

Google has too much of a long history of discontinuing their apps not long after launching them, this one won’t be any different.
Google has too much of a long history of discontinuing their apps not long after launching them, this one won’t be any different.
Can people not search “Ed Zitron newsletter,” or “Ed Zitron podcast”? I’m kinda surprised how much this happens
Would it kill you to add the links yourself?
There you go:
Ofc they’re not, they’re not made for knowledge nor intelligence, they’re made to “predict” language patterns based on probability.
That’s what they do and what they’re trained for, nothing more.
EDIT: CZM Rewind: The Academics That Think ChatGPT Is BS | Better Offline
The problem with Microsoft is they always try to cater to the absolute lowest denominator when it comes to users, I understand why they do it, because there are indeed some people that shouldn’t look at a computer even with a binocular, but I don’t agree with their approach nonetheless.
Being treated like a moron by an OS infuriates me and that’s why I switched to Linux many years ago.
I think Trump open war against them helps, I mean, if you cut them our of critical supply, you push them to develop their own, they’re not stupid.
What the heck does “more ambient” even mean?
you’ll be able to speak to your computer while you’re writing, inking, or interacting with another person. You should be able to have a computer semantically understand your intent to interact with it
God save us all…
It’s a zero-day vulnerability but the article doesn’t say what it is.
Microsoft states it affects all on-premises servers, they say their cloud is not affected.
The company I work for did the same, it’s not easy to completely replace an onpremise virtual farm but we’re working on it :)
Do you really believe they don’t have backups? Especially since it seems selling content for AI training was their plan for quite a while?
Or that they didn’t make full backups a couple years ago before the protest, anticipating a lot of users would try to delete their comments?
I think the only way to truly delete anything from reddit would be living in EU and enforcing a GDPR request, but even in that case, I believe it would be very difficult to check they actually comply.
Why? It’s the point of Lemmy, being able to participate in communities regardless of where they’re hosted and where your account is registered.
I hope they’ll disclose at least the origin, and what they think their reasons are, when it’s over.
I’m curious about who would attack Arch and why.