count_dongulus

joined 2 years ago
[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 4 points 6 hours ago

So I can finally abort those crying foetuses on my next plane flight depending on which state we're over

Nah mines strong AF. I have trouble splitting it open. Cleans great ✨

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 23 points 4 days ago

Well no shit, they don't care if they get fuckin stabbed

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

Biting the hand that feeds

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 23 points 1 week ago

Ever been to a beach? Lingerie everywhere! /s

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago

Most of these aren't even news. They're entertainment companies that happen to include reporting-like segments and opinion pieces, whether they're accurate or not. And they're for-profit; their main customers are advertisers, not viewers/readers.

A non-profit that simply reports without spin would be "real" news - actually trustworthy information from a source that isn't trying to brainwash you or milk you for ad revenue. There are very, very few organizations that fit this criteria. The biggest is AP (Associated Press). The entertainment companies license AP content (and content from for-profit competitors like Reuters) but filter and distort it however they wish.

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 14 points 2 weeks ago

It sparks joy

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

They can't read your mind. A professional painter is going to make the exact image they want in far less time and with more accuracy than repeatedly prompting a black box to make small changes.

But if you're an amateur and don't really know what you want, or you're not very picky or care about quality, then meh good enough. High level software developers know what they want. They are like painters. And at that point, the LLM isn't really solving problems for you. At best, it's putting the paint to the canvas. That is, saving you typing time.

But time spent typing is definitely not the limiting factor for productivity in software.

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world -3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

At the end of the day, it's still CGI. How much fine grained creative control really needs to go into a building collapse?

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

Using generative AI to replace toil and not the creative human process is fine imo. Even doing something like generating visual things, to me, is OK if it's driven by real creative intent and doesn't result in something that looks low quality. But it's not very simple to get output that you can tweak in fine ways to get predictable changes based on specific creative intent - human language is not descriptive enough to really capture that. "A picture is worth a thousand words" is accurate. You're also shooting yourself in the foot when you end up with a ton of assets or systems that you don't have fine control over because you can't do something simple like tweak a layer of an image because what you got at the end of the day was just a raster output from a black box.

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 15 points 2 weeks ago (12 children)

In coke, which is acidic, sucrose breaks down into glucose and fructose anyway in the bottle before you drink it.

[–] count_dongulus@lemmy.world 6 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

My partner and I quit watching these after I pointed out that they usually cover small town murders, and almost every time the crime is eventually solved, it's because the local police suck it up and finally ask for help from the state or FBI who actually know what they're doing. Similarly, the videos of cold cases that aren't yet solved rarely mention any involvement of more competent higher levels of police in the investigation.

 

I had a thought the other day in relation to how impossible it is for a large country to make everyone happy with broad policies. There are big differences in opinions, values, economics, and cultures across a population. What one city, county, province, etc prefers for policy seems to be universally be overridden by "higher level" governance levels going to the top if they so choose. Are there any countries where lower level, more specific jurisdictions get to set policy overrides instead of vice versa? Like, a place where nationwide laws are defaults, but smaller hierarchies can pass laws to supercede the higher defaults?

 

Playing complex strategy games for many years, one of the things that irks me the most is that hard AI levels often just give the dumb AI cheats to simulate it being smarter. To me, it's not very satisfying to go against cheating AI. Are any games today leveraging neural networks to supplant or augment hand-written decision tree based AI? Are any under development? I know AI can be resource intensive, but it seems that at least turn based games could employ it.

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