symbolic
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symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•Company Regrets Replacing All Those Pesky Human Workers With AI, Just Wants Its Humans BackEnglish24·1 month agoEh. It’s useful for finding what I want to know. The result to a query which goes like “Based on this paragraph from some documentation written in 2005 (link) the answer is <bunch of generated text rehashing the information I wanted to find in the first place>” is a whole lot more useful than “Here is a list of thousands and thousands of irrelevant and incoherently sorted results, of which one is probably what you were looking for. Good luck.” which was, unfortunately, the state of the art up to this point.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•Company Regrets Replacing All Those Pesky Human Workers With AI, Just Wants Its Humans BackEnglish1·1 month agoI lived through the dotcom hype cycle, the 5G cycle, the crypto cycle, etc. The useful (boring!) bits of technology remain and something new and shiny becomes the target of hype and speculation a few years later. Nothing new really.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•Company Regrets Replacing All Those Pesky Human Workers With AI, Just Wants Its Humans BackEnglish3·1 month agoYeah the AI hype levels are insane, but at the same time I think there is some interesting and actually useful technology there. That’s my 2c anyway.
The search thing is specific to internal data sets btw. Anyone who has used intranet search engines at large companies would probably relate just how terrible they are. Much worse than Google is at searching the internet.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•Company Regrets Replacing All Those Pesky Human Workers With AI, Just Wants Its Humans BackEnglish44·1 month agoSure, you can’t trust LLMs and just copy-paste whatever comes out of it. But it’s very effective as a way to find something in very large mixed datasets when you may not know which exact keywords to use for a traditional search engine.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•Company Regrets Replacing All Those Pesky Human Workers With AI, Just Wants Its Humans BackEnglish75·1 month agoPerhaps I’m using the wrong terminology. But being able to ask in natural language “why is something the way it is” and it returns references to code, bugs, and documentation along with a small summary is pretty cool. It works better than any of the half-baked corporate search engines I’ve used before. Is this not “knowledge retrieval”? In any case I can see the utility.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•Company Regrets Replacing All Those Pesky Human Workers With AI, Just Wants Its Humans BackEnglish1714·1 month agoAI can be a useful tool and I think it will slowly become more common in the workplace, for example it can be very convenient for knowledge retrieval, but it’s laughable to think that it can replace humans. I’d wager any time “AI” can replace a human the job could’ve already been automated through other means.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Climate - truthful information about climate, related activism and politics.@slrpnk.net•Is This the Year We Doom Civilization? We may be losing our last, best chance to limit climate change3·1 month agoAw man I glanced at that chart thinking “oh that’s pretty good!” before reading.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•Unhappy with the recently lost file upload feature in the Nextcloud app for Android? So are we. Let us explain. - NextcloudEnglish3·1 month agoI’ve been looking at possible phone options too. There are several degoogled Android options but it’s still Android of course. And switching to a Linux phone seems like it would be really limiting without access to Android/iOS apps. Do Linux phone users just use the browser to replace all those apps? I guess it could work, though it seems less ergonomic.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•Unhappy with the recently lost file upload feature in the Nextcloud app for Android? So are we. Let us explain. - NextcloudEnglish15·1 month agoI don’t have an Android phone currently but I thought I’d check on iOS and, yep, Google Drive has access to all files. Well that’s a bit hypocritical.
symbolic@infosec.pubto News@lemmy.world•Harvard scientist Kseniia Petrova has been in ICE detention for 3 months. She is one of a growing number of non-criminal immigrants detained by ICE since Donald Trump took office38·1 month agoJust a few years ago I watched the movie Bridge of Spies which, based on real events, dramatically portrayed the arbitrary Kafkaesque detention of American student Frederic Pryor by the evil Stasi and the unjust East German state. Well I guess we’re the baddies now.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Fediverse@lemmy.world•Usernames using randomized nonsenseEnglish15·1 month agoThat’s probably just mail that lands in your spam folder without being entirely blocked. According to Microsoft and Google approximately 99% of incoming spam (of the ~160 billion spam emails sent per day) never even reaches their users mailboxes. I assume that’s roughly standard across email providers. I am concerned comparably sophisticated filtering may become necessary on the Fediverse eventually.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Fediverse@lemmy.world•Usernames using randomized nonsenseEnglish40·1 month agoI’ve been using Fedi for a long time and from the very beginning I’ve been afraid of spam and bots ruining it, at least temporarily. Spam is still a problem with e-mail, and it’s been around for 40 years and they’ve developed very sophisticated anti-spam mitigations for it.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Hardware@lemmy.world•Chinese chipmaker readies 128-core, 512-thread CPU with AVX-512 and 16-channel DDR5-5600 supportEnglish2·1 month agoI wonder why they’re still proceeding with x86 instead of focusing on ARM or RISC-V. If you don’t have to worry about running Windows it seems like x86 is less future proof.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Hardware@lemmy.world•OneChipBook-12-A is a $215 mini laptop with an FPGA for retro computing - LiliputingEnglish2·1 month agoI’m aware that’s true for complex multi chip systems like arcade boards. The Mister project for example. But a simple Z80? I expect it to emulate virtually perfectly. Maybe not? Hence why I’m curious.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Global News@lemmy.zip•Second US Navy jet is lost at sea from Truman aircraft carrier141·1 month agoThe buttery males greased the flight deck!
symbolic@infosec.pubto Hardware@lemmy.world•OneChipBook-12-A is a $215 mini laptop with an FPGA for retro computing - LiliputingEnglish31·1 month agoPretty neat. But why an FPGA? I would imagine if you want to run software targeting really old chips, like the Z80, you might as well run it on a modern x86/ARM/RISCV processor with an emulator on Linux.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•A brutal message to Westerners who are whining about Chinese dominance in electric cars, claiming it's ''unfair''English2·1 month agoI visited Europe recently and used a rideshare service, the guy was driving a new BYD compact SUV. I was surprised at how nice it was. The interior styling was still a little eccentric, which is something I noticed before with Chinese cars, but the build quality appeared to be very good. It was definitely a vehicle I would consider if they were for sale here in the US. American car manufacturers must be relieved to be protected by arbitrary trade barriers.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•List of Alternatives to Adobe ProgramsEnglish13·1 month agoThe same with Lightroom sadly. The open source alternatives are either too buggy or have UX designed by very “opinionated” people, making them painful and frustrating to use. I currently want to get rid of Lightroom but can’t.
symbolic@infosec.pubto Technology@lemmy.world•EU fines Apple $568m for deterring third-party payment methods on App StoreEnglish1064·2 months agoPerhaps that’s because Steam doesn’t seem to be trying very hard to “lock in” developers to their platform. Devs are free to sell their PC games on Gog or Epic or whatever. Steam is popular because it’s a good platform. This freedom for developers or customers mostly does not exist on mobile or on consoles, except for the EUs efforts here.
Even their “console” the Steam Deck can, relatively easily, run games from other stores. I’m not saying a 30% cut should be considered fair but they do seem to take a different approach to digital sales than the other large players.
Yeah this is the first time I’ve heard of someone being taken while trying to leave the country. Very Kafkaesque.