Not sure what you’re trying to say. Are you saying this is a good thing?
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You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK you can add a noAI version of DuckDuckGo to Firefox
5·3 days agoBecause people want to be free from being bombarded by AI slop.
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World News@lemmy.world•Trump says anything less than having Greenland in the United States’ hands is ‘unacceptable’English
271·7 days agoAre you actually arguing that the US should take Greenland? What in the actual fuck?
What are you talking about? What citations?
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Technology@lemmy.world•F*** You! Co-Creator of Go Language is Rightly Furious Over This Appreciation EmailEnglish
1·13 days agodeleted by creator
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No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•What common American habits do people find quietly annoying?
162·16 days agoI certainly wouldn’t call that “well-traveled” and bragging is kinda dumb in general, but it is worth pointing out that the US does have a huge diversity of different cultures, demographics, and environs in different states (so much so that they can often feel like different countries), so it’s perhaps not as quaint as it sounds. It’s not like traveling within a European country. Much closer to traveling within the EU.
Still would never call that being “well-traveled”, though.
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Programming•The Compiler Is Your Best Friend, Stop Lying to It - Daniel Beskin's Blog
61·22 days agohttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algebraic_data_type
Some reading material for you. Sum types allow for proper, compiler-enforced error handling and optionality rather than the unprincipled free for all that is exceptions and nullability.
Tony Hoare, the person that originally introduced nulls to the programming world, is oft-quoted as calling nulls the “billion dollar mistake”. Here’s the talk: https://www.infoq.com/presentations/Null-References-The-Billion-Dollar-Mistake-Tony-Hoare/.
Nulls are absolutely pervasive in Java and NPEs are not avoidable. At minimum, most of the ecosystem uses nulls, so most any library will have nulls as part of its interface. Null is an inhabitant of every type in Java (even
Optional, ironically). You cannot escape it. It’s a fundamental flaw in the design of the language.Btw, you also can’t escape it in Typescript, either, due to unsoundness of the type system and the fact that many types for libraries are bolted on to the original JS implementation and may possibly be inaccurate. But still, it’s a lot less likely than Java.
Why are you talking about functional programming? Python sure as hell isn’t FP.
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Parenting@lemmy.world•A majority of parents with a child under 2 years old (62%) say their child watches videos on YouTube, up from 45% in 2020
2·24 days agoYeah only time my 2 year old son watches a YouTube video is when brushing his teeth.
I think there’s nothing wrong with that at all. Screentime is fine in limited, intentional doses with clear boundaries (and shows that are not complete dogshit, like Paw Patrol). Because we limit screen time, he’s very excited to brush his teeth because he gets to watch a short cartoon video. I think it’s much more problematic when it becomes a regular thing during the day, especially at mealtime. I see parents at restaurants with their kid glued to an iPad for an hour and it’s depressing.
I can only speak to Nebraska, but the malls here have all of those things except for record stores (for obvious reasons), and the number of malls has not changed in decades. They’re all in various central locations of Lincoln and Omaha and are very much community spaces. Tons of families come to let their kids play in the play spaces (especially lower-income families), teenagers hang out at the mall with their friends, and so on.
I qualified my statement, so not sure what you were hoping to achieve with your comment.
Also, that can happen for any number of reasons that are entirely unrelated to whether or not malls are dead. Like, for example, Amazon offering an obscene amount of money to the owner of the mall to buy it out for the real estate.
This is pretty much what my local mall looks like right now. The whole “all the malls died out” thing is mostly a myth, in my experience. Every time I go it’s absolutely full of people.
I have never witnessed this supposed “dying out”. All the malls in my area are decked out for Christmas and have tons of people there all the time. I’ve been multiple times myself even in the last couple of months.
People always talk about this as a given, but I’ve never actually seen it. Ultimately, malls are one of the few remaining third spaces that you can be for free. That matters a lot.
Not like that at my local mall at all. Decorations everywhere and more people than ever.
Setting aside the fact that that is not even remotely true, do you think Linux = Red Hat? What about almost every other distro being run by volunteeers?
I’ve only ever seen redhat used by government and some corporations. As far as the broader community goes (especially the foss community), they are a pretty minor player.
It’s honestly insane that you can sit there and shill for Microsoft these days. They’ve always been pretty evil, but now they’ve gone so far off the deep end they’re even driving away people who have been all-in on Microsoft their whole lives. Even non-tech people are getting simply fed up with all of the spying and intrusive, AI-infested bullshit. Linux marketshare has been steadily increasing over the last couple of years, and it doesn’t look like it’s slowing down anytime soon. And all of it is, ultimately, because Windows is forcing people away.
Eh, git is never really that fucked. If you understand how it works, it’s generally not hard to get back to a state you want (assuming everything has been committed at some point, ofc).
I would much rather people try to spend some time trying to understand and solve a problem first. I had a “senior” engineer who would message me literally every morning about whatever issue he was facing and it drove me absolutely nuts. Couldn’t do anything for himself. Unsurprisingly, he was recently laid off.
My time should be respected.
vim is definitely cooler than neovim.




That’s how it works. It has a fairly profound psychological effect on people where they can easily be convinced that it’s beneficial, when the actual reality is that we have absolutely no evidence of that being the case. On the contrary, we have a growing body of evidence that it has a great deal of negative effects, like decreasing productivity, cognitive decline, widespread social issues arising from their use, and more.
As to your point, they haven’t actually fundamentally changed at all since the original transformer model paper was written in 2017. The only thing that has changed over time is the number of parameters and the datasets (that is, vacuuming up and stealing all content on the internet). But it does the same thing as it’s always done, which is simply generate the next token by taking the token with the greatest probability across a probability distribution created from the combination of the tokens it’s seen before. Note that this is simply a maximum, so if all of the tokens in the distribution have a low probability, it will still take the max, resulting in hallucinations, fabrications, illogical conclusions, and so forth. That has not, and quite simply cannot, change. You would need a fundamentally different technology for that, and quite frankly, one that exists purely in the realm of science fiction.