

Why did someone buy their shit?
Why did someone buy their shit?
That might be the case. But more often than not it’s WAY too easy to see that a decision is bad to argue that we can’t implement any measures against that.
In this case we “just” need laws that prohibit that any infrastructure can be dependent on few foreign entities and had to be completely independent if reasonably possible. Diversification or elimination of dependencies as a law.
You can’t rely on foreign proprietary software like Teams for public facilities and infrastructure if there are reasonable alternatives.
You can’t rely only on Russian oil if other countries are available for trade.
We should start making laws and frameworks that prevent us from making bad decisions in the future. Using Microsoft and their products was always a bad decision and fixing that now is way more expensive than whatever the arguments were against Linux and FOSS software in the last two decades. It was just easy and convenient at the time.
Being dependent on Russia for oil didn’t turn out great either.
But I just see people talking about how to change things for the better, never how to prevent silly things in the future. I’d rather be in a situation were we don’t have to fix things.
But it’s 2⁵² addresses for each star in the observable universe. Or in other words, if every star in the observable universe has a planet in the habitable zone, each of them got 2²⁰ more IPs than there are IPv4 addresses.
“How a shitty company with an even shittier codebase full of bad design decisions uses AI” isn’t going to get me hooked on using AI.
Just when you thought Nvidia couldn’t get worse, they praise Trump.
But spending a lot of processing power to gain smaller sizes matters mostly in cases you want to store things long term. You probably wouldn’t want to keep the exact same LLM with the same weightings and stuff around in that case.
Ye but that would limit the use cases to very few. Most of the time you compress data to either transfer it to a different system or to store it for some time, in both cases you wouldn’t want to be limited to the exact same LLM. Which leaves us with almost no use case.
I mean… cool research… kinda… but pretty useless.
Ok so the article is very vague about what’s actually done. But as I understand it the “understood content” is transmitted and the original data reconstructed from that.
If that’s the case I’m highly skeptical about the “losslessness” or that the output is exactly the input.
But there are more things to consider like de-/compression speed and compatibility. I would guess it’s pretty hard to reconstruct data with a different LLM or even a newer version of the same one, so you have to make sure you decompress your data some years later with a compatible LLM.
And when it comes to speed I doubt it’s nearly as fast as using zlib (which is neither the fastest nor the best compressing…).
And all that for a high risk of bricked data.
Shoot this fucker in the face already
Naja den Schaden hat die Regierung davor angerichtet, der Scholz hat danach einfach nur nichts dran geändert. Zu sagen der Scholz hätte den Schaden angerichtet würde bedeuten dass die Bundeswehr vor 3 Jahren in einem völlig anderem Zustand gewesen wär, was absolut nicht der Fall ist. Wir haben halt seit Jahrzehnten nichts in der Regierung was mal irgendwas sinnvolles machen würde. Wundert dann leider kaum dass so widerliche Parteien wie die AfD Zuspruch gewinnen…
Why would I need AI for that? We should really stop trying to slap AI on everything. Also no, I’m not that big of a fan of wasting energy on web crawlers.
Yes I agree on that. A lot of people write “C with classes” and then complain…
I’m a full time C++ developer, mostly doing high performance data processing and some visualization and TUI tools, and as someone loving C++, it’s not as simple as you frame it. In sufficiently complex code you still have to deal with these problems. Rust has some good mechanisms in place to avoid these and there are things on the way for c++26 though.
I’ve been playing Jotunnslayer: Hordes of Hel recently on PC and despite being relatively action heavy it’s 99% left hand (WASD + Q + space)
No, because forking a distro and updating some hundred thousands of PCs is not done in a week.
Edit: and why would we go with Ubuntu…
Living under a rock eh?
You could just emulate on a steam deck while having a bazillion other games available