Fidelity9373

joined 1 year ago
[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 12 points 1 year ago

Tried it yesterday. Not working on Amazon links quite yet, hopefully the feature improves. Would love the ability to toggle it for default.

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 19 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Pretty sure they're all mirrored off one of the first two? The reflections don't work right.

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 2 points 1 year ago

You may say that jokingly, but at some point if the tech keeps improving, that may be the only way the world continues to exist without destabilizing. OpenAI already says* that their end goal is to make the world powered by a form of universal basic income by having AI do most jobs. Having the AI be paid on task completion and distributing that accumulated wealth, removing a portion to cover maintenance, would be one method of doing so.

*that said, the words of a potential megacorporation aren't really to be trusted, and the whole thing would have massive issues of "how do you distribute the money" and "what am I giving up in terms of personal safety and privacy". Having to make an account with a specific AI company and providing all your governmental identification to receive that funds for example would be terrible.

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 4 points 1 year ago

There's tradeoffs. If training LLMs (and similar systems that feed on pure physics data) can improve nuclear processes, then overall it could be a net benefit. Fusion energy research takes a huge amount of power to trigger every test ignition and we do them all the time, learning little by little.

The real question is if the LLMs are even capable of revealing those kinds of insights to us. If they are, nuclear is hardly the worst path to go down.

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 3 points 1 year ago

Yeah, I saw "Android 12" and got confused. 13's been out for a while now, and 14 has open betas on some phones...

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 13 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Looking at Destiny. Game worked okay on Linux before they integrated Battleye, which HAS Linux support, but Bungie just doesn't want to interact with it.

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 9 points 1 year ago

Depends on how they're inverting the power. If they're sticking with the DC voltage straight from the panel, that's probably one thick cable. If each panel or group of panels has an inverter to go to high voltage (AC or DC) to a central location, you can proportionally scale the thickness as voltage increases.

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 1 points 1 year ago

By the looks of it, pretty much. Not in the sense of building an AI model, but more like traditional image recognition. Seems to process everything locally too, which is a plus; no sending data off to unknown servers.

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Aside from the obvious fighting and bidding over an already claimed single domain name, what factors into the inherent pricing of a domain?

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 14 points 1 year ago

Not even a conductor at all, apparently.

https://arxiv.org/abs/2308.06256 this group (mentioned jn the article above) synthesized a fully pure crystal, and found that has a resistance in the several megaohms at room temperature. Just a purple piece of glass, functionally speaking. The thoughts of superconductivity was due to random copper sulfate impurities which DO conduct electricity.

[–] Fidelity9373@artemis.camp 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Every battery has a voltage curve though; even alkaline batteries will drop off the 1.5v region after some time. Comparatively, ni-mh rechargeables will hold 1.2v more consistently and for longer than an alkaline, where it's voltage drops pretty quickly as the battery dies.

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