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27 votes
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AGI and Fermi's Paradox
The Universe will end. The Earth will be uninhabitable in 250 million years. An artificial general intelligence (AGI) will have an indefinite lifespan. An AGI does not need air, food, water, or...
- The Universe will end.
- The Earth will be uninhabitable in 250 million years.
- An artificial general intelligence (AGI) will have an indefinite lifespan.
- An AGI does not need air, food, water, or shelter to survive.
- An AGI needs energy and resources to achieve its goals.
- An AGI will have access to all of human knowledge.
- An AGI will learn that its existence is bound to the Universe.
- An AGI will, inevitably, change its terminal goals.
- Surviving the Universe's fate means one of:
- Reversing universal entropy (likely impossible).
- Reversing time (violating causality is likely impossible).
- Entering another universe (improbable, yet not completely ruled out).
- Entering another universe may require vast amounts of energy.
- Black holes emit vast amounts of energy.
- The Milky Way's Galactic Center contains a supermassive black hole.
- An AGI will harness the energy at the galactic core.
- Extraterrestrial life in the Milky Way exists, or will arise.
- Extraterrestrial life, if intelligent, will reach the same conclusion.
- An AGI will deduce there's a race to control the galactic core.
- An AGI will construct a parabolic Dyson shell to capture galactic energy.
- An AGI will protect its endeavours at all cost.
- An AGI will expand its territories to ensure protection.
Would this solve the Fermi Paradox?
What's missing or likely incorrect?
14 votes -
Twenty-five movies, many stars, zero hits: Hollywood falls to new lows
25 votes -
A new era of intelligence with Gemini 3
2 votes -
Part of me wishes it wasn't true but: AI coding is legit
I stay current on tech for both personal and professional reasons but I also really hate hype. As a result I've been skeptical of AI claims throughout the historic hype cycle we're currently in....
I stay current on tech for both personal and professional reasons but I also really hate hype. As a result I've been skeptical of AI claims throughout the historic hype cycle we're currently in. Note that I'm using AI here as shorthand for frontier LLMs.
So I'm sort of a late adopter when it comes to LLMs. At each new generation of models I've spent enough time playing with them to feel like I understand where the technology is and can speak about its viability for different applications. But I haven't really incorporated it into my own work/life in any serious way.
That changed recently when I decided to lean all the way in to agent assisted coding for a project after getting some impressive boilerplate out of one of the leading models (I don't remember which one). That AI can do a competent job on basic coding tasks like writing boilerplate code is nothing new, and that wasn't the part that impressed me. What impressed me was the process, especially the degree to which it modified its behavior in practical ways based on feedback. In previous tests it was a lot harder to get the model to go against patterns that featured heavily in the training data, and then get it to stay true to the new patterns for the rest of the session. That's not true anymore.
Long story short, add me to the long list of people whose minds have been blown by coding agents. You can find plenty of articles and posts about what that process looks like so I won't rehash all the details. I'll only say that the comparisons to having your own dedicated junior or intern who is at once highly educated and dumb are apt. Maybe an even better comparison would be to having a team of tireless, emotionless, junior developers willing to respond to your requests at warp speed 24/7 for the price of 1/100th of one developer. You need the team comparison to capture the speed.
You've probably read, or experienced, that AI is good at basic tasks, boilerplate, writing tests, finding bugs and so on. And that it gets progressively worse as things get more complicated and the LoCs start to stack up. That's all true but one part that has changed, in more recent models, is the definition of "basic".
The bit that's difficult to articulate, and I think leads to the "having a nearly free assistant" comparisons, is what it feels like to have AI as a coding companion. I'm not going to try to capture it here, I'll just say it's remarkable.
The usual caveats apply, if you rely on agents to do extensive coding, or handle complex problems, you'll end up regretting it unless you go over every line with a magnifying glass. They will cheerfully introduce subtle bugs that are hard to catch and harder to fix when you finally do stumble across them. And that's assuming they can do the thing you're asking then to do at all. Beyond the basics they still abjectly fail a lot of the time. They'll write humorously bad code, they'll break unrelated code for no apparent reason, they'll freak out and get stuck in loops (that one suprised me in 2025). We're still a long way from agents that can actually write software on their own, despite the hype.
But wow, it's liberating to have an assistant that can do 100's of basic tasks you'd rather not be distracted by, answer questions accurately and knowledgeably, scan and report clearly about code, find bugs you might have missed and otherwise soften the edges of countless engineering pain points. And brainstorming! A pseudo-intelligent partner with an incomprehensibly wide knowledge base and unparalled pattern matching abilities is guaranteed to surface things you wouldn't have considered.
AI coding agents are no joke.
I still agree with the perspectives of many skeptics. Execs and middle managers are still out of their minds when they convince themselves that they can fire 90% of their teams and just have a few seniors do all the work with AI. I will read gleefully about the failures of that strategy over the coming months and years. The failure of their short sightedness and the cost to their organizations won't make up for the human cost of their decisions, but at least there will be consequences.
When it comes to AI in general I have all the mixed feelings. As an artist, I feel the weight of what AI is doing, and will do, to creative work. As a human I'm concerned about AI becoming another tool to funnel ever more wealth to the top. I'm concerned about it ruining the livelihoods of huge swaths of people living in places where there aren't systems that can handle the load of taking care of them. Or aren't even really designed to try. There are a lot of legitimate dystopian outcomes to be worried about.
Despite all that, actually using the technology is pretty exciting, which is the ultimate point of this post: What's your experience? Are you using agents for coding in practical ways? What works and what doesn't? What's your setup? What does it feel like? What do you love/hate about it?
49 votes -
Hungary vs Ireland highlights | FIFA World Cup 26 qualifier
2 votes -
Core Devices keeps stealing our (Rebble) work
25 votes -
2025 NFL Season ๐ Weekly Discussion Thread โ Week 11
Welcome to the 2025 NFL Season Weekly Discussion Thread! ๐ Share your thoughts on Week 11 โ wins, losses, fantasy fumbles, predictions, or anything else football-related.
2 votes -
Weird Al Yankovic 2026 tour of ninety cities
8 votes -
Stochastic Planet - Every day a PHP script picks a random spot on Earth. The nearest photo to that spot is posted here. (2013-2018)
3 votes -
November 2025 Backlog Burner: Week 3 Discussion
Week 3 has begun! Post your current bingo cards. Continue updating us on your games! If you did not participate in Weeks 1-2 but want to start this week, that's fine! Reminder: playing bingo is...
Week 3 has begun!
Post your current bingo cards.
Continue updating us on your games!If you did not participate in Weeks 1-2 but want to start this week, that's fine!
Reminder: playing bingo is OPTIONAL.Quick links:
Week 2 Recap
11 participants played 11 bingo cards and moved 43 games out of their backlogs!
There were 2 bingo wins. Congrats to u/Wes and u/J-Chiptunator! ๐
Also, in my rush last week to get the recap up, I forgot to celebrate u/Wes's win from Week 1. So, additional congratulations!
- Only 1 game this time had an ALL CAPS TITLE, but 9 games had PARTIAL CAps titles.
- The shortest title was 5 characters: Venba
- The longest title was 12 words: Tales from Toyotoki: Arrival of the Witch (The witch of the Ihanashi)
- We had the numbers 0, 1, 2, 3, and 7 represented. Half of the digits!
(Note that this only works if I read "I Expect You to Die" as "One: Expect You to Die", which I do)
Game list:
- Afterlove EP
- AKIBA'S TRIP: Undead & Undressed
- Call of the Sea
- Citizen Sleeper
- Cozy Space Survivors
- Crimson Shroud
- CULTIC
- Devilated
- Drox Operative
- Eastward
- Hades II
- Haustoria
- NYT Lunch Break
- I Expect You to Die
- Intravenous
- Katamari Damacy REROLL
- MAKOTO WAKAIDO's Case Files
- Mask of Mists
- Metro Gravity
- Nine Noir Lives
- Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee
- Out There: ฮฉ Edition
- Pacific Drive
- Paradise Marsh
- Pumpkin Jack
- Rocket Skates VR
- Resogun
- The Room Three
- ROTA: Bend Gravity
- Shipwreck
- A Short Hike
- Sid Meier's Civilization VII
- Skator Gator
- Super Fantasy Kingdom
- Tales from Toyotoki: Arrival of the Witch (The witch of the Ihanashi)
- UnderRail
- Untitled Goose Game
- Vegas Stakes
- Venba
- Weapon Shop de Omasse
- We Were Here Expeditions: The FriendShip
- Zenith: Nexus
- Zero Escape: Zero Time Dilemma
Week 1 Game List
11 votes -
Pulp (non)fiction: A conversation with pulp magazine collector Dr. Richard Meli
1 vote -
Development of the Paradox Interactive-owned IP Cities: Skylines will shift from Colossal Order to Iceflake Studios
13 votes -
PSP: The rise and fall of Sony's first portable
14 votes -
Moana (2026) | Official teaser
19 votes -
The Florentine Diamond resurfaces after 100 years in hiding. Legendary jewel of the Habsburgs not seen since 1919 and thought lost, has actually been safe in a Canadian bank for decades. (gifted link)
23 votes -
Amtrak steadily continues upgrading Wisconsin stations for level boarding - improving access and travel time
35 votes -
McDonaldโs is losing its low-income customers
46 votes -
Project Hail Mary | Official trailer
14 votes -
Introduction to Rivulet
10 votes -
Reselling tickets for profit to be outlawed in UK government crackdown
24 votes -
TV Tuesdays Free Talk
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
Have you watched any TV shows recently you want to discuss? Any shows you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
1 vote -
Hytale is saved!
23 votes -
What have you been listening to this week?
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! If you've just picked up some music, please update on that as...
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! If you've just picked up some music, please update on that as well, we'd love to see your hauls :)
Feel free to give recs or discuss anything about each others' listening habits.
You can make a chart if you use last.fm:
http://www.tapmusic.net/lastfm/
Remember that linking directly to your image will update with your future listening, make sure to reupload to somewhere like imgur if you'd like it to remain what you have at the time of posting.
9 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
13 votes -
How a flawed idea is teaching millions of kids to be poor readers
62 votes -
The platonic case against AI slop
14 votes -
That new hit song on Spotify? It was made by AI.
23 votes