That kind of seems like a win-win to me.
Curious_Canid
I am owned by several dogs and cats. I have been playing non-computer roleplaying games for almost five decades. I am interested in all kinds of gadgets, particularly multitools, knives, flashlights, and pens.
- 0 Posts
- 65 Comments
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•(Roughly) how old are you and how did you come to be on Lemmy?English
7·3 days agoI’m 65 and I hate the generation labels. I genuinely think they were originally pushed as another propaganda mechanism to create further artificial divisions between people. There is no doubt that people of significantly different ages are often different in various ways, but the over simplicity of the named generations just provides another convenient way to stereotype people instead of understanding them as individuals.
I think I joined reddit in 2008. I’ve been involved in social media since the days of dial-up bulletin board systems in the late 70’s. (And I ran one of my own in the mid-80’s.) I had an email address on Bitnet in 1983 and was on Usenet in its early days. reddit was an interesting and open place for a while there and I enjoyed the variety, but most of it was becoming too cynical and tribal for me by the early 20’s. I discovered Lemmy a couple years before reddit’s API debacle, but that is what convinced me to drop reddit and focus on the Fediverse.
I like the decentralized model of the Fediverse. I think the idea that different servers can have different rules is healthy. I stay away from parts of it, but I have found plenty of communities that are friendly and interesting to me. After hanging out on several different servers, I joined Fedican and have been happy here. It’s a nice place to call my home online.
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•One in four CEOs say AI is a bubble but will continue investingEnglish
7·5 days agoThis is why we could, and should, replace most CEOs with AI. If someone is going to make bad decisions, we could at least avoid paying them hundreds of millions of dollars to do it.
- I read a lot, mostly fantasy, science fiction, and mysteries, plus some non-fiction.
- I play and run non-computer roleplaying games. I started in 1976 and have been at it ever since.
- I have recently taken up playing the recorder, mostly tenor. My wife and a friend play with me.
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Is a relationship that has no long-term future a waste of time?English
4·15 days agoI think the key to this is how you really feel about it. If you are genuinely happy with the arrangement, and aware you will eventually need to move on, that can be okay. If you start to feel any self-esteem issue, like you’re being taken advantage of, it’s time to get out and find something better. Always respect yourself.
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
cats@lemmy.world•This is Jelly. Jelly almost burned the house down this morning.English
451·17 days agoHow is she ever going to learn chemistry if you keep shutting down her experiments?
Curious_Canid@piefed.catocute dogs, cats, and other animals@lemmy.ml•Random.sheepEnglish
4·17 days agoMy random Border Collie thanks you.
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Turns out Generative AI was a scamEnglish
10·19 days agoI write software for a living and I have worked directly with LLM backend code. You aren’t wrong about the exceptions, but I think they actually reinforce my main point. If you play with the parameters you can make all kinds of things happen, but all of those things are still driven by the existing information it already has or can find. It can mash things together in random new ways, but it will always work with components that already exist. There is no awareness of context or meaning that would allow it to make intelligent choices about what it mashes together. That will always be driven by the patterns it already knows, positively or negatively.
It’s like doing chemistry by picking random bottles from the shelf and dumping them into a beaker to see what happens. You could make an amazing discovery that way, but the chances of it happening are very, very low. And even if it does happen, there’s an excellent chance that you won’t recognize it.
I’m in favor of using LLMs for tasks that involve large-scale data analysis. They can be quite helpful, as long as the user understands their limitations and performs due diligence to validate the results.
Unfortunately what we are mostly seeing are cases where LLMs are used to generate boilerplate text or code that is assembled from a vast collection of material that someone who actually knew what they were doing had previously created. That kind of reuse is not inherently bad, but it should not be confused with what competent writers or coders do. And if LLMs really do take over a lot of routine daily tasks from people, the pool of approaches to those tasks will stagnate, and eventually degenerate, as LLMs become the primary sources of each others’ solutions.
LLMs may very well change the world, but not it in the ways most people expect. Companies that have invested heavily in them are pushing them as the solutions to the wrong problems.
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Turns out Generative AI was a scamEnglish
102·19 days agoLLMs are not capable of creating anything, including code. They are enormous word-matching search engines that try to find and piece together the closest existing examples of what is being requested. If what you’re looking for is reasonably common, that may be useful. If what you’re looking for is obscure, you may get things that don’t apply. And the LLM cannot tell the difference. They can be useful but, unlike an LLM, you need to understand the context to use them safely.
I think the most interesting thing about LLMs is actually what they tell us about the repetitive nature of most of what we do.
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•How does the weather affect your mood?English
1·23 days agoFall is probably my favorite season, followed closely by winter. I do use full-spectrum lights to compensate for the shorter days, but overall I think my mood is better during that time. Winter in a forest is one of the most beautiful things in the world.
I stand with Alaric! Where can I buy a campaign button?
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What unusual/uncommon item(s) do you always keep around for a perfectly logical reasons?English
7·25 days agoA small marlin spike. It’s surprising how often I want to untie knots in all kinds of things. A marlin spike makes that easy.
Earplugs. They can obviously be used for protection from overly loud environments. They’re also great for shutting out voices, music, or other noise when you’re trying to read or focus on a task. I like the Loop Switch 2 plugs because they’re small, versatile, and effective.
Ultralight folding bag. I carry a 19 liter bag (Nanobag Sling) with shoulder-length handles that folds down to about the size of my thumb. Any time I need to carry more things than will easily fit in my hands, I pull out the bag. It also lets me support awkward or heavy items using my shoulders and back instead of my hands and arms.
DRM is always a moving target. For a long time I used the free DeDRM tools in combination with Calibre to remove it from Kindle books, but that software is no longer supported. There are several commercial options. The only one I’ve found that has really kept up with the changes is EPubor Ultimate.
When the big change hit, almost nothing worked for a while. EPubor got their DRM-removal working again in a month or so. Since then, I don’t think they’ve ever been more than a week behind in updating their software to deal with the changes.
I hate DRM. I pay for everything I use and feel that I should be treated as a valued customer and not as a probable thief.
I do almost all of my reading on my phone and have for more than a decade. There are many excellent book reading apps, but your source for material will probably limit those options. I prefer books in the ePub format when possible. PDF files also work fairly well, although they are not as convenient to read because they have built-in page breaks that don’t correspond match up with phone screens. Standard ePub and PDF files do not include any DRM (copy protection), although there are variants which do.
If you buy books from Amazon you have to use their Kindle app (unless you use tools to strip the DRM). Borrowing books from your library is a great option, but that will also limit your reader options. Many use OverDrive, which has its own reader. Fortunately Kindle and OverDrive both work pretty well.
Personally, I use various tools to remove the DRM from the eBooks that I buy, then I convert them to ePub. I do believe in authors getting paid for their work, so I don’t share them.
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Technology@lemmy.ml•[Video] China showcases humanoid robot kung-fu performance at Chinese Lunar New Year showEnglish
69·28 days agoWe are screwed.
I came here hoping to see this comment. Thank you for reinforcing my faith.
Bear in mind that it doesn’t actually say “AI” girlfriend. It says “IA” girlfriend. I grew up in Iowa and this all seems perfectly normal to me.
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•I don't actually read the news. I surmise the news based on memes that begin popping up for which I have no context.English
3·1 month agoThat approach makes up a large part of the world in which we now live. It is also one reason why things are as messed up as they are. On the other hand, whether or not to read the news has become a major mental health issue, so I’m not going to blame anyone who avoids it.
Curious_Canid@piefed.cato
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Improving handwriting when exhausted & slightly psychotic?English
2·1 month agoI realize this is an odd suggestion, but think about getting yourself a nice fountain pen and try writing with that. Using a pen that is different from what you’re used to can help you focus on the actual process of writing.

Chocolate is poisonous to dogs! They usually love to eat it, but enough will kill them.
Please, for the sake of your dog, check with your vet for details.