Don't be biased except for these biases.
This article is a lot better than I expected, since it's not blaming us regular people for not working hard enough.
Rogers pointed to a lack of competition across Canada’s industries as not driving companies to invest.
Canada is also “too often” failing to make proper use of skilled newcomers joining the labour pool, she said, which has major implications for productivity rates.
Lol, after both steal every image on the internet.
No wonder the images look similar.
Also wife bad
It doesn't really bother me, but like you I am bored of it and I generally ignore it, or block communities if I'm seeing too much of it.
It is really cool that the models can generate fairly detailed images, but they're all so similar and... boring. I once saw someone describe it like corporate art. It just tries to imitate something popular in a very mediocre way. You can keep re-training it, but it can still only imitate.
Still, if people are into it then that's ok too. I have used it at work on occasion to create stupid little icons for internal tools I've built, so I guess there's some little bit of utility.
My guess is that it'll be used for a while for cheap and low effort branding, but soon companies will want to hire real artists again to differentiate themselves from the ML spam.
Beatings will continue until morale improves
Came here to say exactly this.
I'd trust the piracy sites more actually. We don't voluntarily give them our credit card and address.
It's a total guess, but my theory is that people on the right are tolerant of enshittification and may even find it appealing, while the rest of us just leave. This seems to be the case with Twitter, so maybe Reddit is following?
The Steam Deck is the full package that not only integrates the hardware and software, but is also an open system. Slapping a some inputs together onto a windows PC just isn't the same thing.
If this is your first night at Bard Club, you have to bard!
In this context the use of "they" is just proper English though. I can't fault someone who speaks a gendered language from using gendered pronouns as is proper in that language, but the use of "they" in English is correct and hardly political or exclusive. Every language is going to have rules that may be strange to non-native speakers, but any "confusion" is easily remedied by explaining that's just how the language works. I find that's also part of the fun of learning another language. I especially love trying to mix the rules of one language into another to see how silly it sounds. :)