

This mischaracterisation really struck me during the coverage and commentary of the recent “AI blogged about my rejection” as if that weren’t something prompted by a human for.


This mischaracterisation really struck me during the coverage and commentary of the recent “AI blogged about my rejection” as if that weren’t something prompted by a human for.


SK Hynix are building more supply, I thought I saw: https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/dram/sk-hynix-to-spend-usd13-billion-on-the-worlds-largest-hbm-memory-assembly-plant
May be misinterpreting that, though.


So, to go back to the question above, would he be suing the American branch of the BBC which is the US-operating segment (and I suspect doesn’t have billions of dollars) or trying to sue the BBC which doesn’t operate in America (leaving that to the US branch)?
Or would be be suing, for instance, whatever broadcast service performed the BBC broadcast in the States? (It doesn’t sound like this)


The digital foundry video said no plans to support at launch.


I’m sure they haven’t tested this out, at all. 😅
In more seriousness, does it not just look like the same distance as on the steam deck (which I find comfortable to use), but mildly rotated?


Have you, uh, seen steam input and the new controller with the touch pads? It sounds like you haven’t…


Just as I was saying to myself “I’m pretty happy with the Garmin I have, I don’t need a new Pebble,” here come Pebble’s marketing department with a reason!
… What do you mean this is an announcement from Garmin?


I tried a pair of the Xreal Ones recently. They were pretty decent, though I was a little disappointed by the limited FOV (relative to real life screens, as I gather they’re pretty good for this style of display) the screen pinning was very good, and I really liked the “ultrawide” support (other than the aforementioned fov).
I’m thinking about buying a pair before I have a bunch of long flights later in the year.


And they just got partially acquired by HP.
Real “got money, I’m out” energy, there.


Which part of the industry are you looking, if you don’t mind revealing?
Others have recommended other file explorers, but I use FX and rather like it.


I’ll be honest, I’m very confused about what you mean when you say that Google Wallet isn’t a thing. I pay with my Android phone everywhere, so ubiquitously that I’ve frequently left the house with just my phone and keys.
Do you mean America, where contactless payment is far less frequently accepted, or the concept of clicking on a “Pay with Google Wallet” style prompt on a website?


I enjoyed reading this, thank you.


Certainly sounds more interesting than my original read of it! Sorry about that, I was grumpy.


I don’t understand how you could understand how LLMs work, and then write this.
Machines can learn that…
Ah, nevermind.
If you’ll excuse me saying, I feel that you are the one who is looking at something and extrapolating.


The things you are describing sound like if-statement levels of automation, GitHub Actions with preprogrammed responses rather than LLM whatever.
If you’re worrying about being replaced by that… Go find the code, read it, and feel better.
Yes, people are being forced to use it if they want to, for instance, search using Google or Bing.
As the parent comment suggested, or there’s no way to opt out, currently.
I’m glad you see value in it; I think the injection of LLM queries into search results I want to contain accurate results (and nothing more) a useless waste of power.


Yeah, what’s the jokey parable thing?
A CTO is at lunch when a call comes in. There’s been a huge outage, caused by a low level employee pressing the wrong button.
“Damn, you going to fire that guy?”
“Hell no, do you know how much I just spent on training him to never do that again?”
(</Blah>)
It was popularised after world war 2, iirc, so it’s been the way it is for a good while.