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Kent Sharkey wrote: VB has to remain statisfied with Miss Congeniality And VB6 with "fear the undead"?
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Advances in AI and high-performance computing are changing the way scientists look for new battery materials. Hey ChatGPT, what's a good new battery material?
Oh, sorry. "Hey Bing..."
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"Found", "Found out" or "made up to get more funds for further studies"?
M.D.V.
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It’s the year of the AI PC, after all. In case you need an AI to help write your shopping list
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Article wrote: It’s the year of the AI PC, after all. I would say: "It's the year for buzzword bingo und bullsh1t decissions, that increase exponentally the performance bottlenecks and force people to buy new hardware"
A good "hidden" strategy to force people continue buying hardware that is not really needed and roll out more market share of windows 11
M.D.V.
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Nelek wrote: A good "hidden" strategy to force people continue buying hardware that is not really needed and roll out more market share of windows 11
Although a number of applications have been, and are being, back-ported to Windows 10. E.g., New Outlook, Media Player, Copilot.
Kevin
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9,388 engineers polled by Motherboard and Blind said AI will lead to less hiring. Only 6% were confident they'd get another job with the same pay. "You get a good job with more pay and you're okay"
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Kent Sharkey wrote: AI will lead to less hiring CodeMonkeys will have it difficult, yeah.
Good Devs will still have good jobs for a while, when the consequences of using AI in production start popping out and someone is needed to clean the mess.
M.D.V.
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Could ChatGPT N (for large N) quit the game of generating code in a high-level language like Python, and produce executable machine code directly, like compilers do today? Is the correct guess, "no", or "heck no"?
Betteridge's Law of Headlines wins again
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Kent Sharkey wrote: Is the correct guess, "no", or "heck no"? I prefer "no ing way"
M.D.V.
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Quote: As coding assistants become more accurate, it seems likely to assume that they will eventually stop being “assistants” and take over the job of writing code.
This just tells me the author isn't a programmer, or at least not a great one.
I just think that's the only way you make that assumption.
Granted, the companies who should definitely know that, and their CEOs... They are selling that idea to people who definitely wouldn't have any reason know better.
Edit:
I saw a post on social media criticizing some Indian guy because he posted a joke about integrating AI into something popular but where the whole joke was basically "ok guys, let's do source control, but with AI" and the entirety of the explanation was "source control + AI" (though it wasn't source control, I can't remember).
The vast majority of responses "did not get the joke" to say the least.
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{foo}+AI! is basically the theme of this years CES. And Windows product launches.
TTFN - Kent
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Wait, so he was attacking MSFT and I misread the situation?
(it's a real shame we have no lion emoji to repeat 20x)
Admitted fanboy. But I did not know anything about all that. Thanks.
It is not at all surprising though.
I am a bit ashamed I didn't figure out that context to put what I saw into it.
There would have been at least a silver lining to what I thought I was reading.
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Fancy a Windows laptop that's also an Android tablet or a mouse and keyboard powered by kinetic energy and solar Cry 'Havoc!', and let squirt the streams of wash!
Because of course my brain stopped listening at, "voice-commanded bidet"
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Short, handwritten lines of unrelated words contained coded weather reports to send via telegraph in the late 19th century Not even the antique dress pocket (ADP) encryption is safe anymore
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Article wrote: contained coded weather reports And they needed such a codification that lasted until today to get it craked only for weather reports?
Either it has been wrongly "decoded" or they were not weather reports...
Did "AI" help with this?
M.D.V.
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I should've read your message before I posted my own.
It's actually pretty hilarious. It is 19th century bobwehadababyitsaboy.
Antique dress encryption was not a scheme so much for 'protecting' the information (probably).
Rather, it was about compressing the information. Telegraphs were cheaper if smaller.
People continued to do this in some form or another to lower their telecommunications bills across the next two centuries.
This is why people thought that super bowl commercial was a riot.
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The thing I loved about it?
It's 19th century bobwehadababyitsaboy.
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Some are 14th-gen Core and some are Core (Series 1), but they're the same thing. Whatever it says on the sticker
The most confusing Series 1 since Doctor Who
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Kent Sharkey wrote: The most confusing Series 1 since Doctor Who Not to forget "The last windows ever"
M.D.V.
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Apple's AirDrop feature has reportedly been cracked by a Chinese state-backed institution, allowing authorities to identify senders who share "undesirable content" over the peer-to-peer wireless protocol Oh, thankfully they've saved us from bad people using that information
/sarcasm in case there was a doubt
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Read the article - Apple's had several high-profile security failures recently. Makes me wonder just how secure iOS really isn't.
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Kent Sharkey wrote: Oh, thankfully they've saved us from bad people using that information The best way to keep your data safe is... not connect it to the internet. And even then it is not safe, only a bit more difficult to get.
M.D.V.
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Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
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So they say they used rainbow tables to reverse engineer hashes scraped from pretty much wiretapping the stream.
But doesn't that require that AAPL either didn't bother salting such hashes or didn't bother using a good salt?
Or... that they gave China the salt?
Oooo or they just volunteered implied info about their quantum computing capability?
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Researchers at Cybernews have uncovered a huge data leak which could potentially put the entire population of Brazil at risk. And not on the beach this time
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