@cadey it would probably be all 3 (maybe a bit more the first 2)
"AI" and productivity (long thread)
This is the "AI" gamble. These CEOs are betting our economies on the idea that "AI" somehow increases an organisation's capacity for work despite a reduced headcount, but this is unlikely because "AI" automation is not deterministic and has high inherent variability along multiple axes 8/
score_9, salvador dali choking the CEO of midjourney to death, HDR, 4K, ultradetailed, highest quality, unreal engine
@lritter can't unsee it in my minds'eye... thank you for that?
@TomF I've been bothered for a long time about the wording "world war 2" vs. "(the) second world war". I understand it's an easy shorthand, but it seems weird to name it like a product series or an episode of a movie franchise...
@lindsey you might have space for some kind of bike storage system (off-topic, I'm wondering about your bike parking situation...)
Ah, here's one I recognize. I took a class with Alfred Menezes and he told us to avoid reading the "Handbook of Applied Cryptography by Menezes" lol
@jesper
Key sentence in the article:
> Generational fear of cheating
> In retrospect, my instructions were probably too harsh and discouraged some students from using chatbots.
@grimalkina may I request a link to the recipe? For science?
Some people seem surprised why many folks react very cautiously about the news of #Threema being sold. IMHO, the reason why it has become a normal reaction is that things usually go into a user hostile direction when a capital /investment company buys a tech company and it’s product(s). In Threema‘s case, there is reason to believe that it will not go that way (see https://chaos.social/@dbrgn/115886778118343763) but the apprehensive reactions show that users have had negative experiences and learned from that.
@kaoudis was just kayaking in a mangrove, 'ew' fits for tranquil waters... That sounds like a candle that would attract mosquitoes
All we have are Mussolini cosplayers who can’t make the trains run on time, Rockefeller LARPers who can’t build a refinery, and Nikola Tesla tribute acts who’ve never shipped hardware. History will remember this as the age of the cover band. We are ruled by guys who watched a YouTube documentary about Napoleon and said “I could do that” but meant the hat.
I did a little end-of-year googling and was shocked to discover I made the front page of HackerNews 3 times last year! Shocked because I only knew of one of them. It's very odd reading a conversation long after the window when you could have replied.
Note to self: The commenters on HackerNews are a bit odd....
code / data wrangler in Switzerland.
Recovering reply guy. Posts random photos once in a while.