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3 yr. ago

I'm a technical kinda guy, doing technical kinda stuff.

  • While I agree that having a charging point at home is not mandatory, it's much much friendlier,

    Even a normal outlet can handle slow charging an EV if you drive less than 100km a day.

    Typical EV usage : 18kWh per 100km

    Typical "granny" charger : 1800 watts (240v,7 amps)

    10 hours at 1800 watts = 18kWh = 100km.

    Get home at 6pm, plug in car, car is charged at 4am , leave for work at 7am. Enough spare time there to shift to charging outside peak evening usage at 9pm instead.

  • That thing looked like it took a 90 degree turn to what they were aiming at. I'd hate to be sitting at a traffic light in Moscow somewhere and get a Russian missile to the face.

  • And despite having silicon ear plugs at the last two

    Are they "music" earplugs that attempt to have a flat attenuation across the whole audio spectrum? High frequency sound is the most easily attenuated by earplugs so if you use "normal" earplugs that just aim for max attenuation you might find drum'n'bass overpowering everything else.

  • Broadcom's tactic here is to dump the little fish, keep the whales. Then rake in that revenue for very little effort in support and development until budget proposals showing better alternatives are written, enterprise capital expenditure cycles around to the next refresh, and the whales finally go elsewhere.

  • Yes, it's trending in that direction, and I've been experimenting with pretty small models on my PC as I don't really have the hardware to go large. If you've got the coding chops to set it up, it's definitely something to keep an eye on.

    There's actually scope for someone to set up / sell local compute hardware+software packages, similar to all those coin miners. Give the end user a way to update models, or push models out to them or something, it seems it would be a good middle ground between manually typing code like a peasant and total corporate AI apocalypse.

  • If you've got a toy project that you want "AI" to give you a hand with, do it now.

    Pretty soon all these companies are going to have to pay for all that investment in compute resources they've been busily soaking up over the last few years, and then they're going to have to pay back their investors, and then they're going to have to try and make a profit

    This is the golden time for cheap commercial AI. Already the noose is starting to tighten, and it will never again be as cheap as it is now.

  • Once again the pendulum swings and everything old is new again.

  • Exactly. Functional public health systems will assess patient outcomes and the expenditure in money and resources to determine what treatments get approved.

    The odds are pretty good that - if this works out - this will be on the list of approved treatments straight away. Surgery is an expensive and high-load pathway for public health systems. A non-surgical treatment that gives good outcomes is such a win-win for both patients and public health systems that it almost doesn't matter how much it costs.

  • To be honest I'd rather get OOM errors in my consumer OS than endless disk thrashing. At least mechanical drives were more resilient and you could hear the thrashing, as opposed to silent massive wear on your SSDs.

  • Yeah, it's on the to-do list. I still don't like it endlessly paging though. I also hate Microsoft's push to get everyone on win11 even if their PC's will run like asthmatic slugs.

  • No, the worst app is Windows 11. My parents have some all-in-one HP PC. It has some Intel laptop processor from about 8 years ago, 16GB of ram, (upgraded from 8), and a wheezy 256GB spinning drive, running Win10 adequately.

    After being bombarded with "upgrade to Windows 11! It's easy and fun!!" notifications, they did so, and of course their PC is woefully underpowered for the job.

    I log in remotely and check what's running and the OS is paging to the swap file constantly. [Edit: and I mean, to the point where opening an application takes 60 seconds of disk thrashing for a window to appear]

    I had to get a de-bloat script and turn off about 50 Microsoft "essential services". The biggest hog out of them all was copilot, which was using about 4GB while sitting there idle.

    I have no doubt that I'm going to have to run that script every month as everything gets "repaired", until I can get back to their place and put a SSD in and maybe install some flavour of Linux.

  • So does every city, suburb, town, factory, mine, processing plant, farm, etc.

    What you're missing is that all these things provide economic benefits locally.

    A datacentre uses prodigious amounts of local resources, but doesn't provide much in the way of local returns. It's very much a case of "privatise the profits, socialise the losses" for the locals.

  • Article talking about a little robot taking images of the lander, no images given.

    So here's an image of the faceplanted lander that I found in a 5 second search, because Gizmodo couldn't be bothered to show it in the article, preferring to link to one of their other articles instead to get those juicy clicks.

    < sad lander noises >

    And the press release from the toy manufacturer's website.

    (Side note: I love Japanese websites. Their designs seem to be stuck in the late 90s., along with their floppy disks and fax machines)

  • You know what?

    I'd love to hear a little "toot-toot!" and have a little train pull up outside my window, with my parcel on a carriage behind it.

  • Brave's been making, uh, some controversial philosophical design choices lately.

    I mean, they had some before, but now they also have a few more lately that have riled people up a bit.

  • Where we're going, we don't need roads a rear window.

  • I use them for a bit of coding leverage, and they require a fair bit of... not hand holding, but explicitness, maybe. Otherwise they wander down the path of statistical averageness, and the average code they saw during training was shit.

    So they'll happily serve up a pile of inefficient dogshit, complete with working tests and docs and all of that. And then they'll happily refactor it at your suggestion to slowly turn it into something that's resource friendly and generally secure and generally expandable.

    But there's no way for them to do that by themselves if you don't have the basic domain knowledge to guide them in the right direction. You'll just get average code, and once you've been in the game for a few decades, you realise that nice, efficient, quality code is the rarity, not the norm.

  • And last mile how?

    Progressively smaller gauge railways, until your Amazon parcel arrives via a 1-inch track on the regular 3.15pm service from the end of your street.

  • xml is better than markdown, you will not change my mind

    Markdown is for humans who are writing their prose on the fly and don't want to be bothered with the cognitive load associated with the extra verbiage and rulesets of XML.

    XML is for computers which are great with verbiage and rulesets.

    It's perfectly fine to have a converter between the two to bridge the gap.

  • TURBO PASCAL FOR LYFE