Perspectivist

joined 2 weeks ago
[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 22 points 2 hours ago

Now that I think of it, the Finnish translation for this is "purkkapatentti" which translates to "chewing gum patent"

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submitted 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago) by Perspectivist@feddit.uk to c/til@lemmy.world
 

A kludge or kluge is a workaround or makeshift solution that is clumsy, inelegant, inefficient, difficult to extend, and hard to maintain. Its only benefit is that it rapidly solves an important problem using available resources.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 3 points 3 hours ago

Is "AI slop" synonymous with AI content in general? I've always thought it to mean bad AI content specifically.

I don't consider myself neurotypical yet I see our current AI progress as net-positive. I don't like AI slop either in the sense that I understand the term but I've encountered a lot of good AI generated content.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 4 points 3 hours ago

The problem I'm dealing with right now is kind of a first world one in that I'm unable to ride my electric bicycle because the speed sensor is malfunctioning and the sensor from my other bike is incompatible as it's a 4-pin one and the other bike uses a 3-pin one. I do have a 3rd bike too but it's not fun to ride due to lack of electric assist.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 5 points 3 hours ago

Yeah, I check that it's not .ml first.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 25 points 6 hours ago (2 children)

Someone want to explain to a muggle in plain english what this does and how it's different from simply using a VPN?

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 102 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Looking back, I realize I was pretty immature at 22. It didn’t feel that way at the time, but it sure does now. These days, 18‑year‑olds look like kids to me.

I didn’t want kids back then, and I still don’t - but my perspective has shifted a little. When I see parents now, there’s a slight melancholic feeling that comes with knowing that’s something I’ll probably never experience.

So yeah, if you’re 30 and don’t want kids, that’s probably not going to change. Before that, though, there’s always a chance.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

No, this is just you being mean on purpose - and a hypocrite on top of it.

I don’t get what you gain from acting like a total jerk toward complete strangers who haven’t been hostile to you in any way. There was absolutely no reason to make it personal, but that’s where you chose to take it. I hope you’re satisfied with yourself now. Sure showed me.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Upon closer inspection, the chisel end seems to have a lower angle than the knife edge. It’s a relatively thick carbon steel blade, so I’m not worried about durability, and it should be easy to sharpen. I’ll probably just keep the chisel end sharp and leave the blade itself dull.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 4 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Seems better that they rather live within their own community with likeminded people that within the general population. Win-win.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 2 points 1 day ago

Maybe so, but we already have an example of a generally intelligent system that outperforms our current AI models in its cognitive capabilities while using orders of magnitude less power and memory: the human brain. That alone suggests our current brute‑force approach probably won’t be the path a true AGI takes. It’s entirely conceivable that such a system improves through optimization - getting better while using less power, at least in the beginning.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 7 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I personally think the whole concept of AGI is a mirage. In reality, a truly generally intelligent system would almost immediately be superhuman in its capabilities. Even if it were no “smarter” than a human, it could still process information at a vastly higher speed and solve in minutes what would take a team of scientists years or even decades.

And the moment it hits “human level” in coding ability, it starts improving itself - building a slightly better version, which builds an even better version, and so on. I just don’t see any plausible scenario where we create an AI that stays at human-level intelligence. It either stalls far short of that, or it blows right past it.

[–] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 1 points 1 day ago

If AI ends up destroying us, I’d say it’s unlikely to be because it hates us or wants to destroy us per se - more likely it just treats us the way we treat ants. We don’t usually go out of our way to wipe out ant colonies, but if there’s an anthill where we’re putting up a house, we don’t think twice about bulldozing it. Even in the cartoonish “paperclip maximizer” thought experiment, the end of humanity isn’t caused by a malicious AI - it’s caused by a misaligned one.

 

I’m having a really odd issue with my e‑fatbike (Bafang M400 mid‑drive). When I’m on the two largest cassette cogs (lowest gears), the motor briefly cuts power once per crank revolution. It’s a clean on‑off “tick,” almost like the system thinks I stopped pedaling for a split second.

I first noticed this after switching from a 38T front chainring to a 30T. At that point it only happened on the largest cog, never on the others.

I figured it might be caused by the undersized chainring, so I put the original back in and swapped the original 1x10 drivetrain for a 1x11 and went from a 36T largest cog to a 51T. But no - the issue still persists. Now it happens on the largest two cogs. Whether I’m soft‑pedaling or pedaling hard against the brakes doesn’t seem to make any difference. It still “ticks” once per revolution.

I’m out of ideas at this point. Torque sensor, maybe? I have another identical bike with a 1x12 drivetrain and an 11–50T cassette, and it doesn’t do this, so I doubt it’s a compatibility issue. Must be something sensor‑related? With the assist turned off everything runs perfectly, so it’s not mechanical.

 

Olisi hyödyllistä tietoa seuraavia vaaleja ajatellen.

Ihmetyttää kyllä myös miten vähän tästä on Yle ainakaan mitään uutisoinut. Tuntuu melkein tarkoitukselliselta salamyhkäisyydeltä.

 

I figured I’d give this chisel knife a try, since it’s not like I use this particular knife for its intended purpose anyway but rather as a general purpose sharpish piece of steel. I’m already carrying a folding knife and a Leatherman, so I don’t need a third knife with a pointy tip.

 

I see a huge amount of confusion around terminology in discussions about Artificial Intelligence, so here’s my quick attempt to clear some of it up.

Artificial Intelligence is the broadest possible category. It includes everything from the chess opponent on the Atari to hypothetical superintelligent systems piloting spaceships in sci-fi. Both are forms of artificial intelligence - but drastically different.

That chess engine is an example of narrow AI: it may even be superhuman at chess, but it can’t do anything else. In contrast, the sci-fi systems like HAL 9000, JARVIS, Ava, Mother, Samantha, Skynet, or GERTY are imagined as generally intelligent - that is, capable of performing a wide range of cognitive tasks across domains. This is called Artificial General Intelligence (AGI).

One common misconception I keep running into is the claim that Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT are “not AI” or “not intelligent.” That’s simply false. The issue here is mostly about mismatched expectations. LLMs are not generally intelligent - but they are a form of narrow AI. They’re trained to do one thing very well: generate natural-sounding text based on patterns in language. And they do that with remarkable fluency.

What they’re not designed to do is give factual answers. That it often seems like they do is a side effect - a reflection of how much factual information was present in their training data. But fundamentally, they’re not knowledge databases - they’re statistical pattern machines trained to continue a given prompt with plausible text.

 

I was delivering an order for a customer and saw some guy messing with the bikes on a bike rack using a screwdriver. Then another guy showed up, so the first one stopped, slipped the screwdriver into his pocket, and started smoking a cigarette like nothing was going on. I was debating whether to report it or not - but then I noticed his jacket said "Russia" in big letters on the back, and that settled it for me.

That was only the second time in my life I’ve called the emergency number.

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