- 204 Posts
- 633 Comments
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•G-Assist is ‘real’: NVIDIA unveils NitroGen, open-source AI model that can play 1000+ games for youEnglish
43·1日前Next: game companies can subscribe to NVIDIA anti-AI-cheating AI. This is innovation under capitalism.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Anna’s Archive - Backing up SpotifyEnglish
2·2日前You’re right, sorry, my mistake. I had the wrong currency setting.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Anna’s Archive - Backing up SpotifyEnglish
1·2日前deleted by creator
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Anna’s Archive - Backing up SpotifyEnglish
81·3日前It’s nowhere near that cheap.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Google sues web scraper for sucking up search results ‘at an astonishing scale’English
92·4日前Also those companies: Wait, AI isn’t allowed to steal from us!
It’s not even their own content. Google took the search results from the sites they crawled and scraped.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Creating apps like Signal or WhatsApp could be 'hostile activity,' claims UK watchdogEnglish
1·5日前Lawmakers will make exceptions to allow E2EE for their own communications and those of the very wealthy.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Creating apps like Signal or WhatsApp could be 'hostile activity,' claims UK watchdogEnglish
245·5日前Remember how, before the internet, intelligence agencies by default didn’t know what anyone was saying to anyone else face to face or by mail, and had to actually work to find out? The country didn’t fall apart. Why is the standard now that everything must be handed to them on a plate? Did they just get lazy?
Well that makes more sense. Thanks for the information!
Is this named after Karl Popper? If so that’s unfortunate because Popper spent his life arguing against the validity of inductive reasoning in science. His distinctive contribution was to try to describe a scientific method that did not depend on induction.
https://philosophy.institute/logic/poppers-critique-rejection-induction/
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Samsung to halt SATA SSD production, leaker warns of up to 18 months of SSD price pressure, worse than Micron ending consumer RAMEnglish
20·9日前Not just the tech industry. A huge proportion of the US economy is made up of betting on AI. Like the crash of 2008 (but worse, some predict) it will hurt everyone but the richest, who will become even richer.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Programming@programming.dev•The Architecture of "Not Bad": Decoding the Chinese Source Code of the Void
18·12日前In Chinese, affirmation is often compiled through negation:
没错 (méi cuò) = “not wrong” = Right
不差 (bù chà) = “not bad” = Decent
还行 (hái xíng) = “still passable” = Okay
没事 (méi shì) = “no problem” = It’s fine
In English, this feels bizarre. If something is good, you say:
Nice
Great
Perfect
Brilliant
You name the quality directly. You point at it. You own it.
In American positivity-laden, self-marketing, businessy English perhaps. But in the UK “not bad”, “could be worse”, “not wrong”, “can’t complain”, “I’ve had worse” and so on is often as positive as it gets, or at least was for a long time. American positive-speak gets on British people’s nerves; it’s perceived as boorish, boastful and unsubtle. And “no problem” is common in English all over. British people do say “brilliant” but only when they’re being unusually enthusiastic, or fake, or sarcastic.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
news@lemmings.world•Leaked documents claim 'US wants to convince four countries to quit EU' in bid to 'Make Europe Great Again'English
8·12日前This reads like it could be about either the USA or Russia.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Marco Rubio bans Calibri font at State Department for being too DEIEnglish
159·12日前The font was chosen in an effort to make documents easier to read for the vision impaired.
So It’s Republican policy that the government must not, even in the smallest way, make life any easier for disabled people? And the government must not do nothing and leave in place something that already makes life easier for them, but must actively intervene to make it harder? Of course it is, but what the fuck is wrong with these people that they dedicate their entire life to getting into government so they can punch down and hurt others? How have they not even accidentally stumbled into being better than the worst they can be?
Until version 8.8.7 of Notepad++, the developer used a self-signed certificate, which is available in the Github source code.
That doesn’t sound wise.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•RAM prices soar, but popular Windows 11 apps are using more RAM due to Electron, Web componentsEnglish
6·14日前I wouldn’t mind so much if they were giving their own arms and legs, but they seem to be giving ours.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•RAM prices soar, but popular Windows 11 apps are using more RAM due to Electron, Web componentsEnglish
7·15日前That’s been the thinking for the last couple of decades at least. But it can’t continue if people can’t afford new hardware.
floofloof@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•RAM prices soar, but popular Windows 11 apps are using more RAM due to Electron, Web componentsEnglish
1751·15日前If there’s any silver lining to this, perhaps we can get a renewed interest in efficient open-source software designed to work well on older hardware, and less e-waste.





















Shut up and get back down the mines or your robot manager-security-cop will have to terminate you. Meet your billionaire-enforced quota and you’ll live to enjoy another day of mining.