[-] [email protected] 1 points 6 days ago

All fair points, my issue is mostly with how this is advertised and that I would not want to learn anything from an inherently untrustworthy LLM. Would have liked to use something with quick access to both human-made explanations and a built-in dictionary/thesaurus when I was learning English myself.

[-] [email protected] 13 points 6 days ago

The way the ad is presented makes it look like there's something wrong with the original (❌) and that the mangled version is better (✅), as if it was actually improved.

The tool removed all the subtext from the original by using this very neutral, matter-of-fact language. There is actual information lost there, not just rigmarole. And that's the example they chose to put into the ad.

LLMs will also make shit up or completely misinterpret what's being written, I wouldn't trust it to get through an entire book without grossly misleading the reader or flipping out. They can't parse that much text at once right now so all interpretation of a chunk of text will have only a very broad, short and possibly wrong/irrelevant summary of what came before for context.

I don't even want to know what this would do to something like a Pratchett novel or a textbook.

As far as accessibility tools using machine learning go, wouldn't a text-to-speech reader app be better for dyslexics anyway?

[-] [email protected] 29 points 6 days ago

Okay, now do Nietzsche!

[-] [email protected] 70 points 1 week ago

For real though, containerization isn't the only way to separate applications from each other but totally fine, it's the "It works on my machine, so here's my machine" mentality that doesn't fill me with confidence. I've seen too much barely-working jank in containers that probably only get updated when a new version of the containerized application itself is released.

[-] [email protected] 56 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I had a Jolla smart phone, it was pretty great but it also quickly became apparent that the company had no real intention to make Sailfish the Android-compatible, open and privacy-friendly OS I was hoping it'd be. Selling licenses to customers to put the OS on third party hardware really killed it for me.

Kinda surprised they are still around, but I guess knowing the right magical words to whisper to investors is a good enough business strategy. They've done it with blockchain, now it's AI.

[-] [email protected] 25 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Algebraic notation breaks just about every rule programmers are taught about keeping their code human readable. For example:

  • Variable and function names should be descriptive
  • Don't cram everything into one line
  • Break up large statements
  • Consistency is key
  • Don't be fancy for fancy's sake, don't over-optimize (this is for learning, remember?)
  • Add in-line comments for lines that aren't easily grasped
  • Be explicit where possible (it's a convention to omit the multiplication operator when multiplying variables because variables are only one letter anyway...)

And then we force kids to cram the whole stdlib (or rather its local bastardization) into their heads or at best give them intentionally bad (uncommented) documentation during exams while wondering why so many just don't seem to get it, even resent it.

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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
[-] [email protected] 23 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

I don’t even know why people use Windows 10 (or 11) other than momentum.

Security updates. That's it, that's the only reason I recommend anyone unwilling or unable to switch operating systems all together to move to Windows 10.

44
submitted 6 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
[-] [email protected] 23 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

I often joke about people putting on their “corporatesonas” at work.

I hate mine, it's going in the trash bit by bit. What a boring, miserable and insecure guy that was.

[-] [email protected] 24 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

strings `which mysterytool` | less

Give up your darn secrets before I start fumbling around with strace and get even more frustrated!

[-] [email protected] 30 points 8 months ago

That's a very Brent Spiner thing to say, doesn't mean he actually hated that cat. And it wasn't just one cat playing the role anyway. Most if not all of them were good cats I'm sure.

[-] [email protected] 27 points 11 months ago

Währenddessen:

Die Landesregierung von Schleswig-Holstein beschwert sich bei der Bundesregierung über Kürzungen bei Open-Source-Software. Das Thema der digitalen Souveränität scheine "weit aus dem Fokus des Bundes gerückt zu sein", kritisiert der Chef der Kieler Staatskanzlei, Dirk Schrödter (CDU), in einem Brief an den Chef des Bundeskanzleramts, Wolfgang Schmidt (SPD). "Gerade in einem Markt, der zur Monopolbildung neigt, muss der Staat darauf achten, sich nicht in Abhängigkeiten zu begeben", heißt es weiter in dem Brief, der c't vorliegt. 25 statt 48 Millionen Euro

Anlass für Schrödters Beschwerde ist der Anfang Juli von der Bundesregierung veröffentlichte Haushaltsentwurf für 2024. Dort sind für den Bereich "digitale Souveränität" nur noch knapp 25 Millionen Euro vorgesehen, nach 48 Millionen Euro im Vorjahr. "Es ist also von massiven Kürzungen beim Zentrum für digitale Souveränität (ZenDiS) und damit u. a. dem souveränen Arbeitsplatz auszugehen", schreibt Schrödter in seinem Brief.

Das erst Ende 2022 von der Bundesregierung gegründete ZenDiS soll die Entwicklung von Open-Source-Software für Behörden und Ministerien vorantreiben und dadurch die Abhängigkeit des Staates von Konzernen wie Microsoft reduzieren. Zentrales Produkt des ZenDiS ist der "souveräne Arbeitsplatz", der seit Kurzem "openDesk" heißt. Dabei handelt es sich um eine Suite aus Open-Source-Webanwendungen für Office und Kommunikation. Grundlage ist die "dPhoenixSuite" des öffentlichen, norddeutschen IT-Dienstleisters Dataport.

[...]

Mit den nun von der Bundesregierung geplanten Kürzungen wäre eine effektive Weiterentwicklung des souveränen Arbeitsplatzes und der Open-Source-Plattform OpenCode "kaum möglich", warnt Schrödter in seinem Brief. "Die zentralen Vorhaben zur Stärkung der Digitalen Souveränität und zum Aufbau eines nationalen und europäischen Open-Source-Ökosystems werden stark beeinträchtigt." Der Staat müsse eine aktive Rolle bei der Förderung von Start-ups und mittelständischer, deutscher Unternehmen übernehmen "und nicht nur außereuropäische Konzerne beauftragen."

Quelle

Alles völlig richtig. Würde ja gern behaupten, dass da bestimmt wieder massiv Lobbyarbeit betrieben wurde, aber mittlerweile ist die Idee, dass man ohne Microsoft eigentlich gar nicht arbeiten kann, ja ein Selbstläufer geworden.

[-] [email protected] 20 points 11 months ago

More DRM. Browsers already support DRM schemes for media playback.

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kshade

joined 1 year ago