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926
 
 

https://futurism.com/the-byte/ftx-island-human-genetic-experimentation

One memo suggested that Bankman-Fried and his brother Gabriel even discussed buying a tiny island nation called Nauru, in Micronesia, to build a bunker there. Its goal? To be used in case the world's population were ever cut by "50 to 99.99 percent," when it help repopulate the Earth. It would also serve as a "lab" to develop "sensible regulation around human genetic enhancement."

"Probably there are other things it’s useful to do with a sovereign country, too," the memo reads.

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My Pixel 4a is getting its software support dropped, meaning no more security patches and increasing vulnerabilities. So I installed LineageOS for microG, a fork of LineageOS that has microG. I chose this one because LineageOS has good support for "older" devices like mine unlike GrapheneOS, and getting microG bundled in the fork is a turnkey solution for getting me access to Google services when I need them.

The installation process itself was very simple, I just followed the guide on the LineageOS site and ignored the optional stage for installing a GApps package since I already had microG. The pre-install work was more complicated, and required downloading a few tools and drivers for the Android Debug Bridge (adb) to work. I think this is the biggest barrier to entry - if you can get everything set up for the install, you shouldn't have any trouble with it.

After loading in and getting basics like Wifi and fingerprint lock set up, I was off to the races. The install comes with a very lean set of FOSS apps, as well as F-Droid to grab more. I immediately went and got Aurora Store off there so I could access the Play store and all its apps, which worked without a hitch. In fact, everything I've installed has worked as well as I would expect with the stock ROM with the exception of Google Contacts, which would not sync from my google account (and I can't even definitively say this was a ROM-related issue). Even my banking apps work despite my device not passing the SafetyNet check. Your mileage may vary depending on your apps and their requirements, but I myself was pleasantly surprised. The only thing I think I'm losing out on is NFC payments using Google Pay, but that's not a big deal for me.

Barring that one exception, everything just works and I'm glad I went this route. I was already happy with my Pixel 4a, and buying a whole new phone just because Google decided it couldn't be bothered to update it anymore would've left a bad taste in my mouth, especially as I'd be giving up features (headphone jack and fingerprint sensor on the back) I value. Now it's time to ride this baby out for as many more years as I can.

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TLDR connecting far-flung regions into one huge grid can mitigate the intermittency of renewables. High-voltage direct current is a good way to do this.

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As the title says, the mainboard of my phone broke and repairing it would cost more than a new one. Does anyone have any recommendations? I'd like to be able to change the battery, if possible. Thanks for any help in advance.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by RNAi@hexbear.net to c/technology@hexbear.net
 
 

“In simple terms, Urtopia has integrated ChatGPT into its e-bike to provide voice interaction with the rider. For example, a rider can ask the e-bike how to change a flat tire, or for directions to a local bike shop that could do it for them. “

This should be in the_dunk_tank

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Youtube, twitter, and reddit have obviously been in the news a lot recently, but every day business applications also seem to just keep getting worse. Got new PCs at work which means version updates, and pretty much everything we use (autocad, adobe acrobat, and ms office, mainly) all seem to run much slower, despite the computers having substantially higher specs. Love that I can't use any old versions or alternatives because they refuse to grant me admin access.

I love capitalist innovation! Why make things better when you could just make them worse and charge more?

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The old internet is dying, and a new one struggles to be born.

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I recently got a Google Pixel 7 pro because my previous phone was glitching out and it was a headache. I didn't buy the phone for the camera, I have a mirrorless that I use when I want to take a picture, I got it for the battery life and to not have Samsung bloatware.

But still every once in a while I want to take a quick pic and send it on signal or Snapchat or something, and every time it comes out way too saturated and way too sharpened. All the ads I saw for this phone was for camera features like the magic eraser thing and the night vision, but they're all just covering for what is the worst camera sensor that they could possibly find. You can't control the exposure, you can't get the raw image, It is a horrible experience to take a picture with this phone every single time.

If you want a smartphone to be able to take good pictures. First of all, don't. Get a camera. Second of all, steer clear of the pixel phones.

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"Reddit didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment. According to Reddit spokesperson Tim Rathschmidt, “We’ll no longer comment on hearsay, unsubstantiated claims, or baseless accusations from The Verge. We’ll be in touch as corrections are needed.”"

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eu-cool obviously, but stuff like this is still neat sicko-jammin

Now it seems Apple will need to figure out how to allow access to the battery inside future iPhones, as will every other smartphone manufacturer.

powercry-2

Eat shit and drink piss, Apple. I have a desk drawer full of old phones with removable batteries, we had this shit figured out 20 years ago

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I was using this shit, now it's going to be surprise transferred to a company that wants me to use their product instead of hosting things I control.

Fucking Google.

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Project Cybersyn or Project Synco was a Chilean project from 1971 to 1973 during the presidency of Salvador Allende with the objective of building a distributed decision support system to assist in the management of the national economy. The project consisted of four modules: an economic simulator, customized software to verify factory performance, an operations room, and a national network of telex machines that were connected to a central computer.

The Cybersyn project was based on the viable system model theory approach to organizational design and featured innovative technology at the time: it included a network of telex machines (Cybernet) in state-owned enterprises that would transmit and receive information to and from the government in Santiago. Field information would be fed into statistical modeling software (Cyberstride) that would monitor production indicators, such as raw material supply or high rates of worker absenteeism, in "near" real time, alerting workers in the first case and, in abnormal situations, if those parameters fell outside acceptable ranges to a very high degree, the central government as well. The information would also be entered into economic simulation software (CHECO, for CHilean ECOnomic simulator) that the government could use to forecast the likely outcome of economic decisions. Finally, a sophisticated operations room (Opsroom) would provide a space where managers could view relevant economic data, formulate feasible responses to emergencies, and transmit advice and directives to businesses and factories in alarm situations using the telex network.

The chief architect of the system was British operations research scientist Stafford Beer, and the system incorporated his notions of organizational cybernetics into industrial management. One of its main objectives was to return decision-making power within industrial enterprises to its workforce in order to develop factory self-regulation.

After the military coup of September 11, 1973, Cybersyn was abandoned and the operations room was destroyed.

Name

The name of the project in English (Cybersyn) is an acronym of the words cybernetics and synergy. Since the name is not euphonic in Spanish, in that language the project was called Synco, both an acronym for the Spanish Sistema de Información y Control, ('information and control system'), and a pun on the Spanish cinco, the number five, alluding to the five levels of Beer's viable system model.

History

Stafford Beer was a British consultant in managerial cybernetics. He was also sympathetic to Chilean socialism's stated ideals of maintaining Chile's democratic system and workers' autonomy rather than imposing a Soviet-style system of top-down command and control.

In July 1971, Fernando Flores, a senior employee of the Chilean Production Development Corporation (CORFO) under the direction of Pedro Vuskovic, contacted Beer for advice on incorporating Beer's theories into the management of the newly nationalized sector of the Chilean economy. Beer saw this as a unique opportunity to implement his ideas on a national scale. Rather than offering advice, he gave up most of his other consulting business and devoted much time to what became Project Cybersyn. He traveled to Chile often to collaborate with local implementers and used his personal contacts to get help from British technical experts.

The implementation schedule was very aggressive and the system had reached an advanced prototype stage by early 1973.

The system was most useful in October 1972, when some 40,000 striking truckers blocked access roads converging on Santiago. According to Gustavo Silva (CORFO's executive secretary for energy), the system's telex machines helped organize the transport of resources into the city with only about 200 trucks driven by strikebreakers, which reduced the potential damage caused by the 40,000 striking truckers.

System

There were 500 unused telex machines purchased by the previous government. Each one was placed in a factory. At the control center in Santiago, data from each factory (various numbers, such as raw material input, production output and number of absentees) was entered into a computer each day, which made short-term predictions and necessary adjustments. There were four levels of control (company, branch, sector, total), with algedonic feedback. If a control level did not solve a problem within a given interval, the higher level was notified. The results were discussed in the operations room and a high-level plan was made. The network of telex machines, called Cybernet, was the first operational component of Cybersyn, and the only one used regularly by the Allende government.

The software for Cybersyn was called Cyberstride and used Bayesian filtering and Bayesian control. It was written by Chilean engineers in consultation with a team of 12 British programmers. Cybersyn was first run on an IBM 360/50, but then transferred to a lesser-used Burroughs 3500 mainframe.

The futuristic operating room was designed by a team led by interface designer Gui Bonsiepe. It was equipped with seven swivel chairs (considered the best for creativity) with buttons, which were designed to control several large screens that could project data, and other panels with status information, although these had limited functionality as they could only display prepared pre -Graphs. This consisted of slides.

The vision had been distributed control and worker participation in business planning. The design was more akin to bureaucratic centralization of control through bottom-up reporting and top-down direction. Workers were expected to perform processes and use resources as modeled and planned. Any significant deviations were to be reported upward, and corrective directives were to be cascaded downward.

The project is described in some detail in the second edition of Stafford Beer's Brain of the Firm and Platform for Change books. The latter book includes proposals for social innovations such as having representatives of various 'stakeholder' groups in the control center.

A related development became known as the Cyberfolk Project, which allowed citizens to send information about their moods to Project organizers

Legacy

Computer scientist Paul Cockshott and economist Allin Cottrell referenced Project Cybersyn in their 1993 book Towards a New Socialism, and cited it as inspiration for their own proposed model of a computer-managed socialist planned economy. The Guardian in 2003 called the project "a kind of socialist internet, decades ahead of its time." Authors Leigh Phillips and Michal Rozworski also devoted a chapter to the project in their 2019 book, The People's Republic of Walmart. The authors made a case for the viability of a planned economy with the help of contemporary processing power used by large organizations such as Amazon, Walmart and the Pentagon. The authors, however, question whether much can be built on Project Cybersyn in particular, specifically, "whether a system used in emergency conditions, close to civil war in a single country, covering a limited number of companies and undoubtedly only partially ameliorating a desperate situation, can be applied in peacetime and on a global scale," especially since the project was never completed due to the military coup in 1973, which was followed by economic reforms by the Chicago Boys.

Chilean science fiction author Jorge Baradit published a science fiction novel in Spanish Synco in 2008. It is an alternative history novel set in 1979, of which he said, "It stops the military coup, the socialist government consolidates and creates the first cybernetic. state, a universal example, the true third way, a miracle."

In October 2016, 99% Invisible produced a podcast about the project. The Radio Ambulante podcast covered some of the history of Allende and the Cybersyn project in its 2019 episode "The Room That Was a Brain."

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I've said it before and I'll say it again, democracy simply doesn't work

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If you use libre software, you are now and forever a 'woke communist'.

Libs and Chuds in shambles.

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The loss that he describes is deeper and more existential than anything academic integrity can protect: a specific, if perhaps decaying, way of being among students and their teachers. “AI has already changed the classroom into something I no longer recognize,” he told me. In this view, AI isn’t a harbinger of the future but the last straw in a profession that was almost lost already, to funding collapse, gun violence, state overreach, economic decay, credentialism, and all the rest. New technology arrives on that grim shore, making schoolwork feel worthless, carried out to turn the crank of a machine rather than for teaching or learning.

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A Stanford professor who has researched unidentified aerial phenomena for the US government says he believes extraterrestrial intelligence has not only visited earth but “it’s been here a long time and it’s still here”.

Dr Garry Nolan also claimed that whistleblowers who have worked on “reverse-engineering downed craft” had recently given classified testimony to Congress, creating a “hornet’s nest in Washington”.

Dr Nolan, a Professor of Pathology at Stanford University School of Medicine who has published more than 300 research articles and holds 40 US patents, made the bombshell comments during a talk at the Salt iConnections conference in New York on Thursday titled “The Pentagon, Extraterrestrial Intelligence and Crashed UFOs”.

The respected researcher is one of the most accomplished scientists publicly studying the phenomenon, including by analysing the brains of people who say they’ve experienced a UFO encounter.

During the session, moderator Alex Klokus, founder and managing partner of Salt Fund, asked Dr Nolan, “Do you believe that extraterrestrial intelligence has visited planet earth?”

“I think you can go a step further — it hasn’t just visited, it’s been here a long time and it’s still here,” Dr Nolan replied.

“You know, people talk about the ‘Wow! signal’ looking for extraterrestrial intelligence. The ‘Wow! signal’ is that people see it on an almost regular basis, that’s the communication that’s already here.”

The ‘Wow! signal’ was a powerful 72-second, narrow-bandwidth signal picked up by Ohio State University’s Big Ear radio telescope in 1977 which has not been detected since, and has long been a source of speculation in the stargazing community.

Mr Klokus told Dr Nolan his statement would be “tough to believe” for many, asking him “what probability” he would assign.

“One hundred per cent,” Dr Nolan said.

“And that’s not just my opinion — the National Defense [Authorization] Act passed last year, signed by Biden in December, 30 pages of that is the establishment of an unidentified aerial phenomena office.”

Dr Nolan said that office, the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), which has 25 people working in it, had been tasked with “collecting the information across all of the US Department of Defense, intelligence offices, and collation of that into a uniform format for the very first time, and provision of that then to Congress”.

“Twelve US Senators have signed onto a document that basically says we want the information,” he said.

“The creation of a whistleblower program specifically that allows people from within who, I’m going to say this, have been working on the reverse-engineering programs, reverse-engineering of objects, so that they can come in and break their oaths but specifically just to talk to Congress and give that information in classified settings.”

He added, “And the most recent one that happened was just last weekend and it created quite a hornet’s nest in Washington.”

Asked by Mr Klokus what the “most compelling evidence” was for his claim, Dr Nolan said “you just need to look at what your government is doing right now about it”.

“Just go and look at the number of politicians on both sides of the aisle who have come together and signed off on this statement,” he said.

“What are they basing their opinions on? They’re basing their opinions on the dozens of individuals who in one manner or another have come forward and talked to them in classified settings.”

Dr Nolan said in addition he had “personal experience” with “people who, frankly, I know have worked or are working on the reverse-engineering programs”.

“Of downed craft,” he stressed.

“Now the first question that people will ask is, well if they’re so frigging advanced why are they crashing? Because what’s crashing is not actual living things. I use this example a lot — if you wanted to study a tribe of cannibals in the middle of the Amazon, are you going to go yourself and show up in the middle of the tribe and not hopefully become dinner? If you’re an advanced intelligence, you’re not going to put your life and limb at risk by coming here.”

Dr Nolan said “mostly what you’re seeing here are either drones or some sort of advanced AI or whatever it is”.

“We’re already dealing with an alien intelligence in our own emails, ChatGPT et cetera, we don’t know what it’s doing, so imagine if you were a million years ahead of us — how do you have a dialogue with something like that?” he said.

Dr Nolan also discussed his work analysing alleged materials from UAPs.

“What is it you hope to discover out of a material?” he said.

“A grain of silicon back in the ‘50s or ‘60s changed our culture and world. Something as small as that, the discovery of what you could accomplish with a little piece of germanium doped with the right elements changed our understanding.”

Alluding to the now-famous 2004 USS Nimitz incident off the coast of San Diego, Dr Nolan noted “we have multiple simultaneous sensor systems that have seen these objects go from 50 feet above the water to up to 14 miles and then back in less than a second”.

“It does stuff that we can’t do, we know that the Russians and Chinese are not doing … what is the physics that accomplishes that?” he said.

“What that tells you is we need to rethink our physics, first of all. We saw birds fly, it took us 3000 years and we figured out how to fly. But now we see these things doing this, so what is it that that lets us do?”

Dr Nolan said he knew “some of the physicists on the inside who work at some of these big defence corporations, who basically said here’s how you tweak general relativity to accomplish that”.

“But then how much energy is required to do it? Well more than the whole nuclear output of the planet per day,” he said.

“Who could do that? We can’t. Will we be able to do it in a thousand years? But if we had a piece of any of this, let’s say it’s a thousand revolutions ahead of us, a million revolutions ahead of us, even a tiny piece of knowledge from that could revolutionise what we’re doing.”

Mr Klokus asked if Dr Nolan was sure humans possessed “literal physical material to evaluate, to analyse”.

“Yes, 100 per cent,” he said.

“It’s there. I was working with a group about seven or eight years ago and I literally got within a few weeks of gaining access to one of the objects. And when the people who didn’t want us to gain access to it found out about it they pulled some bureaucratic administrative tricks and snatched it away.”

Mr Klokus remarked at one point, “I’m glad we’ve got some people here to witness these statements — I think they’re very consequential.”

Previous speakers at the Salt conference, billed as a “global thought leadership forum encompassing finance, technology and public policy”, include US President Joe Biden, Virgin founder Sir Richard Branson and former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt.

Dr Nolan’s comments come after the head of Pentagon’s new UFO office told Congress last month it had no credible evidence of aliens.

In a rare open hearing, AARO head Dr Sean Kirkpatrick said his team were reviewing more than 650 potential UFO cases.

Despite the unexplained sightings, Dr Kirkpatrick said there was no suggestion of alien activity.

“AARO has found no credible evidence thus far of extraterrestrial activity, off-world technology or objects that defy the known laws of physics,” he said at the hearing.

Most UAPs turn out to be “balloons, aerial systems, clutter, natural phenomena or other readily explainable sources”, Dr Kirkpatrick added.

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add to the list if you wish

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idek if 7zip is better than winrar anymore assuming both are being updated constantly, but like... My memory is that pretty much every tech oriented person on windows uses 7zip.

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I'm not much of a tech person and I have no idea if my observations are worth anything, but from where I'm sitting it seems computer technology isn't advancing anywhere near as quickly as it was from the 80s to the early 2010s.

The original Moore's law is dead and has been for a very long time, but the less specific trend of rapidly increasing computational power doesn't seem to hold much water anymore either. The laptop I have now doesn't feel like much of an improvement on the laptop I had four years ago at a similar price point. And the laptop I had six years ago is really only marginally worse.

So for those in the know on the relevant industry, how are things looking in general? What is the expected roadmap for the next 10 to 20 years? Will we ever get to the point where a cheap notebook is capable of running today's most demanding games at the highest settings, 144fps, and 4k resolution? Sort of like how today's notebooks can run the most intensive games of the 90s/early 2000s.

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