
...so a modest but significant improvement has been achieved, but nowhere near the temps required for melting ore.
Just stack six of these in series, problem solved. /s
Try harder. A simple request to filter out the nonsense in Gemini gives:
After filtering out the "nonsense"—the pop-culture references (Lord of the Rings, IT, Purple People Eater) and the random metaphors (poison, sandwiches)—the core message appears to be a critique of modern data processing or AI training compared to traditional publishing.
The "correct" message hidden in the text is:
The Core Message
It is inefficient and costly to pay humans to fix low-quality or "noisy" data. Instead of spending money to clean up automated nonsense, it would be more effective to invest in high-quality, verified sources (like books) and pay human creators fairly, as the system was originally designed to function.
Breakdown of the "Noise" Removed
"Poison and noise are the way": Likely a sarcastic opening about the current state of data. "Making a sandwich for those you love": Irrelevant personal imagery. "Off to take the ring to Mordor": Lord of the Rings reference. "Clowns in the sewers... red balloon": Stephen King’s IT reference. "Purple people eater... walking downtown": Reference to the 1958 novelty song.
The Logic Retained
The Problem: It is "not fruitful" to pay humans to undo/fix "noise" to make it "useful." The Result: This process ends up forcing people to "ingest fact" (raw data) without proper context. The Solution: "Buy the books and pay people correctly" according to the original "system."
Would you like me to help you rewrite this message into a formal argument or a professional email?
it is really more useful than Katie from Sales getting skin cancer on a beach in Thailand or that...
A large chunk of air transport is also freight. And business. And regular domestic travel for people going from A to B, travel that doesn't include holidays for Kate or that drunk dude in Mallorca.
And when you look at those uses, AI is still running a pretty distant second place.
It seems that every new release adds another layer of indirection (misdirection?) between you and the useful stuff you need to access. I use a third party utility to manage IP settings, and it's one click from its menu to get to the network adapter page. It takes me about 5 minutes of angry clicking around in stock standard win11 before I get to the same place.
The main one I use is the network adaptor settings, where you can enable/disable protocols and most importantly for me, where you can easily add multiple IP addresses on a network adaptor.
The Win 8+ network settings page is an absolute trainwreck. I particularly like how it doesn't warn about conflicting IP addresses now and just silently accepts your given address and provides an auto-assigned 169.254 address instead if it sees even the smallest hint of another computer out there using the address you want to use.
Guaranteed fun and confusion trying to access/ping things until you finally check the status of the network adaptor and discover the auto assigned address, thanks Microsoft.
Not everyone wants to use dhcp, which is clearly their preferred direction, and there have been bugs where Cisco devices trigger that flip to auto assigned addresses even if things are fine.
Microsoft applied a data-driven approach to find out which features to add now, which features to add later, and which to completely avoid.
Which is why if you dig deep enough into Settings you'll see WinXP Control Panel UI elements. You know, the elements that are actually useful for power users.
the killswitch is in
about:config
Ah yes, the easiest place to put a kill switch for the average user, as opposed to the complexity of a toggle in settings.
Which is worse?
- Entire driver written in a non memory safe language?
- The interface to the rest of the kernel is marked as unsafe and then the other X percent is safe from memory corruption?
Surely if X > 0 then this is still a net improvement?
This is inaccurate. OP , look it up for your airline. You'll find all the information you need for your particular circumstances in a handy guide on their website, because they very much want you to know.
In general though:
Devices containing batteries with less than 100Wh capacity can go in checked luggage as long as they are completely turned off and can't be accidentally turned on. There are limits to how many, for example a suitcase full of laptops will be frowned upon. Vapes and other similar devices (that is, things designed to get hot) need to go in carry-on.
Spare batteries (for eg power tools) need to go in carry-on and again, there are limits to how many.
Anything > 100Wh, like scooters or biiiiig powerbanks need special permission or are banned outright.
The cable between the two boards would be a maximum of 50cm. 3 of the signals are addresses for a multiplexer that would change at a maximum speed of 2ms per change. One of the other signals is a 20khz pwm signal. The final signal is a zc detector for mains so max Freq of 100/120hz.
None of this will be a problem over 50cm of cat5. If you were talking about millivolt or MHz signalling then you'd have to be a bit more careful.
Regarding wifi and power draw, you could always do batch uploading of data to another server at something like a 1:10 ratio, or upload only when there's a change of more than 1 degree or similar.
There are some low power deep sleep esp32 boards out there that can do like 3-6 months on a couple of AA batteries. A lot of power draw comes from hanging around on wifi doing dhcp, so having fixed addresses can cut down power usage considerably.
Even without using the wifi side of things the esp32 boards come with lots of IO , plenty of drivers for various devices, and a reasonable in-house (i.e. not Arduino) development environment so I'd be leaning in that direction.
You could also look at Sharp's memory LCD as opposed to normal LCD, as that's extremely low power without the fiddlyness of e-ink screens.
If you read the phrasing carefully it's quite clear that it will be doing things to the codebase, just "with oversight".
How much oversight? Not sure, just some assurances that there will be oversight.
Vibe coding is essentially just a different phrase for that.
each driving for one hour per day with a computer consuming 840 watts
This entirely depends on what energy source we end up using in 2050.
IF , you assume that by 2050 home solar and batteries are a common item, and consumer electric vehicles are predominantly charged at home via those sources , then claims of emissions becoming a concern are moot. Seeing that home solar/batteries are becoming more common now, with 25 years to go, this is not a huge stretch of the imagination.
Each individual vehicle has daily energy requirements that can be sourced relatively easily by local renewables, unlike datacentres which have huge energy requirements requiring energy to be piped in from sources elsewhere.
Apart from that , the 0.8kWh/day usage of the computer hardware is entirely dwarfed by the (handwave guess) ~20kWh/day usage of the actual electric drive system, where trivial improvements in efficiency can compensate for the 0.8kWh/day usage of the computers. Hell, improvements in efficiency because of the adoption of autonomous driving instead of leadfoot humans at the wheel might end up making all this a net positive.
So, after sifting through all the other breathless articles from their website it seems that they're going to :
- Use a LLM to attempt to sort out their documentation.
- Have a chatbot trained on the docs so you can ask it questions and possibly get coherent answers.
- Some sort of vague thing where the LLM provides guidance and suggestions on improvements to the codebase.
Lots of reassurance that they're not going to let it do vibe coding but to be honest, they doth protest a little too much methinks.
I just got GPU temp monitoring working on my old dell laptop. "Heat management" for the GPU is pretty much just an extra chunk of steel tacked onto the heat pipe halfway between the CPU and its radiator, so GPU temps are always in the red.
I might as well just turn off monitoring and remain ignorant 🤷
It's a 1/4 wave antenna with a groundplane. Physics dictates the size.
Compared to the PCB antenna in your average USB dongle, this would have at least two to three times the range, and likely more than that, because you can put it somewhere more optimal than just poking out the back of your device.
entirely separate and much more sophisticated technology
Or some math nerd will come up with an algorithm for general AI that is embarrassingly simple, and before you know it the "but can it run Doom?" crowd are implementing AI in toasters and watching them have existential crises for the lulz.
promises improved support for Wayland users by raising the minimum supported Wayland version to 1.20...
What a nice fluff piece for NVIDIA. How does ditching users below 1.20 and fixing an issue in their own UI improve support for Wayland exactly?
I do wonder if ditching < 1.20 support just so happens to fix the drop down issue they were having in their UI....
Some of the biggest jumps in house prices were when interest rates were less than 2 percent and you could get a million bucks from the bank just by asking to see the manager and giving them a firm handshake.
I can agree Pauline Hanson is a problematic individual
So problematic individuals shouldn't be punished by the collective? You know what happens then? A few problematic people muddy the waters and generally make it very difficult to actually get shit done.
just for that one stunt with that burqa
There are rules in the senate. They allow for structured and robust debate, but there are limits. You don't become a "problematic individual" with just the one stunt.
Ms. Hanson is - in my humble opinion - a shit-stirrer presenting views stuck in the 1950s that do not mesh well with 21st century geopolitics. Those views are popular with a small segment of the population and she knows it. Stunts like this give disproportionate attention to that small segment at the detriment to everyone else.