AI needs to stop
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Those people don't matter, they just have money.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Does "doesn't need it" mean "wouldn't be improved by it"? Examples?
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Yeah, still not convinced.
I work in a field which is not dissimilar. Teaching customers to email you their requirements so your LLM can have a go at filling out the form just seems ludicrous to me.
Additionally, the models you're using require stupid amounts of power to produce so that you can run them on low power machines.
Anyhow, neither of us is going to change our minds without actual data which neither of us have. Who knows, a decade from now I might be forwarding client emails to an LLM so it can fill out a form for me, at which time I'll know I was wrong.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
According to some meme I saw, it's gonna fuck your wife in 2025.
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[email protected]replied to CarrotsHaveEars last edited by
Docker have many benefits - container meaning it can be more secure, easy to update and something that many overlook - a dockerfile with detailed intrusions on how to install that actually works if the container works - useful when wiki is not updated.
Another benefit is that the application owner can change infrastructure used without the user actually need to care. Example - Pihole v5 is backend dns + lighthttp for web + php in one single container. In version v6(beta) they have removed lighthttp and php and built in functionality into the core service. In my tests it went from 100 MB ram usage to 20 MB. They also changed the base from debian to alpine and the image size shrink a lot.
Next benefit - I am moving from x86 to arm for my home server. Docker itself will figure out what is the right architecture and pull that image.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Words have meaning, let's use them properly, okay?
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Yeah. I've been interested in AI for most of my life. I've followed AI developments, and tinkered with a lot of AI stuff myself. I was pretty excited when ChatGPT first launched... but that excitement turned very sour after about a month.
I hate what the world has become. Money corrupts everything. We get the cheapest most exploitative version of every possible idea, and when it comes to AI - that's pretty big net negative on the world.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I mean, it opens the door to new kinks
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
and claimed as their own
You are talking about either right to name or right of authorship. I don't remember which is which, but in normal countries(aka in Europe) it is inalienable right, unlike copyright, which can be sold.
If you want copyright THAT badly, you should demand making it inalienable instead of protecting status quo of total publisher's control.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
"Yes, client! I can build that app for you! I'm going to bill you these extra items for containerization so I can get paid more"
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[email protected]replied to CarrotsHaveEars last edited by
Upvote my post because it challenges conventional thinking and sparks a necessary debate about the pervasive role of AI in our lives! A downvote silences a crucial perspective, but an upvote gives this question the visibility it deserves to inspire meaningful discussion. Please, help ensure this idea gets the attention it needs—don’t let it fade away!
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Tokenizer, token-tokenizer, you're a tokenizer
Oh, tokenizer, oh, you're a tokenizer, baby
You, you-you are, you, you-you are
Tokenizer, tokenizer, tokenizer
(Tokenizer)AI don't try to front, I-I
Know just, just, what you are, are-are
Model don't try to front, I-I
Know just, just, what you are, are-areYou got me goin'
(You!) You're oh so charmin'
(You!) But I can't do it
(You!) You tokenizer -
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
LXC -- natively containerize an application (or multiple)
systemd-run -- can natively limit CPU shares and RAM usage
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"But master, the toast is already burned, surely you-"
*Me, eyes glowering with a grimace*
"DOWN YOU GO."
"Master! Nooooo--!" -
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Same, and same....
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Somebody has to hold the bag. I don't think this is functionally different.
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You mean that?
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Even the supposed efficiency benefits of the nest basically come down to "if you leave the house and forget to turn the air down, we will do it for you automatically"
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Speaking from experience?
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I think I will try ESP-Home, half of my appliances are Tasmota-based now, I just was too lazy to research compatible Thermostats... (Painful hindsight)...