Ludicrous0251

joined 1 month ago
[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 3 points 1 hour ago (2 children)

Getting the chunks off saves you from having to clean the filter as often (I recognize that's probably different from "scrubbing")

My dishes are by no stretch of the imagination clean when they go into the dishwasher, but they also look nothing like what's in a Cascade™ commercial.

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 5 points 9 hours ago

Bought a tire attachment for my air compressor the other day. You'd think I must live in a house with millions of tires to fill based on my product suggestions.

"Like, you really fucking love tires right? Have you heard of these 6 other tire-filling compressor attachments??"

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 4 points 2 days ago

Quite frankly one of the worst articles I've read in a long time.

A rambling post full of speculative guesses at costs and performance combined with authoritative-sounding opinions.

For a post full of "math", only one chart made it in that they just copied from another source - I've seen better written rants on Lemmy.

Their whole thesis that it's not viable to build a 24/7 renewable grid with just one renewable and batteries is not technically wrong, it's a straw man argument. Sure UAE built this system, but its part of a much larger strategy, not alone in a vacuum.

The only renewables mentioned are solar and wind and only from the context that they're unreliable sources, but at no point do they even hint at the complementary nature of having a diverse portfolio of renewable energy sources, nor that there are any other forms of renewables.

I could go on and on. This feels like someone from Chevron hired an intern to churn out anti-renewable astroturfy spam.

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip -2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I'd also never put punctuation inside of "sarcastic quotes". It feels wrong.

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 1 points 2 days ago

Evidence? From the "most transparent administration"? You must be new here...

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 23 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (3 children)

There's no scenario where I would bring this to a manager. If you aren't capable of (politely!) setting your own boundaries with your coworkers, you're going to struggle no matter what team you land on.

I suspect, given this is a medical setting, the hiring manager has more important things to worry about than "are people talking near the new person again?"

If you came to me with that demand before hiring I would thank you for your time and wish you luck finding a position that meets your needs. I have my own shit to deal with, training new team members is already an additional load to take on, and having to manage personalities full-time is not in my bandwidth

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 1 points 2 days ago

Yes and no - there's so much GoT fan content out there that they could theoretically pick up on the key names and places without the books

That said, I'd be willing to bet these shitty AI companies went the extra mile to pirate these books to train their LLMs, because copyright law is only for the poors.

I generally despise LLMs, but I'd be intrigued to see LLMs be the thing that reigns in copyright law a little bit because it's gotten too out of hand.

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Once a company has already trained one of these monster-models, using it to respond to a content-free work email, cheat on homework, lookup a recipe, or help you write a silly html web page is usually freshwater savings......

If these tasks are so resource light, then what are all these new data centers being built for?

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 1 points 2 days ago

Not as doom and gloom but I feel like "We'll Meet Again" could fit the theme

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We%27ll_Meet_Again

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 1 points 4 days ago (1 children)

We were gonna terrorize some immigrants but our team wanted to hold a costume contest in a field instead.

Oddly enough everyone decided to dress up as a ghost this year. They burned a large t to symbolize the defeat of terrorism.

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 1 points 6 days ago

Deciphered in 11m 28s 5-Stars

[–] Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip 2 points 6 days ago

The confusion appears to have started after Have I Been Pwned (HIBP) creator Troy Hunt announced he had added a large dataset of 183 million credentials to the breach notification service. The data was shared with Hunt by Synthient, a threat intelligence platform that collects and analyzes information from infostealer malware logs. As Hunt explained in a blog post, the collection reflects years of infostealer activity rather than a single new compromise – and certainly not a targeted attack on Gmail.

Short version, 183 million computers have malware on them, and many people logged into their gmail accounts on infected computers.

Not sure I blame Google for this one, but you should probably delete any Google accounts just to be safe (and also stop opening .exe files you get from sketchy websites).

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