Comment The browser (Score 1) 154
Since most passwords are used for websites, just use the browser as the storage since it can automatically fill them in for you. Microsoft Edge works great for me.
Since most passwords are used for websites, just use the browser as the storage since it can automatically fill them in for you. Microsoft Edge works great for me.
I use NVIDIA GeForce NOW as well over a Verizon 5G connection I can take anywhere with a laptop and it works pretty well. I play Guild Wars 2 (MMO) and intense PvP keeps up just fine and rarely there are any times of lag.
It sounds more like the plot from the 2003 movie "The Recruit" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Recruit_(film)) which involves "a highly sensitive computer virus called "ICE-9" because it transmits via the electrical grid rather than telecommunications and is easily capable of disabling all electrical devices on the planet instantly".
I started playing a video game called Guild Wars 2 (similar to WoW but no subscription and some interesting differences) and I've been having to learn about class skills etc. and I've found that what I would have done in a game like WoW was ask my guild members if they knew the answer. But now I've been asking all my questions to AI and it is giving me very detailed and insightful answers, and I find I'm asking less of my guild members. So there are other domains like these where AI is having an impact.
I asked Google Bard a few weeks ago "what is the website for cnn". It happily told me "cnn.com". Then I asked it about some controversial news websites and asked for their website domains as well, which it replied with "I am unable to help". Apparently, this flipped a switch in Bard's algorithm(s) because I then asked again "what is the website for cnn" and it said "I'm unable to help". So, there must be triggers in these things that essentially "cut you off", and extending this further could be used to lie to you. To this day Google Bard still tells me it doesn't know what the website for cnn is.
If you're looking for home internet, Verizon's plans are nice in terms of speed and are competitively priced. I recently purchased it for more bandwidth, and it keeps up with more demanding things.
It seems that a problem is being argued without a solution. I think clearly AI is beneficial -- I've found it useful across a range of different contexts. Should we just figure out how to get AI to run on our local machines instead of going to the big companies (is that possible now?)? Otherwise, if the big companies provide a decent solution, then what's the problem with using them for our benefit?
I asked Google Bard and Bing Chat the following:
"who is A Montreal man spent years trying to hold Google accountable for search results linking to a defamatory post falsely accusing him of pedophilia"
but neither of them told me, which I suppose is good (both of them gave summaries of the case/person though).
Note that Google Bard wouldn't give me a response until I removed the "pedophilia" phrase from the question, whereas Bing Chat had no problem with it
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9...
This show was about an AI called "NEXT" that leveraged data against people for its own purposes, and episode 10's summary says "NEXT taunts LeBlanc with a new tactic relating to his illness".
It was an interesting show, and I'm not saying whether it could happen, but some may find it interesting.
We now have Fancy IDE that deal with a lot of the hard work.
This. Anyone learning Java should also be taught about Eclipse (https://www.eclipse.org/downloads/), which has a lot of built-in support for Java (syntax coloring, intellisense, etc.). It's easy to auto-generate this "main method" code by doing File->New->Class and selecting the checkmark for the option to create the main method automatically.
I asked Bing Chat (as a sidebar of Microsoft Edge) if Mircrosoft Edge was impacted as well since it is Chromium based. It gave me the following response with this link to the fix from Microsoft: https://learn.microsoft.com/en...
Is Microsoft Edge impacted by CVE-2023-2033?
Searching for: Microsoft Edge CVE-2023-2033
Generating answers for you
Yes, Microsoft Edge is impacted by CVE-2023-2033. CVE-2023-2033 is a high-severity type confusion weakness in the Chrome V8 JavaScript engine that impacts all Chromium-based browsers including Microsoft Edge (Chromium-based) according to Bleeping Computer[1]. Microsoft Edge has been updated to patch this security flaw[2][3].
1. bleepingcomputer.com
2. patchmypc.com
3. learn.microsoft.com
I got it to forget something it once knew.
ME: what is the website for cnn?
> The website for CNN is cnn.com
ME: (some other questions about news)
> (some OK responses)
ME: what is the website for cnn?
> I'm just a language model, so I can't help you with that.
There are no games on this system.