cley_faye
@cley_faye@lemmy.world
- Comment on i broke 2 days ago:
“I think you should come here twice a week to work that out”
I’m not sure how that helps you though.
- Comment on Windows Is Adding AI Agents That Can Change Your Settings 6 days ago:
When NFT started getting popular. Forums were full of idiots saying “now I can really BUY something and HAVE it!” as opposed to, say, game publishers having their server with user accounts on it and their item there. There’s even people that touted “we will be able to bring items from one game to another!”. Pointing the silliness of the idea to them was a lost cause.
And, since that’s not how any of this works, it crashed and aside from some big publisher being incredibly late to the party, the idea is now buried deep and forgotten.
- Comment on Windows Is Adding AI Agents That Can Change Your Settings 1 week ago:
This is the TYPICAL AI use case :
- have situation that’s not perfect, but works fine and is understandable (old control panel and some hidden settings)
- improve on the old control panel, create subsections that makes sense, make it searchable, everyone is happy
- someone decides that “control panel” and “old looking UI” have to go, create a cluster-a-doodle-fuck of a garbage mess labeled “Settings”, put only half the old settings in there, and half the time conflicts with other well-established ways to do things
- keep pushing the new thing despite it being so horrendous a kitten litter dies every time it is used
- pretend “there is a problem with settings, but we can solve it with AI”
- ???
- nothing, whatever, definitely not profit
It seems that people keep forgetting we just, did stuff. Changing most system settings wasn’t an incomprehensible chore reserved to the most elite of people. And changing the fringe ultra rare and hard to find setting only happened with half-decent competent people. No need to throw AI at that… unless you dismantle everything that works before, of course.
I swear, it’s not long ago that people were touting that we could finally have decent microtransactions in games thanks to blockchain, despite microtransactions being a very lucrative thing for decades before. And don’t get me started on people saying “but it’s the only way artists can get paid”.
As a collective, humanity is dumb.
- Comment on French culture 1 week ago:
We did that to stop English from stealing from us. They didn’t get the joke, and here we are.
- Comment on ‘How come I can’t breathe?': Musk’s data company draws a backlash in Memphis 1 week ago:
Unfortunately, not many people are willing to step in the horrific realm of nudified fat bastards.
- Comment on A completely useful compulsion I have. 1 week ago:
Well, now you have :)
- Comment on A completely useful compulsion I have. 1 week ago:
I only buy boxes of 2x2. I suppose the only way is to get all four out at the same time.
- Comment on OpenAI wants to buy Chrome and make it an “AI-first” experience 3 weeks ago:
Firefox, the software mainly driven by Mozilla, which is heavily investing in AI and ads ventures? That Firefox?
But, maybe “it will be different this time”, I guess.
- Comment on Windows 10 LTSC – the version that won't expire for years 3 weeks ago:
also the “GUI” for debuggers on Linux aee pretty much just separate terminals for gdb, and often I can’t just jank my way out with printf() from various issues
And that is an issue because…?
- Comment on Angry, disappointed users react to Bluesky's upcoming blue check mark verification system 3 weeks ago:
Jack Dorsey hasn’t been around for a long time.
- Comment on In the not too distant past this was a thing 3 weeks ago:
Sounds like an upside.
- Comment on In the not too distant past this was a thing 3 weeks ago:
something buzzing on my wrist all the time would drive me batty
It’s the same when it’s in your pocket. I’d say the issue is not that it buzz all the time on your wrist, but that it buzz all the time. I disabled most notifications, except for a selection of people and apps. When I get a notification, it is usually important enough that I should check it. Everything else (including non-emergency work stuff) is checked on my own accord, when I feel like it.
Having the notifications pop on my wrist, with that system, does not feel like a shackle more than a phone constantly turning its screen on to tell you you have unread whatever.
- Comment on This is why we have a defense budget 4 weeks ago:
So, someone plastering boobs on his truck is a missile target, but a musky orange tanking the world economy for a pump and dump isn’t?
- Comment on Dear Big Tech, Stop Shoving AI Into Operating Systems 4 weeks ago:
Disable automatic updates
Unless your offline don’t do that. Even on windows that’s the worst advice one can give.
- Comment on Facebook Pushes Its Llama 4 AI Model to the Right, Wants to Present “Both Sides” 4 weeks ago:
Both sides, as in, the fair, balanced, and upbringing right view, and the evil menace to society that’s the destroying left sickos.
You know, being neutral and all that.
- Comment on I had no idea y cunt was this powerful 4 weeks ago:
Real hetero cis men only have sex with other real hetero cis men, preferably more than one at a time, to avoid lowering their male-ness. That’s the only way to keep our society alive, obviously.
Pfffrt. These jokers are such idiots.
- Comment on Adobe Gets Bullied Off Bluesky 4 weeks ago:
They started it by pretending to want to connect with artists.
- Comment on How likely is it that Trump will be the first President assassinated since Kennedy? 5 weeks ago:
I’m not sure if he’ll get unalived with funny prejudice, but if I had to give pointers, don’t aim for the head, it’s unlikely to hit any vital organ in there.
- Comment on Anthropic has developed an AI 'brain scanner' to understand how LLMs work and it turns out the reason why chatbots are terrible at simple math and hallucinate is weirder than you thought 5 weeks ago:
Anyone that used them for even a limited amount of time will tell you that the thing can give you a correct, detailed explanation on how to do a thing, and provide a broken result. And vice versa. Looking into it by asking more have zero chance of being useful.
- Comment on Mozilla Thunderbird Challenges Gmail With Its Own Email Service 5 weeks ago:
“nvidia’s confidential compute” had me choke when reading it. Sure bro, sure.
- Comment on Mozilla Thunderbird Challenges Gmail With Its Own Email Service 5 weeks ago:
Unless everyone you communicate with have agreed to use the same standard as you, no, it is not.
- Comment on What kind of CAPTCHA is this? 1 month ago:
It checks if you’re both human AND not a bumbling tumbleweed.
- Comment on Online ‘Pedophile Hunters’ Are Growing More Violent — and Going Viral: With the rise of loosely moderated social media platforms, a fringe vigilante movement is experiencing a dangerous evolution. 1 month ago:
I don’t know how it works in the US, and it’s certainly not perfect, but if you bring “compromised” evidences of actual child abuse, you can be sure it’ll trigger some extensive investigation. Sometimes, this leads to nothing. Sometimes, the “evidences” were not really evidence, but more of a hunch. Sometimes, it leads to actual consequences.
One issue with such a vigilante system is that sometimes, you’re wrong. That’s why due process is a thing. But the “this evidence was collected illegally, so we won’t even look up the guy” thing isn’t really a thing, as long as the evidence is better than “I’m sure of it”.
- Comment on Online ‘Pedophile Hunters’ Are Growing More Violent — and Going Viral: With the rise of loosely moderated social media platforms, a fringe vigilante movement is experiencing a dangerous evolution. 1 month ago:
Great. Just dump anyone you dislike as a “pedophile” and then it’s a free for all.
- Comment on Something Bizarre Is Happening to People Who Use ChatGPT a Lot 1 month ago:
I don’t know how people can be so easily taken in by a system that has been proven to be wrong about so many things
Ahem. Weren’t there an election recently, in some big country, with uncanny similitude with that?
- Comment on After 50 million miles, Waymos crash a lot less than human drivers 1 month ago:
I honestly believe their self driving tech is safer than humans.
That’s how it should be. Unfortunately, one of the main decision maker on tesla’s self driving software is doing their best to make it perform worse and worse every time it gets an update.
- Comment on How do the Republicans feel about Project 2025 now? 1 month ago:
some good stuff
If you want to live in medieval time with your wife/servant, sure.
- Comment on Tesla recalls all Cybertrucks ever made over trim falling off | Electrek 1 month ago:
Let’s hope they won’t cheap out on those bolts. Thankfully cheaping out on everything is not an habit they have, right?
- Comment on Microsoft tells Windows 10 users to just trade in their PC for a newer one, because how hard can it be? 1 month ago:
Users to microsoft: “You’re creating a huge pile of garbage out of perfectly fine devices because of unneeded hardware requirement” microsoft: “It’s ok, just buy a new one”
Rarely have a message gone through so bad.
- Comment on Get your new PebbleOS watch 1 month ago:
Pebble is now playing a gambit, whereby they think they will sell more of the premium model to people who will be using it for exercise and health reasons.
There’s an explicit line in their site that says these are not made to be fitness trackers, and that garmin are good for that (or some other brand, can’t remember). It would be very odd to say that if it was their target.