Here’s a nickel, kid, buy yourself a language that eliminates boilerplate.
Here’s a nickel, kid, buy yourself a language that eliminates boilerplate.
You sound very insecure, kid.
I have a Logitech Trackman Wheel from circa 2004, and it works just fine, thank you.
At work I have the wireless equivalent from around 2015? It works fine, too, but isn’t better than the old one in any way, plus you have to worry about pairing the dongle and replacing the battery.
I do not know. Perhaps Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for Thinking Humans by Melanie Mitchell.
We might eventually get to a point where LLMs are a useful conversational user interface for systems that are actually intrinsically useful, like expert systems, but it will still be hard to justify their energy cost for such a trivial benefit.
Cory Doctorow has a good write-up on the reverse centaur problem and why there’s no foreseeable way that LLMs could be profitable. Because of the way they’re error-prone, LLMs are really only suited to low-stakes uses, and there are lots of low-stakes, low-value uses people have found for them. But they need high-value use-cases to be profitable, and all of the high-value use-cases anyone has identified for them are also high-stakes.
You should recognize that all the artistic, aesthetic, and emotional work being done here was done by you.
As a software developer with close to 30 years of experience, I find it continually astonishing when people say LLMs are useful to them for technical stuff. I already spend too much of my life debugging code I didn’t write. I don’t need to automatically churn out more technical debt to be responsible for!
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There’s a Flatpak of FireDragon. Found it while looking for Floorp, actually.
All Constables Are Boneless
Did you one better and found a still-working nitter instance.
Ukrainian crews say the fundamental problem is that the Abrams were built for advances aided by air power and artillery, which Ukraine lacks.
It seems to me like this might be the absolute biggest problem.
Don’t you understand, it’s real!
Be the change you want to see in the world, invite a boy to watch The Matrix with you.
I just got an enormous Falung Gong spam, entirely in Chinese, which I do not speak. Usually any spam I get in Chinese is about wholesaleing partnerships.
Buying a Dr. Bashir action figure and a Garak action figure so I can mash them together and make them kiss.
Heck yeah, if you added logins and posting, it would be basically brutaldon for Lemmy, something I’ve been pondering for years.
Land and houses aren’t private property unless you’re renting them out. If they aren’t a financial asset, they’re just personal property.
Businesses are an interesting question? The Federation, or at least its core worlds, doesn’t use money (by the 24th century). The only business we see onscreen, on a Federation core world, as far as I can remember, is Sisko’s Creole Kitchen. If there’s no money, why does Joseph Sisko run it? My guess is to maintain the tradition of Creole cuisine, to perfect his skills as a chef, to meet and interact with guests, and to preserve an historic New Orleans building by keeping it in use. Is it private property? Does he own it? He owns the business in some abstract sense, but the building? Probably not. I’d expect he holds it in trust in some kind of legal arrangement with the city, but there’s really no onscreen evidence.