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melfie@lemmy.zipto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•If I shared a home with a 36' tall, 2-ton creature, I would be very careful to stay away from its feet while it walked
5·7 hours agoMy cat is always trying to trip me. Then again, she looks and acts like one of her parents was an African wildcat straight from the savanna. Even when she’s being purry and cuddly laying in my nook, she keeps trying to lovingly bite my face off and when I play with her, she does backflips several feet into the air trying to catch whatever toy I’m animating for her. Little creature is half wild!
melfie@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•Anthropic says its latest AI model is too powerful for public release and that it broke containment during testingEnglish
6·19 hours agoYawn, we all know how this goes. So what model am I not supposed to use? I’ll be sure and avoid it, though I’d much rather avoid downloading their leaked weights like I avoid other things I’m not supposed to download.
melfie@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•Anthropic says its latest AI model is too powerful for public release and that it broke containment during testingEnglish
7·23 hours agoScam Altman
😆
The studies about intrinsic vs. extrinsic motivation suggest otherwise, and that monetary rewards can even have a negative impact on productivity and creativity. Ultimately, we want a society of intrinsically motivated people doing their best, most inspired work, not a society following financial incentives.
melfie@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•Claude AI down: Anthropic users hit with errors as chatbot goes offlineEnglish
2·1 day agoClearly SaaS isn’t working out, so just open source all the frontier models and stop building data centers so we can all buy our own GPUs.
melfie@lemmy.zipto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•It should be "as the duck flies", not "as the crow flies".
3·3 days agoDon’t ducks have specific migratory flyaways, so it’s more akin to commercial airlines in that they fly specific routes seasonally? Other than that, I assume they primarily fly between bodies of water. “As the duck flies” would therefore assume that a duck would even fly the route in question, when in fact, a crow may be more likely to fly it than a duck.
melfie@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft says Copilot is for entertainment purposes only, not serious use — firm pushing AI hard to consumers and businesses tells users not to rely on it for important adviceEnglish
8·4 days agoI can see where an AI that fucks everything up all the time might be entertaining like a good slapstick comedy, but nah, Resident Evil Requiem is sufficient entertainment for now.
melfie@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•Tesla Is Sitting on a Record 50k Unsold EVsEnglish
2·4 days agoI didn’t realize TSLA stock had an upward trend most of last year and is only heading downhill this year.
Interesting, I’ve only ever had this issue in Mint as well.
My Mint laptop audio stopped working for a couple months and then miraculously fixed itself this week. I made various attempts to fix it with no luck. It’s either a hardware issue or some obscure software issue.
In the past, I had plugged in a HDMI cable to mirror the screen and couldn’t get the audio working again until I plugged it back into HDMI and switched it back to the internal speakers before unplugging HDMI. Before the audio broke this time, I had connected a USB microphone, so it’s possible that’s what did it.
melfie@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•Tesla Is Sitting on a Record 50k Unsold EVsEnglish
49·4 days agoReading Tesla workers shared images from car cameras, including “scenes of intimacy” was enough to put me off Tesla. The build quality being garbage and Musk also being a garbage human being make the company just a complete waste of space.
Yeah, like Anthropic’s leaked code that was converted to Python and open sourced. It seems proprietary to open source is a bigger opportunity than open source to proprietary. If there’s already a FOSS version, why would anyone bother with a proprietary bastardization of it?
melfie@lemmy.zipto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Cedarville professor, author on Christian sexual ethics, arrested on eight sex feloniesEnglish
9·5 days agoThe Bible doesn’t specifically condemn pedophilia, and in fact seems to endorse it, so I guess he was technically practicing Christian ethics.
https://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/says_about/pedophilia.html
melfie@lemmy.zipto
science@lemmy.world•NASA’s Artemis II Crew Launches to the Moon (Official Broadcast)English
2·6 days agoI would’ve been inclined to agree with you as of 10 minutes ago, until I read this Wikipedia article saying Starship refueling will require 10 or more launches. Damn, that means at least $1b to leave LEO assuming each launch is around $100m, so not really all that much cheaper than expendable stages.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starship_Propellant_Transfer_Demonstration
melfie@lemmy.zipto
science@lemmy.world•NASA’s Artemis II Crew Launches to the Moon (Official Broadcast)English
2·6 days agoI had assumed the propellant would be a single additional launch, but this Wikipedia article says 10. $1B+ to leave LEO definitely makes the narrative that Starship is going to revolutionize space travel sound like a load of bullshit, unless there are realistic plans I am not aware of to reduce the number of launches significantly.
Edit:
This article has more details. It takes 7.5 tanker launches to fill a Starship, but Elon insists 4 should be enough for the Moon, whereas NASA estimates up to 16 due to boil off.
It really sounds like Elon has been overselling the value of Starship, but the saddest part is that other reusable rockets in development will likely have the same problem.
Edit 2:
Even if starship just becomes a heavy launch to LEO vehicles
This seems plausible, whereas Starship shuttling between Earth and Mars to “build a colony” does not. More like Starship is a shuttle to LEO and then something like the Hermes spacecraft in The Martian that remains in space and uses ion drive would be what actually transfers humans to Mars orbit, with perhaps Starship also doing the shuttling between the surface and low orbit. It seems we are a really long way off from what The Martian depicts, though it’s possible the first human may step foot on Mars in the next couple decades.
melfie@lemmy.zipto
World News@lemmy.world•Rocket lifts off with four Artemis II astronauts on a mission to the moon and backEnglish
5·7 days agoAFAIK, the service module is European, built by the ESA, so this is not 100% an American accomplishment.
melfie@lemmy.zipto
World News@lemmy.world•Rocket lifts off with four Artemis II astronauts on a mission to the moon and backEnglish
4·7 days agoWhile Whitey’s on the moon
At least the crew for this mission includes a black guy and a woman, unlike the 24 white dudes who crewed the Apollo missions.





They’d probably like to come colonize our planet, but with 2x the gravity of Earth, I bet it’s hard to build a rocket that can actually get them into space, much less travel 1800 light years.