Comment Re: TACO Tuesday? (Score 1) 66
Comment Re: TACO Tuesday? (Score 1) 66
Comment Re: TACO Tuesday? (Score 1) 66
Comment Re: TACO Tuesday? (Score 0) 66
Comment Re: TACO Tuesday? (Score 0) 66
Comment Re:TACO Tuesday? (Score 2) 66
Comment Re:Loophole (Score 1) 124
Comment Re:And water (Score 1) 328
Submission + - DHL introduces a trimaran sailboat line for freight.
Comment More clarity on Fermis Paradox. (Score 3, Insightful) 31
It's taking shape: Basic life may actually be quite common. Naked apes typing on keyboards on a digital network they built themselves not so much.
The rare earth and rare advanced intelligent life theories just got some extra weight.
Comment Right now the real temperature here ... (Score 4, Interesting) 164
... in Europe is roughly 5 degrees centigrade above worst case scenarios projected for the year 2050 back in 2016. Germany will likely crack the 40 degree mark in multiple locations at the end of this week. Once again a new heat record. I personally expect this to only get more intense in the next years until perhaps the gulf stream completely shuts down.
These are cascading effects kicking in and ramping up. It wouldn't stop if the planet went net-zero carbon tomorrow. So we're pretty f*cked, as predicted ever since 1970. I'm curious how hard though. Guess we'll find out soon.
Comment Wikipedia is incomplete ... (Score 2, Interesting) 214
... in some parts, contains bucketloads of over-the-top excess trivia in others and has sections that are flat-out provably false. If the sections chiefs don't think an article is important, they delete it. That's why poets important to the development of a language and culture sometimes don't even have an entry, let alone more that 3 lines while some third-grade rapper that made some noise 10 years back has an essay with 10 000 words covering every detail of their private life.
I've seen flat-out bullshit on wikipedia more than once, I've corrected some things, roughly 30% get rolled back. If an area of expertise has asshole/dimwitt chief editors (or whatever they are called in wikipedia-speak) I often just give up and don't bother.
Wikipedia is a reflection of our times and what's important to us. And it should be viewed as such. With a pound of salt.
Comment Yepp. Even the Oracle racket ... (Score 4, Interesting) 40
... won't be spared. I'm down 20k from my last salary and with AI my productivity has risen 5x. On to of that, the processes I was supposed to automate with code are getting replaced by AI themselves.
Prepare for incoming.
Comment I'm basically a lead senior ... (Score 2) 31
... to my AI metasubscription now. AI does what I ask it to do, I just review the changes and commit. It's like having a personal team of 10-20 experts sitting in a chat just ready to do my bidding. It's not sitting but it doesn't feel like that too often yet.
However it's quite staggering to watch am AI so your job an order of magnitude better than yourself. And that for a bunch of software stacks a human couldn't dream to comprehend. It's also sobering to watch the value-add chains I'm supposed to automate with code being voided entirely by AI. Not only is my job gone, the context with which it makes sense is also rapidly vanishing. You should see the look on the face of the lawyers I work with when the realize how AI does away with them too.
I'm very likely going to leave my current team. I'm in the process of leaving classic Web software development as a day job.