-
16 votes
-
Daniel Ek says Spotify has no plans to completely ban content created by artificial intelligence from the music streaming platform
3 votes -
Lego abandons effort to make bricks from recycled plastic bottles
43 votes -
Lego drops prototype blocks made of recycled plastic bottles as they "didn't reduce carbon emissions"
15 votes -
Why scalpers can get Olivia Rodrigo tickets and you can't
12 votes -
Jet Propulsion Laboratory-led team use Iceland as a stand-in for Venus to test radar technologies that will help uncover the planet's ground truth
6 votes -
E-reader purchasing advice
So for various reasons I can't use paper books very well. I've been reading almost exclusively on epaper for... 15 years or so now? My current reader is a Kobo Aura One which has done very well...
So for various reasons I can't use paper books very well. I've been reading almost exclusively on epaper for... 15 years or so now?
My current reader is a Kobo Aura One which has done very well but is starting to get a bit tired - the screen is a bit scratched up and the battery life is measured in days rather than weeks (at around 1hr/day reading with the frontlight on low). Plus the usb socket has done that annoying thing where the cable needs to be at the exact right angle in order to charge.
So I'm in the market for a new one. I'd like it to be >7 inches, 300ppi (same spec as the Aura One or better). Overdrive support is nice but not essential. EPub support is a must, as is orange/red frontlighting. Linux slightly preferred over Android. Battery life in weeks. Waterproof doesn't matter. Cloud sync, bluetooth, audiobook support, apps (other than a decent reader), note-taking - I don't care about. It's for reading books, nothing else. Budget is not a huge issue but I don't want to spend more than I have to.
I have had zero time for the last few weeks to look into what the market is doing now and it's been many since I paid much attention to the world of ereaders, so anyone who is more up to date than me who can offer some suggestions would be much appreciated.
27 votes -
In Spain, dozens of girls are reporting AI-generated nude photos of them being circulated at school: ‘My heart skipped a beat’
68 votes -
I just had a weird experience, one possible interpretation of which is that my iphone just read my mind
So I just finished Mission Impossible, latest movie, in the theater. I tend to avoid Mr. Cruise because of him personally, but darn it if he's not a decent actor and usually has a top notch crew....
So I just finished Mission Impossible, latest movie, in the theater. I tend to avoid Mr. Cruise because of him personally, but darn it if he's not a decent actor and usually has a top notch crew. Also, Simon Pegg filters some of the evil. I give it a B+. What's relevant to my tale is that the movie features an evil, possibly sentient, very pervasive AI that is very accurate in its predictions.
After the movie ended, I brought forth my iphone to look at while the credits rolled to a post-credits scene that never came. I glanced at a newsletter, which had "Pickleball" in the subject line. Now, I happen to think that pickleball is a sign of the apocalypse, and that the 1000 years of satan's rule will look a lot like Wall-E (who is obviously Christ). I was mulling posting a quip about that, and thought further that the quippiest way to do that was to talk about life on the ship in Wall-E. So I tapped the search bar and started typing "what is the name of the ship . . ." and, this where it gets freaky, before I could continue to tap out "in Wall-E" Siri suggested the fandom page for Wall-E.
Bzzz-wut? I checked my histories, I have not mentioned Wall-E or pickleball anywhere, to my recollection, I have never even mentioned it to anyone (I have probably complained abut pickleball in a general sense). As far as I know, the concept has only ever lived in my mind.
Now, I don't, as I sit here in this moment, believe that Siri can detect my thoughts. But it is a downright Fortean confluence of seemingly unconnected mental activity and external reality. I found (in my very short search) only one other mention, at hipinions.com of pickleball being related to Wall-e. If it is not merely coincidence, and not AI reading my mind, it is very peculiar and particularly well timed and specific predictive association by the AI, and one which I am certainly not entirely comfortable with, perhaps the first time I have ever had such a hmmm moment with technology.
It might be interesting what happens next, now that I have entered this datum into the AI's processing materials. Watch this space for further developments.
P.S. the ship in Wall-E is named "Axiom."
8 votes -
UK's Online Safety Bill: Crackdown on harmful social media content agreed
27 votes -
A publisher published a book on educational technology generated by AI. Authors of a cited source found plagiarism
10 votes -
How to regulate AI? Bioethicist David Magnus on medicine’s critical moment.
4 votes -
‘We put in air conditionin’, stayed year-round, and ruined America’
13 votes -
Tesla reinvents carmaking with quiet breakthrough
25 votes -
Plan for £100m UK underwater living research facility move forward
12 votes -
Wikipedia:Dark mode
20 votes -
Robots are pouring drinks in Vegas. As AI grows, the city's workers brace for change
19 votes -
Best compact cameras in 2023
25 votes -
Swedish schools minister Lotta Edholm moves students off digital devices and on to books and handwriting, with teachers and experts debating the pros and cons
20 votes -
Could a language learning model talk to whales? Or a human who speaks a language besides English?
The New Yorker has a provocative article asking the question "Can We Talk To Whales?" It boils down to utilizing language learning models to process a dataset of sperm whale clicks, their codas,...
The New Yorker has a provocative article asking the question "Can We Talk To Whales?" It boils down to utilizing language learning models to process a dataset of sperm whale clicks, their codas, and crossing one's fingers to see if "ClickGPT" can produce actual sperm whale language.
Which makes me wonder if a language learning model been given a library of Chinese sounds and ideograms, without context, then communicated in workable Chinese?
Using a language learning model to learn to speak to whales is an interesting idea, but I'm thinking any LLM assigned the task will wind up chunking out a word salad or something akin to Prisencolinensinainciusol. I'd like to learn more.
24 votes -
A portrait of Tenochtitlan
31 votes -
Lucid dreamers transmit musical melodies from dreams to reality in real-time in groundbreaking study
22 votes -
Blockchains are entering their “broadband era”
7 votes -
NarxCare score may influence who can get or prescribe pain medication
16 votes -
Should AI be permitted in college classrooms? Four scholars weigh in.
13 votes -
The endless battle to banish the world’s most notorious stalker website Kiwi Farms
22 votes -
As a young industrial designer, Patricia Moore undertook a radical experiment in aging. Her discoveries reshaped the built world.
26 votes -
France’s browser-based website blocking proposal will set a disastrous precedent for the open internet
49 votes -
Machines can't always take the heat: How heat waves threaten everything from cars to computers
15 votes -
The wallet event: Crypto startup company tells bankruptcy judge it has lost the password to a 38.9 million dollar physical crypto wallet
17 votes -
Ørsted shares fall 25% after it reveals troubles in US business – £7bn wiped off value of world's largest offshore wind company over possible £1.8bn write-down
8 votes -
Finnish citizens traveling with Finnair between Helsinki Airport and the UK will be able to trial Digital Travel Credentials, using them to leave and enter Finland
8 votes -
Why Silicon Valley is here. One radio engineer had a plan. And it worked.
3 votes -
Europe is cracking down on Big Tech. This is what will change when you sign on.
81 votes -
Tesla braces for its first trial involving Autopilot US fatality
35 votes -
‘Rebel canning’ is having a moment, whether or not it should
58 votes -
The indigenous groups fighting against the quest for 'white gold' in South America
11 votes -
A microcomputer-like prompt on any device
7 votes -
A cargo ship equipped with rigid sails, each the height of a ten-story building, has departed on its inaugural journey
62 votes -
My secret to dating in San Francisco is a spreadsheet
24 votes -
Apple formally endorses right to repair US legislation after spending millions fighting it
67 votes -
How a brain implant and AI gave a woman with paralysis her voice back
15 votes -
The world's largest floating wind farm is now officially open in Norway – and helping to power North Sea oil operations
19 votes -
Tesla reportedly asked US highway safety officials to redact information about whether driver-assistance software was in use during crashes
35 votes -
Chip company Arm files for Nasdaq listing in IPO anticipated to be this year’s biggest
20 votes -
Permanent US injunction and $650,000 civil penalty imposed on Experian Consumer Services for allegedly sending commercial emails
15 votes -
Carbon removal should be a public good
30 votes -
Lunar Codex: Digitised works of 30,000 artists to be archived on moon
15 votes -
Cyberattack shutters major National Science Foundation-funded telescopes for more than two weeks
18 votes -
Much of the innovation in natural language processing comes from the US, resulting in an English language bias – Finland decided to change the game with a collective approach
12 votes