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Comment Re:17 Years! (Score 1) 25

> it still doesn't seem like a meaningful improvement over KDE 3.5.

Have you tried LXQt?

On Debian just install it and uninstall connman and it's pretty good for most tasks, especially low-spec devices.

Comment Category Problems (Score 2) 22

Some neural nets have been good at solving sticky programming problems. Whether finding game cheats, doing voice recognition, modeling proteins, or other tasks humans haven't done well at.

But an LLM is more of an information retrieval tool, so tasking it with clever algorithm design is asking the wrong tool the wrong question.

Then there are the people who complete in programming challenges. In high school I would sometimes stay after to do the ACSL competition tests - no big deal, the school was a five minute walk, and it helped my buddies who wanted a high team score.

Then they implored me to go to DC on a trip for a national competition our score qualified us for. This seemed so bizzare to me as a fifteen year old kid - I could stay in a run-down motel and take tests this weekend or go camping in a state forest with friends. I let them down, in a way, but the ask was totally alien to me.

I have nothing at all against people who enjoy such things but it's a subset of the algorithm minds.

So we now have the results of some competitive coders vs. the wrong tool for the job.

OK, mildly interesting, but does it tell us much?

Comment Re: same same. (Score 4, Interesting) 214

99% of the time these issues are caused by doing something that wasn't intended by the package maintainer.

And that's a problem. Too many things require you to read the mind of the package maintainer so you can not do things that they didn't want you to do (but never documented "don't do this, it works fine in this version but it won't work when we upgrade to another version".)

Comment Depends (Score 1) 44

On exactly what the detector is capable of detecting. If they're looking, at any point, for radio waves, then I'd start there. Do the radio waves correspond to the absorption (and therefore emission) band for any molecule or chemical bond that is likely to arise in the ice?

This is so basic that I'm thinking that if this was remotely plausible, they'd have already thought of it. This is too junior to miss. Ergo, the detector isn't looking for radio waves (which seems the most likely, given it's a particle detector, not a radio telescope), or nothing obvious exists at that frequency (which is only a meaningful answer if, indeed, it is a radio telescope).

So, the question is, what precisely does the detector actually detect?

Comment Re:Fringe science [Re:Only China] (Score 1) 112

The authors of that study frequently say that they don't have evidence that LNT is not the correct model.

atomicalgebra's assertion was that the LNT is not the correct model.
The report says that there is no evidence that LNT is not the correct model.
The linked report says that there is no evidence for atomicalgebra's assertion.

Comment Re:Fringe science [Re:Only China] (Score 1) 112

It's not a fringe. All the evidence demonstrates the linear no threshold is wrong

All the evidence shows it's wrong... assuming that you dismiss all the evidence that shows it isn't wrong.

I gave a reference. I can give some more, if you need, but since you didn't read the National Academies of Sciences one, I doubt you'd read others.

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