, but they are basically always feeling hunger. Some people don't feel it but some people are having to constantly fight sensation of hunger, with a respite of a little bit after a meal, and almost never feeling 'full'.

I wonder how much that hunger sensation problem is fed by bad or alternative diets that avoid meat-based proteins?

Not saying those diets are bad for you per se, but I could eat rice and leafy greens until it's coming out of my ears. It will never satiate me like eating meat does. As it always has, which is not an uncommon phenomenon.

Comment The Slashdot Effect. Revisted. (Score 4, Funny) 46

Hahaha. Oh, wait, you're serious? Let me laugh even harder. HAHAHA.

Ironically that was also the Slashdot community response when listening to victims of The Slashdot Effect brag about how awesome their server infrastructure is/was, five minutes before the post went up on the main page.

And we ALL clicked. And laugh-ranted, in search of a mirror by the time the first frosty piss of a post went up.

Slashdot. Offering quality technical DDoSing and server stress testing since, get the fuck off my lawn.

Comment Re:Keep Mount Everest a challenge! (Score 3, Informative) 46

I think they shouldn't have those sherpas either. If you wanna claim you've climbed the everest, you should have to carry your gear, your oxygen, your un-poisoned food. The balooning ego that propelled you there should be all you need to carry it all.

I think that's more of a mutually agreed thing, since sherpas can easily make $5-10K per client. Sherpas were also mandated by the local government following a rather horrific 2013 season.

As demand for luxury and "supported" climbs increases, the cost for highly experienced Sherpas has increased, contributing to total expedition costs ranging from $40,000 (Nepali-led) to over $100,000 (Western luxury-led).

As always, money can motivate most anyone to walk the walk. That said, I don't agree with "supported" climbs if that's going to eventually morph into sherpa escalator maintainers forced to cheat death on the regular, maintaining the half-million-dollar EverExpress Pass Plus service, sponsored by PeaksRUs.

Comment Re:UFC? They mean business! (Score 1) 52

What you're actually insisting an IP owner and creator do, is give you their IP for free..

Not at all. I've already bought and paid for that IP when I bought a copy of the game.

What are you talking about? You bought a license to use a game developed and wholly owned (including any in-house IP) by the company who created the damn thing. You, don't own any part of that beyond a compiled installer on read-only media unless the company happens to be publicly listed. And then you're likely restricted to a certain class of shares that essentially translate into you having NO real power beyond an investor willing to lose everything.

I would expect that licensing agreements for IP holders, while time limited, cannot be retroactively applied. If the car models and likenesses are already on the disc, it is impossible to remove them. I can see there being a stipulation that no further instances are to be sold or made available once that agreement has expired (which would be a reason to stop selling the game, for instance), but customers who already have the game already have those models/likenesses in-hand, so allowing them to continue using them is not in violation of any agreement.

If there is merely a contractual agreement between the game vendor and the car vendor, which both vendors agreed to licensing of that car vendor IP for a fixed period of time, then the expiration of that license is STILL between the same two vendors. Likely the reason Ubisoft is jettisoning any official support for the game rather than offer any type of alternative, is because Ubisoft was contractually obligated to do exactly that upon IP expiration. Is that a shitty tactic to force vendors to extend IP licensing with or-else type verbiage? Sure. Am I shocked if that was the case here? Not in the least.

Neither of the parties or contracts involved related to that IP, involve you the consumer in any way. You have been given a EULA-limited license to the game. With likely zero inherent guarantees regarding network play. And I doubt you're going to find even EU law in support of the consumer after 10+ years of support.

You the consumer can keep the game and continue to play (locally) with the skins that are already on the disc because you didn't sign the IP agreement with a car vendor now putting on the squeeze. The ones taking down all official support did.

Comment Re:Coronalmassejectionbird Client (Score 2) 136

You don't need OWA in space. It doesn't matter if I'm the only one who believes this, for I believe it enough for the entire world.

In space, no one can hear you scream "NO fucking email!"

(I mean seriously, they're wired up more than The Truman Show. As if we need written emails when NASA likely has every other form of communication running/streaming/saving/recording.)

Comment Re:Sue them into next wednesday! (Score 1) 52

For all I care they deserve it. If they can't or won't run the servers anymore they should at least release the server as freeware and allow for hobbyists to continue hosting the game. This used to be common practice with multiplayer games and we should enforce this practice by law, especially with people paid solid money for their game copies.

Publishers often delist driving games like The Crew and Forza Horizon when licensing agreements with car manufacturers expire.

Speaking of suing, is the user community willing to pay for the costs to renew the licensing agreements with all the relevant car vendors, IF they're even offering it?

Because that's likely what it would take to legally make this "free".

Comment Re:UFC? They mean business! (Score 1) 52

Why are you defending spoiled-ass gamers who insist that a company keep a 10-year old game online, no matter what?

We're not insisting they keep a game online. If you want to abandon a game, that's fine. Publish an offline patch so players don't have to rely on your servers anymore. Or publish your online server software so we can run our own. Or even stop fucking suing the third party devs who are making their own servers to support the game that you refuse to support yourself

It's not like we're going to be eating into your profits by hosting our own servers, you're not selling it anymore anyway. Hell, it'll make you more money as people buy copies of your "abandoned" game to run on their own community servers.

What you're actually insisting an IP owner and creator do, is give you their IP for free.. Ever consider the fact their server software contains relevant IP used in other product lines still being sold? Because they likely did when making a decision knowing it would create backlash in the community.

Gut feeling? Buried in the EULA somewhere on page 37 is the exacting fine print that offers ZERO guarantees related to server uptime or availability. It likely outlines how the game expectations with regards to delivering any sort of warranty or guarantee, is limited to the locally running code.

Yup. The EULA was probably updated with that verbiage in the last year or so. When the game executives started getting emails from the car licensing agent explaining how a certain vendor or two was not going to offer a renewal on that IP licensing, forcing a game vendor to make an unpopular decision.

Running the game offline, even in user community supported mode, still violates car manufacturer agreements that will likely expire or have expired.

Comment Re:The REAL enemy here. (Score 0) 52

Maybe the game box should have a list of when all the licences expire, since apparently a licence is what you are "buying".

Or maybe there should be a reasonable expectation on the life of any game. No matter how popular.

IF in fact it was indeed the expiring licensing agreement with car manufacturers that caused a beloved game to go extinct, then perhaps the proper compromise should have been the game vendor negotiating with the IP holders and offering the ability for the user community to buy that license extension via a one-time charge rather than kill the game altogether. (Again, assuming it was merely money that was needed to refresh the necessary IP for the game to live on. Might have been any one of the other 98 reasons.)

If users love it enough, they'll open their wallet. If not, oh well. Business is business at the end of the day. For some games, today is that day.

Chances are if anyone were to actually read the game EULA, we'd find out a license was the only thing we ever truly bought.

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