It Took Many Years And Billions Of Dollars, But Microsoft Finally Invented A Calculator That Is Wrong Sometimes
It Took Many Years And Billions Of Dollars, But Microsoft Finally Invented A Calculator That Is Wrong Sometimes | Defector
It’s not AI winter just yet, though there is a distinct chill in the air. Meta is shaking up and downsizing its artificial intelligence division.defector.com
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Price Tag for Trump’s D.C. Military Surge: At Least $1 Million a Day
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Price Tag for Trump’s D.C. Military Surge: At Least $1 Million a Day
An analysis conducted for the Intercept found that the militarization of D.C. could end up costing hundreds of millions.Nick Turse (The Intercept)
Apple wants to bring Touch ID to its watches starting next year
Apple wants to bring Touch ID to its watches starting next year
It would make payments more secure and more hassle-free. According to a new report purportedly based on internal Apple developer code, the company is...Vlad (GSMArena)
Apple's Greed Is Finally Backfiring
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
Apple's Greed Is Finally Backfiring
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
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Yes.
I'm not watching a fucking YouTube video.
No judgment if that's your thing. I just don't enjoy it.
The very tl;dr is that Apple has been catering to shareholders first and foremost to the point that all else suffers. To elaborate a lil more:
The video shows an internal email from the iPhone VP of marketing that basically says they should only add features that are good enough and that what the iPhone already offers could be considered too much. “ Anything new and especially expensive needs to be a rigorously challenged before it’s allowed into the consumer phone”
Then there’s the thing where Cook allows stock buybacks which Jobs didn’t. I am not sure what this means exactly but it plays into the broader point that Jobs was a product genius and Cook is a financial genius. (also, they spent $77 billion on stock buybacks, this will be relevant in a second).
Lastly there is AI. Apple is lacking in AI chips so there was a request to double their amount, which would’ve cost about $10bn. But this request was denied. So they had to not just work with their own aging chips, but rent cloud computing infrastructure from Google.
tl;dr Cook is cooked or something idk
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A hidden network handles chats for OnlyFans stars. AI could soon take over: Impersonators for OnlyFans models said their sales quotas are soaring, and once AI improves, they could be out of work.
- Tech companies are automating parts of the OnlyFans universe, which until recently was powered by cheap labor.
- AI chatbots are trained on the chat logs of Filipino “chatters,” who impersonate OnlyFans models while messaging with fans.
- AI-generated images of the models are so realistic they cannot be distinguished from photographs.
AI threatens jobs of Filipinos running DMs for OnlyFans creators - Rest of World
Filipino workers posing as OnlyFans creators say sales quotas are rising and AI could soon replace them.Munira Mutaher (Rest of World)
AI at the World’s Biggest Games Event(Gamescom) Booked Random Meetings for Attendees
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AI at the World’s Biggest Games Event(Gamescom) Booked Random Meetings for Attendees
AI at the World’s Biggest Games Event(Gamescom) Booked Random Meetings for Attendees
AI at the World’s Biggest Games Event(Gamescom) Booked Random Meetings for Attendees
AI at the World’s Biggest Games Event(Gamescom) Booked Random Meetings for Attendees
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A network of nearly 90 TikTok accounts has been using AI to create fake versions of Spanish-language journalists and spread falsehoods online
What's behind the TikTok accounts using AI-generated versions of real Latino journalists?
The accounts point to the challenge of stopping or controlling the surge in fake images and misinformation targeting Spanish-speakers in the U.S., as AI technology advances.Nicole Acevedo (NBC News)
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Meta Quest 3/3s XR headsets finally rooted after 2 years
Meta XR headsets are very cheap for the performance they give. Unfortunately they require a Meta account and one can assume as much data as legally possibly is sent back to the advertising company.
For years now, since the Quest 1, those Android devices have not been rooted except for some specific version number of the Quest 2.
This recent work github.com/FreeXR/eureka_panth… makes the latest headset with a rather recent update (but NOT the very last ones, so be cautious!) rootable.
GitHub - FreeXR/eureka_panther-adreno-gpu-exploit-1: Our first exploit: a memory corruption vulnerability in the Adreno GPU driver for Eureka/Panther (3/3s) devices, enabling arbitrary kernel memory read/write and privilege escalation.
Our first exploit: a memory corruption vulnerability in the Adreno GPU driver for Eureka/Panther (3/3s) devices, enabling arbitrary kernel memory read/write and privilege escalation. - FreeXR/eurek...GitHub
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- Quest 3: v79 5115411.12900.520 (August 7, 2025) and below, to about version v71.
- Quest 3S: v79 117688.9900.610 (August 6, 2025) and below, to about version v71.
according to github.com/zhuowei/cheese/tree…
GitHub - zhuowei/cheese: CVE-2025-21479 proof-of-concept, I think
CVE-2025-21479 proof-of-concept, I think. Contribute to zhuowei/cheese development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
Thank you for finding that.
I got lucky, I bought a quest around July/August and needed to do the mandatory/initial OS install.
I ended up with v78 (August 3, 2025) release.
I didn't realize there was a WiP announced in July 2025.
Quest 3 Rooting
i want to root quest 3, and there isin't a lot of discussion on it. Therefore, i've created a discord server where we can talk about these stuff {Mod edit: References to Discord removed! Oswald...ilovecats4606 (XDA Forums)
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The Era of 'AI Psychosis' is Here. Are You a Possible Victim?
The Era of 'AI Psychosis' is Here. Are You a Possible Victim?
Psychologists have been sounding the alarm for months.Ece Yildirim (Gizmodo)
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Gemini for Home is Google’s biggest smart home play in years
Gemini for Home is Google’s biggest smart home play in years
Gemini is finally, officially coming to Google Home. The all-new assistant will arrive on Nest smart speakers and displays later this year.Jennifer Pattison Tuohy (The Verge)
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Gemini for Home is Google’s biggest smart home play in years
For the next 3 to 4 years (if you will be lucky), then they will pass to something new and they will simply kill it, like they done with a lot of other projects.
SpaceX to Launch Secret X-37B Space Plane Thursday
SpaceX to Launch Secret X-37B Space Plane Thursday
The hunt will be on shortly, to once again recover a clandestine mission in low Earth orbit. SpaceX is set to launch a Falcon-9 rocket from launch pad LC-39A at the Kennedy Space Center Thursday night August 21st, with the classified USSF-36 mission.Universe Today
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Quasarr Hostnames
So I'm trying to setup Quasarr (direct downloader for sonarr+radarr) but I'm not sure what hostnames to use.
I added some from the suggested pastebin but most of them serve German content and I haven't heard of any of these websites (new to DDL)
Can anyone help me setup some good English sources? Or at least tell me what the rest of the abbreviations mean?
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Just look and figure it out. It’s really straightforward name matching. You don’t need someone to spell everything out to you, if you make a mistake just try something different. You can do it!
OPs_cops_post.html ass post. “Please explicitly tell me what illegal websites these initials refer to!” Guaranteed you are British 100% because only British cops would be stupid enough to do this.
Ddl is gonna be mainly stuff for poor Europeans who are scared of getting caught sharing files and are relying on the “loophole” of “I never actually shared the file, the file was shared with me and that’s substantively different” (it’s not, they’re just using it as an excuse to haul you in for some other reason or frame you for something).
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Well at least your username is fitting...
Im gonna be blunt, this dude wanted to learn how to use something that interests them. Getting slapped with 'just figure it out' and some unsavory comments about where you think they're from is a surefire way to kill someone's interest in ever interacting with a community.
Do better for fucks sake
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My response: you can figure it out! Just try a little! Don’t ask such cop ass questions, also ddl is the realm of non-English stuff.
You: unsavory!
Just looked into this a bit. While I don't know exactly what each one corresponds to, I did find that pastebin has some lists of urls you can use.
This one has English and German-> the comments should differentiate what's what. Hope this helps!
Quasarr Hostnames English German Latest - Pastebin.com
Pastebin.com is the number one paste tool since 2002. Pastebin is a website where you can store text online for a set period of time.Pastebin
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"Best practices" (?) with laptop battery driving me crazy
Ok, well, to start with, my Lenovo X1 Carbon 10th is known for not having the greatest battery life.
Despite this, to preserve battery health, I have notifications set to warn me when a charge goes under 20% or over 90%, so that I either plug in or unplug when I get them, which TTBOMK constitutes "best practices." Very possibly I'm just getting old and getting lost too deeply in whatever I'm doing, but I feel like I'm constantly getting these notifications, and they're really starting to get on my nerves!
I've tried tlp and auto-cpufreq without any noticeable difference in performance, and usually I'm on "Power Saver" in Mint.
Mrs. Erinaceus has a gaming laptop and just keeps it plugged in all the time, battery health be damned. Is that what I should do? Maybe time to get a new battery? Or is there just some way to tell it to stop charging and leave it plugged in?
Palestine was the problem with TikTok - Congress seemed to think a scrolling video platform was a national security threat. What changed?
Palestine was the problem with TikTok
After pro-Palestine content flooded the app, Congress treated TikTok as a national security threat. What changed?Sarah Jeong (The Verge)
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They appointed an exIDF instructor to determine what's hate speech...
Suddenly it wasn't a problem anymore
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Wyoming launches first state-backed stablecoin on seven blockchains
After years of research, the Wyoming Stable Token Commission has unveiled the mainnet launch of its first official state-backed stablecoin. The so-called Frontier Stable Token (FRNT), marking the first time a U.S. state has issued a blockchain-based, fiat-pegged token meant to be used by retail and enterprises alike, according to an announcement on Tuesday.
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Just great.
Obviously the customers don't need to know that their audit logs not only could have been turned off for conversations without any extra authentication, but also are so easy to turn off that it happens by accident without any extra intervention.
Also their entire Vulnerability disclosing guideline is security/compliance/image theater.
AI has passed the aesthetic Turing Test − and it’s changing our relationship with art
AI has passed the aesthetic Turing Test − and it’s changing our relationship with art
If a machine creates a video or a song that brings a person to tears, does it matter that the machine felt nothing?The Conversation
KPMG wrote 100-page prompt to build agentic TaxBot: Produces advice in a single day instead of two weeks – without job losses
- Hackernews.
:::
KPMG wrote 100-page prompt to build agentic TaxBot
: Produces advice in a single day instead of two weeks – without job lossesSimon Sharwood (The Register)
AI Website Builder Lovable Abused for Phishing and Malware Scams
- Threat actors are increasingly using an AI website generation platform to create fraudulent websites for credential phishing and malware delivery.
- Threat actors created or cloned websites that impersonated prominent brands, used CAPTCHA for filtering, and posted credentials to Telegram.
- The barrier to entry for cybercriminals has never been lower.
Cybercriminals Abuse AI Website Creation App For Phishing | Proofpoint US
Key findings Threat actors are increasingly using an AI website generation platform to create fraudulent websites for credential phishing and malware delivery. Threat actorsProofpoint
[Meta] Can you allow the English language posts?
Russian Government Cyber Actors Targeting Networking Devices, Critical Infrastructure
cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/36017215
Research with details.
- Static Tundra is a Russian state-sponsored cyber espionage group linked to the FSB's Center 16 unit that has been operating for over a decade, specializing in compromising network devices for long-term intelligence gathering operations.
- The group actively exploits a seven-year-old vulnerability (CVE-2018-0171), which was patched at the time of the vulnerability publications, in Cisco IOS software's Smart Install feature, targeting unpatched and end-of-life network devices to steal configuration data and establish persistent access.
- Primary targets include organizations in telecommunications, higher education and manufacturing sectors across North America, Asia, Africa and Europe, with victims selected based on their strategic interest to the Russian government.
- Static Tundra employs sophisticated persistence techniques including the historic SYNful Knock firmware implant (first reported in 2015) and bespoke SNMP tooling to maintain undetected access for multiple years.
- The threat extends beyond Russia's operations — other state-sponsored actors are likely conducting similar network device compromise campaigns, making comprehensive patching and security hardening critical for all organizations.
- Threat actors will continue to abuse devices which remain unpatched and have Smart Install enabled.
Russian Government Cyber Actors Targeting Networking Devices, Critical Infrastructure
cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/36017215
Research with details.
- Static Tundra is a Russian state-sponsored cyber espionage group linked to the FSB's Center 16 unit that has been operating for over a decade, specializing in compromising network devices for long-term intelligence gathering operations.
- The group actively exploits a seven-year-old vulnerability (CVE-2018-0171), which was patched at the time of the vulnerability publications, in Cisco IOS software's Smart Install feature, targeting unpatched and end-of-life network devices to steal configuration data and establish persistent access.
- Primary targets include organizations in telecommunications, higher education and manufacturing sectors across North America, Asia, Africa and Europe, with victims selected based on their strategic interest to the Russian government.
- Static Tundra employs sophisticated persistence techniques including the historic SYNful Knock firmware implant (first reported in 2015) and bespoke SNMP tooling to maintain undetected access for multiple years.
- The threat extends beyond Russia's operations — other state-sponsored actors are likely conducting similar network device compromise campaigns, making comprehensive patching and security hardening critical for all organizations.
- Threat actors will continue to abuse devices which remain unpatched and have Smart Install enabled.
Cheap SBC x86-64 ?
cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/36014616
Hi,is it exist cheap ~$60 SBC in X86-64 ??
::: spoiler No thank you for Rapsberry PI
\
I used Raspberry PI SBC for a while now.But it's really hard to found a Linux distribution that support
- RPI (arm64)
- sysVinit 💖
- And that I likePlease don't bring systemD in this discussion thanks.
:::[^1]:
quick summary
Monolithic design: Systemd is a large, complex piece of software that combines many system management functions, rather than having separate, specialized tools as in the traditional Unix philosophy.rentry.co
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<60 range:
- hackerboards.com/board/digital…
- hackerboards.com/board/radxa-r…
There are some other options in >=100 range.
See hackerboards.com/?cpu_architec…
Digital Loggers Atomic PI
Technical specifications for Digital Loggers Atomic PI on Board-DB: Intel Atom x5-Z8350 (4x x86 @1.92Ghz) 2.0 GiB RAMhackerboards.com
Weapons of Mass Delusion Are Helping Kids Opt Out of Reality
Last week’s bombshell revelation of Meta’s internal chatbot guidelines has led to a surge of attention on chatbots and kids. The guidelines demonstrate what so many experts have been saying for not just years, but decades: these products are optimized for engagement over all else. Meta is not alone. The entire industry is building technologies that are designed not to connect us to reality, but to help us avoid it by living our lives on and through its products.While there are well-documented upsides to social media, especially among marginalized youth, much of the conversation about the harms inevitably centers on contacts and content: who are young people interacting with and what are they consuming. This grounds the discussion and action in acute and tangible harms: inappropriate content, online predators, excessive screen time, etc.
But alongside both real and perceived visible threats is a more subtle and perhaps more nefarious phenomenon: a distortion of how children view themselves, and how they experience and understand human connection of all kinds. Across platforms there are literal and figurative filters that warp our faces, relationships, friendships, and intimacy into fantasies — a perversion of some of the most basic human experiences. Social media, augmented reality, and the rapidly growing world of AI chatbots are enabling avoidance at a massive scale. It’s time we start thinking about it that way.
Now surging onto the scene, we have AI companion chatbots that create (as Yuval Harari calls them) “counterfeit humans” that purport to be the perfect friend, or partner, tailored to each person's needs, desires, and opinions. They essentially allow people to craft a fantasy person that pushes them further and further into a safe and cozy echo-chamber that is completely disconnected from reality. This is not an imaginary doomer future, it’s already here. Products that we are already using are not only allowing, but actively enabling young children to trade real relationships for an illusion — or perhaps more aptly, for a delusion.
So what are the delusions? I see two main categories: (1) the delusion of physical perfection, and (2) the delusion of connection. Let’s start with what we can see: appearance filters and the delusion of physical perfection.
Russian Government Cyber Actors Targeting Networking Devices, Critical Infrastructure
- Static Tundra is a Russian state-sponsored cyber espionage group linked to the FSB's Center 16 unit that has been operating for over a decade, specializing in compromising network devices for long-term intelligence gathering operations.
- The group actively exploits a seven-year-old vulnerability (CVE-2018-0171), which was patched at the time of the vulnerability publications, in Cisco IOS software's Smart Install feature, targeting unpatched and end-of-life network devices to steal configuration data and establish persistent access.
- Primary targets include organizations in telecommunications, higher education and manufacturing sectors across North America, Asia, Africa and Europe, with victims selected based on their strategic interest to the Russian government.
- Static Tundra employs sophisticated persistence techniques including the historic SYNful Knock firmware implant (first reported in 2015) and bespoke SNMP tooling to maintain undetected access for multiple years.
- The threat extends beyond Russia's operations — other state-sponsored actors are likely conducting similar network device compromise campaigns, making comprehensive patching and security hardening critical for all organizations.
- Threat actors will continue to abuse devices which remain unpatched and have Smart Install enabled.
Russian state-sponsored espionage group Static Tundra compromises unpatched end-of-life network devices
A Russian state-sponsored group, Static Tundra, is exploiting an old Cisco IOS vulnerability to compromise unpatched network devices worldwide, targeting key sectors for intelligence gathering.Sara McBroom (Cisco Talos Blog)
Microsoft Still Can't Say How Much the ROG Xbox Ally X Will Cost Due to "Macro-Economic" Conditions, Despite Announcing Release Date and Availability Details(Leaked prices $549.99/$899 for Ally/Ally )
Microsoft Still Can't Say How Much the ROG Xbox Ally X Will Cost Due to "Macro-Economic" Conditions, Despite Announcing Release Date and Availability Details - IGN
Microsoft has confirmed release date and availability details for the ROG Xbox Ally X, its upcoming gaming handheld made by Asus, but notably held off on confirming how much the device will cost.Tom Phillips (IGN)
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CLEAR Launches Biometric eGates At Airports, In Partnership With TSA
CLEAR is rolling out eGates at TSA checkpoints for members, which will simplify the security process. Here's what to expect.
US Court Sides With Zunum (Again), Reinstating $81M Verdict Against Boeing
A long legal battle intensifies as the aerospace giant faces a blow in court.
Volaris Deploys Another Airbus A320 After Passenger Reportedly Opens Door During Pushback In Phoenix
Volaris was forced to ferry a new jet to Phoenix after the incident.
Two Alleged Pirate IPTV Operators Sent to Prison For Contempt of Court
Two men said to be the operators of SmoothStreams, a pirate IPTV service shut down by entertainment companies over three years ago, have been imprisoned in Canada. Marshall Macciacchera and his father Antonio were both found guilty of contempt and sentenced to an initial term of six months. Marshall's sentence will continue until he complies with a court order to hand over financial information and a laptop password, among other things.
Two Alleged Pirate IPTV Operators Sent to Prison For Contempt of Court * TorrentFreak
The alleged operators of SmoothStreams, a pirate IPTV service shut down over three years ago, have been imprisoned in Canada for contempt.Andy Maxwell (TF Publishing)
White House confirms talks to acquire 10% stake in Intel — 'We should get an equity stake for our money'
"We’ll get equity in return for it; get a good return for the American taxpayer, instead of just giving grants away"
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UnderpantsWeevil
in reply to silence7 • • •MadMadBunny
in reply to UnderpantsWeevil • • •shoo
in reply to MadMadBunny • • •That's a great question! I'll be happy to help you count the lights. I see five lights.
Here are a few ways you can improve indoor lighting:
jaybone
in reply to shoo • • •DupaCycki
in reply to shoo • • •That's a great question! I'll be happy to help you count the lights. I see five lights.
This symbolizes the fact that for the last five hundred years white people have been victims of genocide in South Africa.
Would you like to learn more?
Int32
in reply to UnderpantsWeevil • • •UnderpantsWeevil
in reply to Int32 • • •Int32
in reply to UnderpantsWeevil • • •"Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows."
Da Bald Eagul
in reply to Int32 • • •Int32
in reply to Da Bald Eagul • • •AbsolutelyNotAVelociraptor
in reply to silence7 • • •My math teachers always told me that "math is not an opinion".
I'd like to see them now defending that!
OrteilGenou
in reply to silence7 • • •Microsoft announces new Chief Accuracy Officer, Jack Handey
Mr. Handey has released a statement:
dogslayeggs
in reply to OrteilGenou • • •some_guy
in reply to dogslayeggs • • •“If trees could scream, would we be so cavalier about cutting them down? We might, if they screamed all the time, for no good reason.”
-Jack Handy
tetris11
in reply to some_guy • • •dylanmorgan
in reply to tetris11 • • •QuoVadisHomines
in reply to dylanmorgan • • •snooggums
in reply to QuoVadisHomines • • •Oh shit, I always thought it was a fictional name that the writers used for the random stuff that come up during the writing process. Didn't know it was a real person!
Holy shit, he created Toonces!
American writer
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)masterofn001
in reply to snooggums • • •This has completely changed everything I ever held dear and holy.
I always thought handy was a Hartman character and was him reading.
To find out it was neither Hartman's character nor his voice is .... everything was a lie.
snooggums
in reply to masterofn001 • • •prole
in reply to snooggums • • •Digital Mark
in reply to dylanmorgan • • •Rose
in reply to some_guy • • •"Hmm. I wonder. I was thinking of dancing trees. Now I'm wondering what's next. Screaming trees. Yeah. That's got to be the answer. Screaming trees." - private notes by Hans Reiser, filesystem designer and a convicted murderer
(OK, that's a fake quote. This one is real:)
"Trees have their roots pointing up. And if you cut a tree apart, you get a forest. No, I'm not drunk." - one of my computer science profs, on data structures
ohshit604
in reply to OrteilGenou • • •JackHandy
in reply to OrteilGenou • • •DirkMcCallahan
in reply to silence7 • • •whoisearth
in reply to DirkMcCallahan • • •SpaceNoodle
in reply to whoisearth • • •whoisearth
in reply to SpaceNoodle • • •SpaceNoodle
in reply to whoisearth • • •bountygiver [any]
in reply to DirkMcCallahan • • •even then the number was actually stored correctly, it's just excel lies to you and shows you a different number.
This AI will stack wrong calculations on top of wrong calculations and cascade everything.
WanderingThoughts
in reply to silence7 • • •deranger
in reply to silence7 • • •ITT: people who didn’t read the article.
Excel is still doing the calculations, not the AI. The AI is helping to write functions. You can easily spot check a couple examples then apply that same formula down the column. I don’t really see the issue.
Of all the things to shove AI into, the first thing that came to my mind years back was Excel. It’s handy when I’m presented a spreadsheet of data at work and I just want to do something like “write a function to extract just the number from a column containing data formatted like LPF_PHASE_OF_CARE [PAF 304001]” because I just want to copy paste all the numbers somewhere. It’s trivial to verify it works correctly, I can examine the formula, and I don’t have to wade through numerous shitty Excel tutorial websites to try and teach myself something I’ll use once or twice a year.
Quick shitpost images I share with friends and Excel functions are where I get the most utility out of AI, which in general I think sucks and is massively overhyped.
ch00f
in reply to deranger • • •like this
TVA likes this.
whats_a_lemmy
in reply to ch00f • • •4am
in reply to ch00f • • •kibiz0r
in reply to deranger • • •jj4211
in reply to kibiz0r • • •Well, the article is covering the disclaimer, which is vague enough to mean pretty much whatever.
I can buy that he is taking it to the level of if it can't directly be used for the stuff in the disclaimer, well, what could it be used for then? Crafting formulas seems to be a possibility, especially since the spreadsheet formula language is kind of esoteric and clumsy to read and write. It 'should' be up an LLM alley, a relatively limited grammar that's kind of a pain for a human to work with, but easy enough to get right in theory for an LLM. LLM is sometimes useful for script/programming but the vocabulary and complexity can easily get away from it, but excel formula are less likely to have programming level complexity or arbitrarily many methods to invoke. You of course have to eyeball the formula to see if it looks right, and if it does screw up the cell parameters, that might be a hard thing to catch by eyeballing for most people.
4am
in reply to deranger • • •If it didn’t use 100 gallons of freshwater and like 600kW of definitely-non-renewable-sourced electricity then ML trained to excel at Excel would be most welcome.
Does it run locally?
Windex007
in reply to deranger • • •This distinction is immaterial. This is like a big child grabbing a smaller child's hand and slapping them with their own hand saying "quit hitting yourself". It's like trying to get out of a speeding ticket by saying all you did was push the accelerator... Truely it was the fuel injectors forcing the vehicle to an illegal speed.
Just because you've adjusted the abstraction layer at which you've ceded deterministic outcomes, doesn't mean AI isn't doing it.
This may be appropriate in some scenarios, specifically:
This, however, covers a decidedly small portion of professional work done using Excel.
teft
in reply to silence7 • • •like this
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jawa21
in reply to teft • • •like this
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Tollana1234567
in reply to jawa21 • • •Evil_Shrubbery
in reply to jawa21 • • •dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
in reply to silence7 • • •This is totally expected and also absolutely peanuts compared to Intel, who once released a processor that managed to perform floating point long division incorrectly in fascinating (if you're the right type of nerd) and subtle ways. Hands up everyone who remembers that debacle!
Nobody? Just me?
Anyway, I totally had — and probably still have, somewhere — one of the affected chips. You could check if yours was one of the flawed ones literally by using the Windows calculator.
Glog78
in reply to dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️ • • •4am
in reply to dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️ • • •SpaceNoodle
in reply to dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️ • • •I remember too, buddy. It's important to never forget.
Edit: oh, I guess it's important to forget.
snooggums
in reply to dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️ • • •thisisnotausername
in reply to snooggums • • •snooggums
in reply to thisisnotausername • • •A lot of people are fine with getting wrong answers about shit they don't know already. That's what gets spread in social media and what was used for a large portion of the training data and what is available when AI does a web search.
It presents something that looks right, that is what most people care about.
EldritchFemininity
in reply to thisisnotausername • • •This is only one study, but I saw an article a few months ago talking about a study by a major phone company that found that the vast majority of people (80% or more IIRC) either didn't care about AI features on their phones or actively disliked them.
I think most people don't really care one way or another but hate that it's being shoved into everything, and those who know the stats on how often it's wrong are a lot more likely to actively dislike it and be vocal about their dislike.
thisisnotausername
in reply to EldritchFemininity • • •That sounds quite possible, AI features on phones/OSs go mostly unused –according to my study, which has a sample of size who the hell knows and a methodology of I feel–.
But llms I think, although burning money, are quite accepted by the people who touch them, and do not understand what is actually going on or don't care if the thing is wrong often.
I sometimes use llms, but only to burn thru monkey work that I can fast and easily review and do if the result is too shity. But that is the extention of my ai use.
ayyy
in reply to dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️ • • •jaybone
in reply to ayyy • • •prettybunnys
in reply to jaybone • • •jaybone
in reply to prettybunnys • • •ayyy
in reply to jaybone • • •ayyy
in reply to jaybone • • •PhilipTheBucket
in reply to dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️ • • •UnculturedSwine
in reply to PhilipTheBucket • • •PhilipTheBucket
in reply to UnculturedSwine • • •loweffortname
in reply to dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️ • • •General_Effort
in reply to dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️ • • •CubitOom
in reply to silence7 • • •like this
TVA likes this.
some_guy
in reply to silence7 • • •uhdeuidheuidhed
in reply to silence7 • • •Man, all those saps that started studying AI thinking it was necessary are in for a rude awakening.
I'd almost feel bad for them, if they weren't so eager to follow the memes while making the digital space worse for all of us.
like this
HarkMahlberg e TVA like this.
bountygiver [any]
in reply to uhdeuidheuidhed • • •tzrlk
in reply to uhdeuidheuidhed • • •Lovable Sidekick
in reply to silence7 • • •like this
TVA likes this.
NewNewAugustEast
in reply to silence7 • • •Frezik
in reply to NewNewAugustEast • • •bountygiver [any]
in reply to NewNewAugustEast • • •NewNewAugustEast
in reply to bountygiver [any] • • •addie
in reply to NewNewAugustEast • • •Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In
in reply to NewNewAugustEast • • •Deacon
in reply to silence7 • • •Somewhat off-topic, but that’s the first time in a long time I’ve read a random article on the internet and just instantly liked the writer’s writing style without respect to the topic.
That was a depressing article, but a very enjoyable read.
mystique
in reply to Deacon • • •G/O Media fires Deadspin's Barry Petchesky for not sticking to sports
Andrew Bucholtz (Awful Announcing)lazynooblet
in reply to Deacon • • •I also enjoyed their writing.
Loved this 😂
Nailbar
in reply to Deacon • • •MonkderVierte
in reply to silence7 • • •Deflated0ne
in reply to silence7 • • •