Everybody hates cookie consent, but you should really be directing your anger at websites who are being legally forced to disclose their use of tracking and advertising.
Essential cookies don't require consent. Whenever you see a prompt, it's being they're doing something shady. Don't get mad at the EU for GDPR, get mad at the shitheads packing so much crap into modern sites.
@juliette You should, however, definitly outsource the job of McKinsey to any half-decent LLM because generating endless streams of garbage thoughts, delivered with perfect confidence, is something LLMs are awesome at.
Also, in-source your janitorial staff, in-source the people making food at the canteen, in-source your receptionist, in-source your IT support.
Every person working for a company should be working for that company.
You will have mid-term gains with outsourcing some functions, but in the long term, you will pay.
Stop listening to McKinsey telling you to outsource all that stuff. Their very business model relies on you outsourcing your brains. Ignore them.
Companies contract out small parts manufacturing, then big parts, then engineering and design, and only retain a "people and culture" organization that sits far from any factory, and before you know it you have two astronauts stranded in space and windows blowing our of planes because no one feels responsible for your overall product anymore.
IN-SOURCE YOUR ENGINEERING AND MANUFACTURING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@kissane The public/unlisted nature of a post seems, to me, a good indication of whether the author want to have a conversation as wide as possible or if she/he makes a public statement with no intent to have a wider reach. Am I missing the point of this feature?
The task of a healthy publicly owned rail company is this:
To run as many trains as possible, within the financial constraints under which it operates
Note trains. It’s not “transport as many passengers as possible on the fewest number of trains”
That 5am train with a dozen building workers on it, or the last train home in the evening *matter for the trust and reliability of the system*, even if those individual trains make heavy losses and are largely empty
@Dtl PSUs without current limits can also be called "Shorts finder with sight/sound/smell signaling"
@Blort @starkraving666 @igd_news Time to bet on the next trillion dollar hyperscaling grift, there's money to be made.
Quantum stuff? Carbon capture?
"After a June 27 Goldman Sachs report finally said that the emperor, AI, had no clothes in a language tech grifters understand, the bubble has been starting to pop. OpenAI, valued at $80 billion, revealed it might be bankrupt by the end of the year, because AI is valueless and makes no money, while studies showed that products that mentioned AI in their marketing did less well, we may be witnessing the end of what tech reporter Ed Zitron calls The Rot Economy. And today it is tech--in the US, Japan, S. Korea and Taiwan--that is driving the market collapse."
Great analysis from @VickyACAB on today's #stockmarket news.
https://all-cats-are-beautiful.ghost.io/lets-all-watch-the-tech-economy-die/
"3 Degrees More" https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-58144-1
- Shows the consequences of a global warming of +3°C
- Demonstrates that we still have it in our hands to ensure that global warming is limited to at least +2°C
- Details the plan of what politically feasible, cost-effective measures should now be taken
- This book is open access, which means that you have free and unlimited access
@th @kelvin0mql @quixoticgeek Are they *really* running on 100% wind (ie. adjusting service level with the variable availability of energy), or are they using they same accounting trick as nearly everybody, treating monthly or yearly balance sheet of kWh bought vs. kWh used as if it was some honest approximation of how an electrical grid works?
What's amazing to me about this article/study is that after discovering mentions of "AI" make people less interested in products, their recommendation is "so you should not call attention to the AI in your marketing". The idea of simply *not doing* the thing that people don't want is apparently never considered. We cannot conceive of a way of constructing software other than "develop for the investors" https://xoxo.zone/@vwampage/112881383051537497
If computer hardware innovation frozes today we would still have decades before we exhaust all possible performance improvements on software.
The software industry needs to smart up. The free ride has been terribly wasteful and harmful to the planet. Update cycles needs to slow down and we need to relearn how to code with performance in mind.
@smellsofbikes She's recharging
Seeing some #fieldtelephone stuff here again, which brought up an older thought again
Are there any DIY field telephone kits/PCBs/schematics out there, possibly open source hardware?
I know there are schematics for most field telephones out there but it doesn’t seem like parts would be easily available. I was thinking of something like a PCB you could just plug a POTS phone receiver into. Anyone ever seen something like that? Or do I have to keep it on my project list
@KevinMarks Hmm, it's almost as if the people who organise their life around the relentless pursuit of resource acquisition at all costs are not the people whose control over capital provides the greatest societal benefit.
Extremely online electronics engineer, PhD in #microelectronics (low-power digital systems architecture), #LoRa pioneer.
Co-founded a #hackerspace, co-founded an industrial #company, interested in #manufacturing (traditional and distributed), frugal innovation, durable and resilient sociotechnical systems.