

Sort of, there used to be way more HDD manufacturers and then they all talked each other into dropping them for SDDs. Now a sudden need arises and there are no HDDs.


Sort of, there used to be way more HDD manufacturers and then they all talked each other into dropping them for SDDs. Now a sudden need arises and there are no HDDs.


As far as I can tell there hasn’t been any tangible reward in terms of pay increase, promotion or external recruitment from using the cognitive amplifier.


He’s never going to stop so they might as well give up hopes now of Americans ever buying their stuff again


So just a video then without the game


Yeah maybe if you lived 6,000 years ago in the Volga River valley.


Same it seems useless to me. The real value is knowing how songs relate to each other in terms of being played before/after other songs, and that’s only available via internal datasets that they could never scrape anyway.


Plugging in a flash drive and having it just work would be a start. Linux beginners don’t care about the plight with exfat support.


And what if people don’t, are they going to look you up anyway to prove you lied? So if they can do that then what’s the point?


Right I thought it was cyber security something or other like API keys now duck duck go probably thinks I’m a creep


Who wants to click on an icon to open a program when you could just type in the program you want and have it guess what to open amirite?


Actually it won’t be finishing anything because code is disposable now and nobody cares what trivial app somebody can churn out


They make it seem like families being fed is somehow the emergency that needs to be prevented.


Jokes on them because there has to be a product that exists that’s for me in the first place to have AI generated ads for it.


What is this AI everywhere concept actually supposed to accomplish for the end user? Maybe I’m just behind on the vision but I can’t grasp the point. I have a feeling it’s not really about what the users want but I’d love to here a genuinely good use case.


But Wikipedia actually is crowd sourced data verification. Every AI prompt response is made up on the fly and there’s no way to audit what other people are seeing for accuracy.


Yet I still have to go to the page for the episode lists of my favorite TV shows because every time I ask AI which ones to watch it starts making up episodes that either don’t exist or it gives me the wrong number.


Because you have to be tech savvy to understand what the fediverse is or how ActivityPub works so it sets the filter for a userbase that evangelizes emerging technology.


If Lemmy is supposed to be the place where the most tech savvy people in the interest congregate, and everyone in the comments is unsatisfied with AI then we really do have a problem. These companies have all reached a point where they no longer listen to their most informed customer base but instead take 100% of direction from investors who don’t even know what they want except a line going up.
No thanks I’ll have my soda ROOM TEMP without any FROZEN WATER