Comment McRib (Score 1) 33
When you have a product made from leftover rejected parts the supply is guaranteed to be limited.
So you hype it as "for a limited time" and people go hog wild with FOMO.
coming soon: "The Neo is Back."
When you have a product made from leftover rejected parts the supply is guaranteed to be limited.
So you hype it as "for a limited time" and people go hog wild with FOMO.
coming soon: "The Neo is Back."
Yeah, "LLM's are gods" and "statistical ML networks are good at finding defective code patterns" are extremely different claims.
The people who are True Believers on both extremes look pretty silly.
I appreciate really good closed captioning while having no use for chatbots. Both ends get to call me a heretic!
Just watch the patches and CVE's trickling out.
It's not like OpenBSD is going to sit on a vulnerability for 90 days or whatever.
Issuing a patch doesn't give away the details about how it was found.
To be fair I just wasted a week tracking down a radio telemetry problem because of a forum post that many people said worked great but it definitely pulled a pin high that was supposed to be low, which shut off an antenna.
Only diving into the spec sheet and some sample embedded code convinced me that the forum post was exactly wrong and after making a simple change to do the opposite did all the telemetry devices mesh up and start reporting correctly.
So
A wrinkle is that everybody knows humans are flawed and too many people treaty the LLM as omniscient.
Why should anybody care if this drives electric bills up to $1000/mo for the typical household?
We have unlimited energy, no?
Dipshits aren't creating a global energy crisis right now.
The world economy isn't headed for a global depression.
Natgas should be burned for LLM hallucinations and cats driving motorcycles, not converted into fertilizer to stave off a massive African famine.
Western woke governments haven't spent the past fifty years blocking new energy generation at every opportunity.
Right?
Don't invite the guillotines, dudes.
Why not notify their electric company to cut their power to halt infringement?
Or their water company so the house is uninhabitable?
The Courts need to recognize that Internet has become a necessary utility and that the music companies need to deal with the individual directly through the Courts, not in a lazy clandestine way.
Grande seems based.
Count the number of emails between a company founder and Epstein before you install their code in your Browser or put your data on their platform.
I mean, spies were spying on you?
Not to mock the victims, but c'mon, Nancy, don't be naÃve.
Yeah, Via made a clone that was similar not-quite-i586 fairly recently too.
I have an old embedded box with one that has SATA 6Gbps ports on it that I thought I would use zeroing out old hard drives.
I tried Puppy, DSL, SystemRescueCD, and a bunch of others and none would finish boot. FreeDOS is fine.
It's either eWaste or I need to dig out an Infomagic CD from the attic to get Redhat 9 pr whatever. Probably need to look up when the jump from 3 to 6 happened in SATA land.
But Linus is correct that actual distros don't supoort it. There's one project for composing embedded images that I might try before it hits a shredder. Or NetBSD maybe.
I would assume, that the fines are on top of all damage compensation these crooks will have to pay. I am also a bit unsure, whether the crooks will have the funds to both reimburse their victims and pay the fines, especially now, when they rightfully face decades of FPMITA prison. Not sure, whether raising the fines would have any effect on the actual outcome.
I am fully aware, that very few years from now we'll be laughing at the models we use today, just as we laugh at the hallucinating mess we admired so much two years ago. GPUs will improve, CPU memory bandwidth will go way up, we'll have Raspberry Pi like systems which can do quality inference. I look forward to using each and every one of them.
However: some people want to run lobsters today, and they are mostly left out to dry for now. These folks paid a few dozen dollars per month to perform mundane tasks like creating optimized grocery shopping lists or scheduling appointments, and now their operators are about to discover the true cost of these toys. Few of these operators can afford the quoted "US$ 1000-5000 daily".
The first rule of intelligent tinkering is to save all the parts. -- Paul Erlich