And yes, you CAN run Doom on it. But turns out it’s not a great idea
- 3 Posts
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andallthat@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Grok is spreading misinformation about the Bondi Beach shootingEnglish
13·7 days ago***k
Hey, how do you know my password?
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•China would destroy US military in fight over Taiwan, top secret document warnsEnglish
16·8 days agoUnderestimating China isn’t wise, but always using China as the new Boogeyman to get even more trillions invested in “national security” is getting old fast. “Secret reports” my ass. If you’re reading it on the internet it’s most likely plain old FUD.
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•MS-13 and Trump Backed the Same Presidential Candidate in HondurasEnglish
2·10 days agoYou’re right, meddling with elections in other countries has been done pretty often (see how many times the US appear in this list on wikipedia ) but sitting Presidents usually pretend to be politely looking the other way.
What’s different now is that Trump likes to put his name on everything, preferably in big golden letters, and he can’t keep his mouth shut to save his life. In the news it’s hardly ever “the USA” now; it’s “the Trunp admin” or just “Trump” doing everything.
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Children Flood Putin With Complaints About Roblox Ban, Kremlin SaysEnglish
1·10 days agoOh, now he’s concerned that Roblox is bad for kids? After he bought Trump?
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Children Flood Putin With Complaints About Roblox Ban, Kremlin SaysEnglish
4·10 days ago…out of the overwindow?
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•AI Slop Is Ruining Reddit for EveryoneEnglish
25·15 days agoYes it did. Making up variation of the same story in order to farm upvotes used to be done by humans.
But the strategy of throwing shit at the wall and see what sticks has now been industrialized with AI, because the machine can produce tons of cheaper, faster, smellier shit.
Reddit and generally socials are basically the perfect application for AI. Unreliable results are not a bug but a feature. You have thousands of humans helpfully training it for free by up or downvoting the result. And the AI companies get a machine trained to persuade large groups of people of any made-up story.
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Top US official berates Europe over cutting American industry out of defense buildupEnglish
1·17 days agoOh, new intelligence has just emerged that your country’s government is supporting a terrorist organization that sending drugs to the US! /s
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•The Algorithm That Detected a $610 Billion Fraud: How Machine Intelligence Exposed the AI Industry’s Circular Financing SchemeEnglish
15·17 days agoI like how there are all these terms with increasingly loose definitions, to which we attach different levels of evilness:
- algorithm - older, reliable, deterministic except when it’s “The Algorithm” in capital letters like “The Social Media Algorithm”; then it becomes evil
- machine learning - been out for decades, hasn’t destroyed the world, mostly does its job undetected. Used mainly by technical people
- machine intelligence - The machine is starting to become conscious but it is still generally helpful. “Machine intelligence” performs brain surgery, detects tumors, folds and unfolds proteins, whatever that means (but it sounds like a good thing, so we’ll give it a pass)
- artificial intelligence - machine intelligence’s evil twin. Takes credit for everything good that comes from the other ones and we tend to believe it, because it’s the only one we can actually speak to and can lie to us very convincingly. On its own it can draw pretty pictures and animate them, write code that occasionally works, pretend to love us and teach us the most effective way to slash our own wrists
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•IBM CEO says there is 'no way' spending trillions on AI data centers will pay off at today's infrastructure costsEnglish
181·18 days agoOne day we’ll read some of these comments and laugh at how shortsighted they were.
Of course we’ll probably have to read them on a manuscript or smeared on a wall with feces because all the world’s resources will be used by the huge datacenters that power our AI overlords
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Nato considers being ‘more aggressive’ against Russia’s hybrid warfare, including a 'pre-emptive strike'English
32·18 days agoso… NATO-minus-the-US are considering creating a committee to discuss maybe retaliating AND they are helpfully announcing their intentions to Russia?
I know nothing of diplomacy, foreign politics or war but what the f#@k is this? If NATO did have the strength and consensus to do something like that, wouldn’t they just launch a cyber attack and then immediately deny that anything happened? If we AREN’T already actively doing at least some light sabotaging in Russia, how do I return my NATO loyalty card?
If someone is declaring something like that, it strikes me as a declaration of weakness for EU-internal reasons. It’s a call for the EU to start preparing to maybe start having this kind of capabilities in the next 10-15 years. And I fully hope I’m wrong and that there’s a better, 4D-chess type of strategy behind this.
EDIT: I don’t mind the downvotes, but why? I WANT to be wrong on this so I’d really like to read a comment that explains why.
If I know anything at all after I’m dead, I will already have the answer to the biggest question from all major religions
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•France’s far-right leader hit by egg, days after flour attackEnglish
5·20 days agoI’m appalled at all these people who condone throwing flour and eggs at politicians. Everyone knows that the egg goes first, because it helps the flour stick.
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Elon Musk Had Grok Rewrite Wikipedia. It Calls Hitler “The Führer.”English
7·24 days ago“I’m not a Nazi, I just like the esthetics of someone else’s blood on my black uniform”
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11's adoption is much slower compared to Windows 10, claims DellEnglish
27·24 days agoIt’s almost like “you have to buy a new laptop to install it and help train our AI on your private documents” is somehow not convincing enough. Maybe if they also removed local accounts and forced you to have an online MS account? Nah scratch that, it would be stupid
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•EU court rules entire bloc must respect same-sex marriages in rebuke to PolandEnglish
24·26 days agoEtymology, slogans, rhymes or catchy acronyms give our brains the illusion of hearing something that makes sense. Repeating them a million times drills them in your neural pathways. Plus they are easy to scream loud enough to drown any attempt at intelligent conversation.
That’s right-hand populist communication in a nutshell.
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Germany wants to build Europe’s strongest army – a new conscription bill is moving that closerEnglish
5·27 days agoNot unique, but still how safe is to create a new powerful army when the forces against democracy could just democratically take control of it?
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Elon Musk’s Grok Goes Haywire, Boasts About Billionaire’s Pee-Drinking Skills and ‘Blowjob Prowess’English
4·1 month agoAI goes haywire and starts actually giving reliable information
andallthat@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft says Copilot will 'finish your code before you finish your coffee' adding fuel to the Windows 11 AI controversy that's still ragingEnglish
4·1 month agobut can YOU do it before I finish my coffee?



Not an expert at all, but I think to an extent this already happens with the current system in most countries, and it would probably need to be done much more now. Not that Automation pays more taxes, but that having employees generally qualifies companies for tax breaks.
For instance, when Amazon said “we’re going to open a new HQ”, Cities and States tripped over themselves to try and give them the largest tax breaks. But that was under the assumption that the HQ would give jobs to tens of thousand of people, not to 5 data scientist and a massive, energy-hungry data center.