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14 votes
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Why is the world's most powerful quantum computer being built in Denmark? Atom Computing and Microsoft working at backend to set up computer.
7 votes -
Global hack on Microsoft SharePoint hits US, state agencies, researchers say
37 votes -
CSU students’ 3D printing project improves campus Wi-Fi, saves thousands of dollars
29 votes -
What is your opinion whenever you see news/opinion that tech companies are relying more on chatbots rather than junior developers/interns?
I see that in the headline from time to time. Not really sure how prevalent it is and it's pretty disappointing news. but I also can't help but think: the news articles are probably overblowing it...
I see that in the headline from time to time. Not really sure how prevalent it is and it's pretty disappointing news.
but I also can't help but think:
- the news articles are probably overblowing it and it's not probably not as prevalent as it's being portrayed
- that any tech company doing that is shooting themselves in the foot. in total, I was an intern at various companies for a little under 3 years. I don't doubt that the work I did for the majority of the my co-ops were all things that could have been done by a chatBot. writing unit tests and small scripts and etc. but they were invaluable to me (1) understanding what is expected of me in a professional environment and (2) gave me a basic idea of how to code in a professional environment (2) gave me alot of perspective on what technologies and tools I should spend spare time learning cause my university very much focused on dinosaur-era languages, for the classes that did teach any coding related skills. same for the friends I went to uni with. So all I think is maybe in the short term, they are saving money on not hiring interns/co-ops/junior devs to do work that can be done by a bot but I feel like in the long terms that will reduce the number of intermediate/senior devs on the market which means they'll be in higher demand and cost more money.
26 votes -
OpenAI to release web browser in challenge to Google Chrome
37 votes -
The 'Severance' keyboard is crazy expensive, but every fan is going to want one
17 votes -
What are your AI-generated guilty pleasures?
Most people here dislike AI, more specifically LLM generated content, for reasons such as environmental impact, stealing people's work, etc. Despite that, is there anything that you enjoy? I've...
Most people here dislike AI, more specifically LLM generated content, for reasons such as environmental impact, stealing people's work, etc. Despite that, is there anything that you enjoy?
I've been listening to this artist's music for a while. It's mostly video game music "re-imagined by AI" into City Pop and other styles. Artist says they use AI to generate samples, then do the rest of the work like any producer would. I have no idea if it's true or not, but I gotta admit that most of it is really good.
Today I also watched some "AI ASMR" videos out of curiosity. It's stupid, I know. But watching a knife cut glass can be so damn satisfying. I'm sorry, planet.
45 votes -
What’s on my phone
2 votes -
Revisiting my digital security model
18 votes -
Denmark wants stricter enforcement of the EU Digital Services Act as part of a range of proposed measures to better protect children online
9 votes -
Shouldn't somebody *stop* "Meta Superintelligence Labs"?
Noted smoked meats enthusiast Mark Zuckerberg has recently been running around collecting ML experts for a project involving an organization called Meta Superintelligence Labs, which is set to...
Noted smoked meats enthusiast Mark Zuckerberg has recently been running around collecting ML experts for a project involving an organization called Meta Superintelligence Labs, which is set to feature compute clusters with names like "Prometheus" and "Hyperion", and which will attempt to "deliver" superintelligence.
Isn't this sort of behavior on the list of things people are absolutely not to be allowed to do? Or has something changed and we now feel it's safe for Mark Zuckerberg to be allowed control of a piece of equipment that can outsmart all his enemies and also Mark Zuckerberg? Are we all safely convinced he will fail?
If it cannot be permitted, who is responsible for not permitting it?
26 votes -
When/Why/How did Cloudflare become such a critical/integral part of the Internet?
Presumably, my understanding of Cloudflare is too simple, too rudimentary, or even entirely lacking in some aspects. As far as I understand it, the main feature is just faster and more reliable...
Presumably, my understanding of Cloudflare is too simple, too rudimentary, or even entirely lacking in some aspects.
As far as I understand it, the main feature is just faster and more reliable access to sites, right?
If I host a website on a server in New York, and someone tries to look at it in Tokyo ... that's a long distance and a lot of potential hops to retrieve the file(s) directly from the NY machine. Cloudflare provides closer-location mirrors of websites so there is less lag time, plus having multiple copies makes my website more readily/reliably available.
That's good, I get that, especially for big, professional business-critical-type sites/services.
But it's not actually essential, is it? Anyone, anywhere on Earth could still visit my NY website w/o the existence of Cloudflare.
Is there more to Cloudflare than this? I realize they are getting into a variety of 2ndary "value-added"-type features, like their own "are you a robot" tests and probably a bunch of other stuff I don't know about ... but fundamentally, are they actually necessary for the Internet?
Why is Cloudflare such a big deal?
38 votes -
OpenAI can rehabilitate AI models that develop a “bad boy persona”
14 votes -
Grok searches for Elon Musk's opinion on controversial questions
39 votes -
Paying for AI: Have you found it to be worth it?
I'm starting to use AI increasingly, and am getting some value out of it. I'm curious if paying for paid tiers of the big players (in particular, ChatGPT and Claude) provides significantly better...
I'm starting to use AI increasingly, and am getting some value out of it. I'm curious if paying for paid tiers of the big players (in particular, ChatGPT and Claude) provides significantly better responses.
I'm aware that the paid tiers offer more features and benefits than just higher response quality. For me, those are just nice-to-haves, and not my primary concern.
My main uses of AI are software development and foreign language learning. So far, I've used the free versions of ChatGPT and Claude, as well as "proxies," including Github Copilot and Duck.ai. For both my use cases, I've found the responses usually good and helpful. I just maintain a healthy skepticism about the correctness of the answers, and challenge, test, and double check where needed (especially testing suggested code when developing software).
Have you found response quality to be noticeably and significantly better with paid tiers? I was just randomly thinking, and it occurred to me that the cost of an AI subscription is in the same ballpark as a subscription to a language learning service like Duolingo. So, if I can get value from AI that approaches what I'd get from a dedicated language learning service (even if it doesn't quite match or exceed it), then also getting the value of general AI in the same subscription should make things quite valuable and worth it. Not to mention possibly getting better software development assistance in the same package.
32 votes -
What do you think about Medium nowadays?
They aren't a startup anymore, but it seems the current CEO, Tony Stubblebine, got it right, according to his latest (long) blogpost. Although Medium is in a healthy path now, they burnt goodwill...
They aren't a startup anymore, but it seems the current CEO, Tony Stubblebine, got it right, according to his latest (long) blogpost.
Although Medium is in a healthy path now, they burnt goodwill so many times in the past that my trust on the business is absent. I wonder how other people perceive them…
24 votes -
The future of forums is lies, I guess
63 votes -
Swiss embassy radio
8 votes -
Don’t publish your podcast only on Spotify
31 votes -
Are a few people ruining the internet for the rest of us?
27 votes -
AI videos have never been better: can you tell what's real?
31 votes -
No, of course I can! Refusal mechanisms can be exploited using harmless fine-tuning data.
9 votes -
Interview with Google's Android leader Sameer Samat
6 votes -
AI coding tools make developers slower but they think they're faster, study finds
40 votes -
Web numbers
22 votes -
Google Wallet adds age verification and more government ID support
21 votes -
The rise of Whatever
92 votes -
The Digg beta has just gone live. What are people's thoughts and experiences so far with the reboot?
I don't have a lot to say myself, yet. I signed up for the beta mostly because people talk so positively of what Digg was like in the past. I never experienced that, as Digg was already on it's...
I don't have a lot to say myself, yet. I signed up for the beta mostly because people talk so positively of what Digg was like in the past. I never experienced that, as Digg was already on it's way out when I discovered it.
I'd love to hear from those who remember the golden age of Digg, as well as those just curious about the reboot themselves... What are you thoughts, expectations, hopes and concerns?
36 votes -
What dashcam do you use?
My last dashcam was a total dud and wasn't even operational for 6 hours. I'm hoping to get some community recommendations on reliable units with good image quality. If you would also share the...
My last dashcam was a total dud and wasn't even operational for 6 hours. I'm hoping to get some community recommendations on reliable units with good image quality. If you would also share the approx. length of time you've had/used it that would be a huge help as well. Thanks in advance!
26 votes -
That white guy who can't get a job at Tim Hortons? He's AI.
22 votes -
Low-end Linux tablet recommendations
I love reading but lately I've found myself having to sit in front of my 2k monitor to read PDFs because they're technical documents and render poorly on my Kindle, even with using various tools...
I love reading but lately I've found myself having to sit in front of my 2k monitor to read PDFs because they're technical documents and render poorly on my Kindle, even with using various tools to optimize.
I've been considering getting a tablet primarily for this purpose. My main requirement is that I really don't want Android or iOS devices, leaving me with either purpose built Linux tablets or Windows tablets that I can replace with Linux. I really don't need much -
- Fast enough that there's no significant lag between page turns/scrolls
- 8"+ screen size
- Video watching isn't necessary but a nice bonus
- Wifi isn't absolutely necessary as long as there is an easy way of getting files on the device (USB transfer, SD card, external adapter, etc)
- SD card storage would be nice but I can also make due with just internal flash
- Keyboard is also optional - I wouldn't mind being able to run an IDE and connect to my gitlab instance for some simple coding on the fly or SSH into my homelab
- Cameras are largely unnecessary
- Decent battery life or the ability to upgrade down the road
- Looking for something around 500$ CAD (362-ish USD, 312€, 269£)
I've been eyeing the PineTab2 as it meets most of the requirements but reviews seem to be mixed on its usability. So I thought I would ask here if anybody has had similar requirements and found something that works for them. Or if the PineTab2 software has significantly improved - this reddit post seems to indicate that it is in a decent state now.
If nothing like this exists, I suppose I could settle for an Android device provided it can easily take a custom ROM and be de-googled. I would just prefer Linux as I know it quite well and I much prefer the freedom of it. I've also used a touch screen monitor with Plasma on my Arch laptop and been pleasantly surprised at the experience - the hardware is just a bit too clunky to reliably read with.
24 votes -
Ten desktop publishing tools that didn’t make it
19 votes -
The EU wants to decrypt your private data by 2030
50 votes -
Pay up or stop scraping: Cloudflare program charges bots for each crawl
46 votes -
Decrypted Apple Intelligence safety filters
18 votes -
Apple overhauls EU App Store rules following penalty
32 votes -
Sam Altman says Meta offered OpenAI staff $100 million bonuses, as Mark Zuckerberg ramps up AI poaching efforts
37 votes -
Four buttons - hardware hacker mods their keyboard mouse switcher to have a fourth button
8 votes -
China hosts first fully autonomous AI robot football (soccer) match
7 votes -
Amazon now counts more than one million robots at its facilities
11 votes -
Cats confuse reasoning LLM: Query-agnostic adversarial triggers for reasoning models
24 votes -
You're going to use Gemini on Android whether you like it or not
48 votes -
A Higgs-bugson in the Linux kernel
35 votes -
Looking for a low-profile desktop gaming PC
Main constraint: The space it needs to fit in is 7¾ in (19.7 cm) high. Width and length aren't a concern. Primary use: Gaming. Doesn't need to be top of the line or cutting edge. Most of what I...
Main constraint: The space it needs to fit in is 7¾ in (19.7 cm) high. Width and length aren't a concern.
Primary use: Gaming. Doesn't need to be top of the line or cutting edge. Most of what I play isn't very demanding, though I would like the option to play newer stuff if I find something that interests me.
Budget: Ideally less than $1500, but I do realize that I might have to pay out a bit more because I want something both pre-built and compact. $2000 is the hard limit.
Important: I am NOT interested in building my own PC. (Yes, I have done it before, including one that was in a compact case that was HELL to get right.)
Me being uninformed: This might be a silly question, but can I lay desktop towers down on their side? Any traditional tower isn't going to fit, but some of them are thin enough that, if put in landscape instead of portrait, they would. I've read conflicting things about this online, particularly regarding liquid cooling and airflow.
If anyone has any recommendations, I'd appreciate it!
19 votes -
TikTok is being flooded with racist AI videos generated by Google’s Veo 3
35 votes -
Laser-wielding device is like an anti-aircraft system for mosquitoes
28 votes -
How technologies of connection tear us apart — Nicholas Carr's latest book
6 votes -
I've always found the common approach that websites take to changing the email associated with an account iffy but I am not sure if I am wrong
I have changed my email more than once, just as part of customizing my online identity and all that. and that obviously required me to login into any accounts I had and updating the email...
I have changed my email more than once, just as part of customizing my online identity and all that.
and that obviously required me to login into any accounts I had and updating the email associated with them.
the most common workflow I have found is
login -> navigate to settings page -> edit the email field to the new email -> go to the inbox for the new email -> click confirm on confirmation emailthen you can go to that website and do the
forgot password
, provide your email and change the password and get complete control.I have always found that workflow weird cause it's the most prevalent one I have come across and seems so susceptible to tampering.
if someone leaves their laptop unattended for 3-4 minutes in public while visiting a bathroom (which happened often in the library of my university), there was nothing preventing me from going to their Facebook or whatever account they had open on their computer, changing the email to my own email and then clicking confirm on my inbox once I am back at my desk.
and most people don't have 2FA so that would effectively give me control of their account.
Hell, my university once had a potential data breach and they were 99.999% sure the data was not actually accessed by a malicious actor but still sent a mass email saying that they were advising everyone to change their passwords. a classmate of mine in the software systems program's attitude was basically "oh well, who cares?" and I just facepalmed internally.there are maybe 3 websites I have come across that instead first send a confirmation email to your current inbox and after you confirm on that, then you get a confirmation email on the new email inbox. which isn't perfect but I feel like it's a bit more sensical and the best you can do without involving 2FA.
even then, that's also susceptible to the situation I described above if the user is always logged into their email.
I find it odd that websites don't prompt for a password as part of the email update process (or better yet 2FA with an app as even prompting for a password isn't a guarantee if the user has the password manager as an extension in their browser and they recently unlocked it before leaving their session unattended) to ensure that email changes are always done by the account owner.
16 votes -
Why is Cloudflare trusted with encryption?
I am a big fan of Cloudflare Tunnels, it's let me muck about with quite a few low risk apps and it's been fun. one thing that's always bothered me though is the SSL setup. According to their...
I am a big fan of Cloudflare Tunnels, it's let me muck about with quite a few low risk apps and it's been fun.
one thing that's always bothered me though is the SSL setup.
According to their website, only enterprise users are allowed to manage their own TLS private keys.
I can kinda understand the logic behind free accounts not having that perk.
But if you are someone who really doesn't like cloudflare reading your traffic or you are a business, it seems odd to me that it's not being demanded of cloudflare that they make it more available for paid users to not expose their TLS private keys to cloudflare.
Why are so many folks OK with cloudflare essentially being able to read all their traffic?
or am I overestimating how many people are using the Pro and Business account? is the majority of their users just Free or Enterprise?
24 votes