Much of the complexity of the 8086's flags is for historical reasons. The 8086's flags were compatible with the 8080 processor (1974), which extended the 8008 (1972). The 8008 was a clone of the Datapoint 2200 (1971), a desktop computer that is now mostly forgotten.
Lipstick on an amoral Chatbot pig
In hindsight, ChatGPT may come to be seen as the greatest publicity stunt in AI history, an intoxicating glimpse at a future that may actually take years to realize—kind of like a 2012-vintage driverless car demo, but this time with a foretaste of an ethical guardrail that will take years to perfect.
https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/inside-the-heart-of-chatgpts-darkness?utm_medium=email
#ai #artificialintelligence #chatGPT @garymarcus #chatbot #chatbots
It hasn't sunk in yet, but we learned last week that the whole discourse of #LLM critique since November has been aiming behind the ball. #Bing and Google Search are now going to compete to address factual accuracy. Meanwhile the brainstorming function is already integrated in Word if you use the Edge browser.
Image: #ChatGPT integration into Office365.
+++ ChatGPT stellt Lehrpersonal vor neue Herausforderungen +++
Künstliche Intelligenz fordert auch die Schule heraus. Der Kanton Genf schickt Lehrpersonen nun in die Weiterbildung.
@CerstinMahlow Hmm, since they advertise it as lacking features of Windows 10, I’m no longer sure… It doesn’t say anything about “Workgroups” either…
@AAMfP Thanks!
I find the whole Windows experience horrible, but a virtual machine proved to be not enough for updating the firmware…
“Some Windows 10 features aren’t available in Windows 11.” Wow, sounds great!
A while ago I bought an Intel NUC, so I could update the firmware of a #MechanicalKeyboard, I’m not using it for anything else. What do the #Windows users say, is it safe to #update to #Windows11?
As requested by @DosFox here is my #Atari Stacy running #Macintosh System 6 with a bit of help from the Spectre GCR hardware emulator. The Spectre contains actual Apple ROMs that the end user needed to source themselves in order to keep Gadgets by Small ( the company behind the Spectre ) out of legal trouble. The Spectre runs a cable back into the Stacy in order for it to read Macintosh disks. It can also prepare the hard drive to include an HFS partition for better storage. For a bit of time this was a cheaper alternative to a Macintosh Portable.
So, http://DISCMASTER.TEXTFILES.COM may be shut down at the end of the month, just due to the cost of running and maintaining it. I'm mentioning this just because I'd like to encourage people to use it extensively while next stage planning is looked into, so the maximum value is enjoyed.
Hey, today is XML’s 25th birthday. Back in the day I wrote a lot about it: https://www.tbray.org/ongoing/What/Technology/XML/
Probably the most important: Neither XML’s father nor inventor: https://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/200x/2008/11/22/Not-the-Inventor-of-XML
Amusing: “XML People”: https://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/200x/2008/02/10/XML-People
Quoting from “What XML Means” (2007): “XML is the first successful instance of a data packaging system that is simultaneously (human) language-independent and (computer) system-independent. It’s the existence proof that such a thing can be built and be useful.”
Many universities are forcing students and instructors to use #Microsoft products—and will thus deploy #AI assistants on a massive scale. You probably won’t be able to turn off these functions even if you wanted to.
https://www.theverge.com/2023/2/10/23593980/microsoft-bing-chatgpt-ai-teams-outlook-integration
@felwert I’m no sed wizard either. In fact, all I needed here was s/…/…/g—otherwise I’d have probably used Perl ;-)
The IF Archive dates to 1992, the same year as Mark Howell's release of txd, the first z-code disassembler, Activision's release of Lost Treasures of Infocom, and Graham Nelson's development of zass, the z-code assembler that was the forerunner for the original version of Inform.
It was an FTP server; this was prior to NCSA Mosaic and still very much the web's early days.
What is it to "cite your source" for a claim?
I think it is: referring to the source that informed and convinced you of the claim.
I think it is not: becoming convinced of the claim, then finding some document or website that says something similar and citing that.
The former is a genuine explanation of the source of your belief. The latter is, at best, ad hoc imitation, at worst, dishonest.
Let's keep this distinction in mind when we see the hype around all the new LLM applications.
The Roboto Serif minisite is live and it’s excellent https://fonts.withgoogle.com/roboto-serif
Huge congrats to @greggazdowicz and to everyone who worked on this!
18 corrections in a 659-word AI-written Men's Journal article about low testosterone. AI language tools generate cogent word patterns, not facts - an obvious issue that so many companies ae going to embarrass themselves learning in the coming years
https://futurism.com/neoscope/magazine-mens-journal-errors-ai-health-article
Compilation of design elements from vintage LP records promoting their #stereo sound (Dates Variable)
#records #LPs #stereorecords #HIFI #vinyl #vinylrecords #typography #abstract #design #graphicdesign
Associate professor of digital humanities, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Professeur associé en humanités numériques, Université de Lausanne, Suisse