northernscrub

joined 2 years ago
[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 6 points 4 months ago

They've been interfering with the UK since the 70's. We have neo-liberalism as a result of their meddling. We could have had a nice, well-regulated economy that was far less prone to market fluctuations but nope. America doesn't have friends, it has business interests.

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 8 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Great idea! Now do this for the americans too.

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world -1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I, too, am aware of zlib and librera reader. But there's a difference between a curated selection of books in physical form in front of you, and deciding to read a book on an electronic device. The former dissuades the reader-to-be from abandoning the idea over too wide a selection, and removes other electronic distractions from asserting themselves over the reading material - I refer here to notifications that flash over the current window.

Plus, there's plenty of people who choose not to read, despite the option being available. Having the option physically there in front of you is far more encouraging, in my opinion. And once they start reading, they might go on to seek titles outside of that curated selection. Great success!

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Artificial merely implies manmade, as opposed to naturally developed IMO.

As for the hypothesis, a few years ago I took a crack at designing a system like that as an on-paper exercise. The vast majority of it was just...pushing data around and using existing data to suggest new data. Not all that dissimilar to how human beings think, to be honest. The big hurdle was optimisation and context, and allowing the platform to "grow" without letting it metastasize and without improperly restricting it. There are some hardware limitations to consider too - a storage backbone, for one, and interlinking every thread as opposed to having them wholly isolated from each other. There's the potential for thread interruption too, which as far as I'm aware is not something that any microcode packages support.

But despite all that, I'm still fairly certain one could build an approximation therein. The complexity of inter-stimuli input (read: input from audio, visual, and potentially sensatory endpoints, replicating vision, hearing and touch) isn't to be underestimated, though.

Perhaps one day I might take a crack at it - but its also a morally gray area that has quite a few caveats to it, so... uh... maybe.

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago (3 children)

On the contrary, I'd argue that its entirely feasible to create an artificial intelligence. "All" you need do is replicate the concept of thought - which is a never ending train of relational contexts that are entirely dependent on the individuals life experiences. Putting that into practise is a huge job, but arguably not an impossible one. Such a creation, presuming it could create new concepts along the way, would certainly be deserving of the title "AI".

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago (3 children)

I'm neurodivergent. Wanna know what would a been great? Easier access to the library and more books.

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago

I have an SFF PC currently running Mint, with Bello and steam as well as xemu and a few other goodies. The flexibility is great, if something is a bit borked I can usually just play it in VLC, and the compute allows me to run pretty much any emulator besides Xenia or that PS3 one. Once I plug a GPU into it, those should be fine too. Not bad for a cheap i5 system.

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago (5 children)

They're not intelligent, though. The only thing they can do is repeat patterns according to prompt. That's literally all an LLM is - a massive relational database hooking up words and phrases, or repeating the laws of physics on a vast scale, or copying out design principles. Its nothing more than a stochastic parrot. It has no sentience, and sentience cannot be romanticised into it.

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 1 points 6 months ago

LaNd Of ThE fReE

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 1 points 6 months ago

Fuck no. Not happening.

It was already a monumentally stupid idea to bank with your phone. This is catastrophic.

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 4 points 6 months ago (8 children)

AI

Its. Not. Fucking. AI.

Jfc this muck is going to make us as blind as a bat when an actual artificial sentience appears. An LLM does not an intelligence make.

[–] northernscrub@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Mr Tang said: “Typically broadband customers will pay for 13 months in a year rather than 12, thanks to inflation linked mid-contract price rises.

Zen has never done this in its 28 years of trading.

Sure about that? My broadband just went up by a quid. It's not a lot, and it's mostly thanks to upstream costing, but come on. Don't fuck around with blatant lies.

I'd still go with Zen like. Can't beat user-configurable rDNS.

 

I've just bought a new-to-me Xperia 10 V. It took me a while, but I managed to root the device, forcibly remove the bloat I didn't want, and apply some system tweaks.

There are two things that persist in frustrating me. First, I cannot shift the clock back over to the right. Shizuku & System UI Tuner appear to have no effect on this, and until I can compile a copy of LineageOS, I appear to be stuck with it in the wrong place.

The second is a little more egregious, and that's this new lockscreen/notification media control. It's horrendous. In fact, it's a step back in functionality, because the FF/RW buttons are too small to press (and sometimes don't work at all!). Yet, somehow, the notification manages to be larger than it used to be.

I'd really like to get rid of this new media notification UI, and return to the old style of media control where it was indistinguishable to other notifications bar the media controls. Short of compiling Android... 10?11? for a phone released last year, what can I do to accomplish this?

 

I'm currently using a VM to run Visual Studio on Fedora. Because I want easy access to both systems at once, without having to minimise a VM or use hotkeys to access the host system, I require a VM solution that has "seamless" integration - I.E hiding the virtual desktop, and running applications in the VM as though they were running natively.

Virtualbox has this solution, but it is somewhat unreliable and doesn't maintain seamless mode (or multi-monitor mode) between boots. VMWare has a feature called "Unity mode", which seems to be a little more reliable - however, unity mode has not been a VMware Linux feature since v7 - we are now somewhere around v17.

I'm using v7 at the moment, but I'd like to find something that won't fall over at some point in the future. RemoteApp isn't a solution, because VS needs to be able to launch a browser and communicate with it during debugging. What other VM solutions have this "seamless" functionality?

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by northernscrub@lemmy.world to c/ukcasual@lemmy.world
 

In !newcastleupontyne@lemmy.world we have a list of other UK communities in the sidebar. It might be nice if we can get a comprehensive list of the other UK based communites too, so if you run one or know of one, drop a link here. Make sure it's in the remote format so that they can be reached from any instance - this is !<communityname>@<instanceurl>. I don't think hyperlinking works properly yet, but there are active issues raised on the github to get it functional.

 

I'm after a remote for JMP that is just a remote. No local playback or streaming, no fancy extras, just a remote with some directional buttons, keyboard input, that sort of thing. Somethign akin to what Kore is to Kodi.

Does such a remote exist?

 

Mostly a replica of /r/NewcastleUponTyne, but with less automoderator and more bridge pics

!newcastleupontyne@lemmy.world

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by northernscrub@lemmy.world to c/lemmy_support@lemmy.ml
 

Is this a possibility? Right now, lemmy communities are very compressed, fitting into the centre third of my screen. Smaller devices, such as 1080p devices, will fair better - but I'd ideally like to implement some CSS that expands page content a little, perhaps to 70vw or so. I could do that with Stylish or some other scripting addon, but I'd like to make it a default for visitors. Possible, or no?

Here's what it looks like currently:

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