@mckinley@twtxt.net backintime for my desktop and work files. A combination of rsync, zfs snapshots, and redundancy for āat restā type things.
@Planet_Jabber_XMPP@feeds.twtxt.net No. ChatGPT does not improve your code. Coding is thinking. You offloaded your thought to a machine. You will not be able to reproduce what the machine did for you if you donāt have the machine, so you learned nothing.
@mckinley@twtxt.net ninja backup and Borg
@prologic@twtxt.net that would work if it was using shamirās secret sharing .. although i think its typically 3 of 5 so you get 3, one to the company, and one to the āthird partyā. so you can recover all you want.. but if the company or 3rd wants to they need one of your 3 to recover.
but still .. if they are providing them then whats the point of trusting they donāt have copies.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de § after we pass the key over to the GOV cloud for our protection.
@abucci@anthony.buc.ci buuuuut it show when winter!
In the time scale viewed from the planets perspective, the climate has changed many many times.. The issue is whether that change that will inevitability come is hospitable to us meat bags. Or if we are doomed to take part in the next mass extinction event.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de @prologic@twtxt.net you think we could get media cards to show youtube previews?
@prologic@twtxt.net You more or less need a data center to run one of these adequately (well, trainā¦you can run a trained one with a little less hardware). I think thatās the ideaāno one can run them locally, they have to rent them (and we know how much SaaS companies and VCs love the rental model of computing).
Thereās a lot of promising research-grade work being done right now to produce models that can be run on a human-scale (not data-center-scale) computing setup. I suspect those will become more commonly deployed in the next few years.
@darch@neotxt.dk I fully agree with this. As the well-worn saying goes, you cannot address social problems with technological solutions.
@prologic@twtxt.net eesh, thatās rough! Hope you get a break soon.
@prologic@twtxt.net 13th without a break???
@prologic@twtxt.net hey.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de I was visiting Germany once, and saw a guy try to load his bicycle onto the bike racks they have on the front of city buses. There were rules about when you could do that, which were posted on the bus stop sign, and I guess the guy thought this was a time when he could do that. But no, the bus driver disagreed. The bus driver got off the bus with a rule book, flipped it open to what I guess were the rules about bikes on the bus, and showed him the rules. The guy pointed at the sign, the bus driver said no and pointed at the book, and they went back and forth for I donāt know how long. It felt a lot like these videos lol
@prologic@twtxt.net doesnāt sound like there has been much planning involved in the āplanned power outageā if they canāt tell you when the power will be out š¤¦
@phoronix@feeds.twtxt.net Google just sucks in every way it seems.
@prologic@twtxt.net I should have posted the more recent one from May, but the rankings are still pretty similar and Go and scala are tied still!
@ocakuvoe@anthony.buc.ci hello! Are you intending to post here? Because of issues with spammers, I delete users who have not posted any txts within a few days of signing up.
š Hello @ocakuvoe@anthony.buc.ci, welcome to Buccipod, a Yarn.social Pod! To get started you may want to check out the podās Discover feed to find users to follow and interact with. To follow new users, use the ⨠Follow button on their profile page or use the Follow form and enter a Twtxt URL. You may also find other feeds of interest via Feeds. Welcome! š¤
@bmallred@nahongvita.run note to self: if planning to do a āburn boot campā with the wife again donāt do a run beforehand or make sure you properly recover (hydrate you idiot!)
@xuu@txt.sour.is lol š
@abucci@anthony.buc.ci read my new skibloreet about why social meets payments is the next level idea! For just §5 bitshlongs a month on my serfdomage site!
@prologic@twtxt.net why do these fools think anyone wants āsocial meets paymentsā? Itās such a ridiculous sounding idea.
@obsidian-roundup@feeds.twtxt.net how many damn AI plugins does obsidian need? This shit is so annoying; itās sucking the oxygen out of every other development effort.
@prologic@twtxt.net lol I canāt blame you
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org I knew from the get go it was going to be an annoying thing to track down, which is was, but that made it take even longer because I avoided trying.
@shreyan@twtxt.net I agree re: AR. Vircadia is neat. I stumbled on it years ago when I randomly started wondering āwonder whatās going on with Second Life and those VR thingsā and started googling around.
Unfortunately, like so many metaverse efforts, itās almost devoid of life. Interesting worlds to explore, cool tools to build your own stuff, but almost no people in it. It feels depressing, like an abandoned shopping mall.
@shreyan@twtxt.net Oh? Tell me more if you feel up to it.
@prologic@twtxt.net What? Thereās literally a āReligion, heritage, and valuesā section on his Wikipedia page.
@prologic@twtxt.net Iāve not looked into the Bluesky protocol, so I donāt know what to think specifically. But this guy definitely is not impressed lol
@prologic@twtxt.net I think those headsets were not particularly usable for things like web browsing because the resolution was too low, something like 1080p if I recall correctly. A very small screen at that resolution close to your eye is going to look grainy. Youād need 4k at least, I think, before you could realistically have text and stuff like that be zoomable and readable for low vision people. The hardware isnāt quite there yet, and the headsets that can do that kind of resolution are extremely expensive.
But yeah, even so I can imagine the metaverse wouldnāt be very helpful for low vision people as things stand today, even with higher resolution. Iāve played VR games and that was fine, but Iāve never tried to do work of any kind.
I guess where Iām coming from is that even though Iām low vision, I can work effectively on a modern OS because of the accessibility features. I also do a lot of crap like take pictures of things with my smartphone then zoom into the picture to see detail (like words on street signs) that my eyes canāt see normally. That feels very much like rudimentary augmented reality that an appropriately-designed headset could mostly automate. VR/AR/metaverse isnāt there yet, but it seems at least possible for the hardware and software to develop accessibility features that would make it workable for low vision people.
@stigatle@yarn.stigatle.no @prologic@twtxt.net @eldersnake@we.loveprivacy.club I love VR too, and I wonder a lot whether it can help people with accessibility challenges, like low vision.
But Metaās approach from the beginning almost seemed like a joke? My first thought was āare they trolling us?ā Thereās open source metaverse software like Vircadia that looks better than Metaās demos (avatars have legs in Vircadia, ffs) and can already do virtual co-working. Vircadia developers hold their meetings within Vircadia, and there are virtual whiteboards and walls where you can run video feeds, calendars and web browsers. What is Meta spending all that money doing, if their visuals look so weak, and their co-working affordances arenāt there?
On top of that, Meta didnāt seem to put any kind of effort into moderating the content. There are already stories of bad things happening in Horizon Worlds, like gangs forming and harassing people off of it. Imagine what thatād look like if 1 billion people were using it the way Meta says they want.
Then, there are plenty of technical challenges left, like people feeling motion sickness or disoriented after using a headset for a long period of time. I havenāt heard announcements from Meta that theyāre working on these or have made any advances in these.
All around, it never sounded serious to me, despite how much money Meta seems to be throwing at it. For something with so much promise, and so many obvious challenges to attack first that Meta seems to be ignoring, what are they even doing?
@eldersnake@we.loveprivacy.club interesting, because some people are writing articles declaring the metaverse dead: https://www.businessinsider.com/metaverse-dead-obituary-facebook-mark-zuckerberg-tech-fad-ai-chatgpt-2023-5
@shreyan@twtxt.net probably ~1k up to 1.5k. One I found had 64G ram and 12C / 16T for 1.1k
@prologic@twtxt.net have trued to get a RasPi lately? Them things are Unobtainium
@prologic@twtxt.net Itās a fun challenge to see how many words you can say without expressing any ideas at all. Maybe this GPT stuff should be trained to do that!
@prologic@twtxt.net maybe it doesnāt fool you, but it fools lots of people and has for thousands of years. Thatās why politicians (for instance) keep doing it.
Letās assume for a moment that an answer to a question would be met with so many words you donāt know what the answer was at all. Why? Why do this? Is this a stereotype of academics and philosophers? If so, itās not a very straight-forward way of thinking, let alone answering a simple question.
Well, I canāt know whatās in these peoplesā minds and hearts. Personally I think itās a way of dissembling, of sowing doubt, and of maintaining plausible deniability. The strategy is to persuade as many people as possible to change their minds, and then force the remaining people to accept the idea because they think too many other people believe it.
Letās say you want, for whatever reason, to get a lot of people to accept an idea that you know most people find horrible. The last thing you should do is express the idea clearly and concisely and repeat it over and over again. All youād accomplish is to cement peopleās resistance to you, and label yourself as a person who harbors horrible ideas that they donāt like. So you canāt do that.
What do you do instead? The entire field of ārhetoricā, dating back at least to Plato and Aristotle (400 years BC), is all about this. How to persuade people to accept your idea, even when they resist it. There are way too many techniques to summarize in a twt, but it seems almost obvious that you have to use more words and to use misleading or at least embellished or warped descriptions of things, because thatās the opposite of clearly and concisely expressing yourself, which would directly lead to people rejecting your idea.
Thatās how I think of it anyway.
@prologic@twtxt.net Yes, and you enjoy the best seafood every day if you want it!
@chunkimo@twtxt.net @prologic@twtxt.net I donāt think I need Jesus. I need more sleep š“
@prologic@twtxt.net hmm, dunno about the recency of that line of thought. I suspect though that given his (recent or not) history, if someone directly asked him ādo you support rapeā he would not say ānoā, heād go on one of these rambling answers about property crime like he did in the video. Maybe Iām mind poisoned by being around academics my whole career, but that way of talking is how an academic gives you an answer they know will be unpopular. PhD = Piled Higher And Deeper, after all right? In other words, if he doesnāt say ānoā right away, heās saying āyesā, except with so many words thereās some uncertainty about whether he actually meant yes. And he damn well knows that, and thatās why I give him no slack.
There are people in academia who believe adult men should be able to have sex with children, legally, too. They use the same manner of talking about it that Peterson uses. We need to stop tolerating this, and draw hard red lines. No, thatās bad, no matter how many words you use to say it. No, donāt express doubts about it, because that provides justification and talking points to the people who actually carry out the acts.
@xuu@txt.sour.is LOL omfg.
This is the absurd logical endpoint of free market fundamentalism. āThe market will fix everything!ā Including, apparently, encroaching floodwater.
I do have to say though, after spending awhile looking at houses, that there are a crapton of homes for sale for very high prices (>$1 million) in coastal areas NASA is more or less telling us will be underwater in the next few decades. I donāt get how a house thatās going to be underwater soon is worth $1 million, but then Iām never been a free market fundamentalist either so 𤷠Maybe theyāre all watertight.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org that could definitely be a track in an ambient song, no question whatsoever.
The exhaust is amazingly soothing to look at, even though itād vaporize your entire being in milliseconds if you were anywhere near it.
@jmjl@tilde.green I explain the favicon trick in https://mckinley.cc/blog/20210824.html
@prologic@twtxt.net nice
@bmallred@nahongvita.run the run was fine and no issues from it. but taking note that after the run my son stepped on my right foot and it has been extremely painful since. even walking the kids back and forth has been a chore.
@abucci@anthony.buc.ci Ben Shapiro has plenty to be ashamed of not the least of which is selling his home to Aquaman: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X9FGRkqUdf8