My company tried it…and now they have hybrid work schedules after employees with decades of experience left the company for remote work jobs.
My company tried it…and now they have hybrid work schedules after employees with decades of experience left the company for remote work jobs.
No, I just thought they were vaguely similar enough words to make a dumb internet joke.
Oh, the artificial humanity!
This is a very good point, and it’s one of the reasons I don’t use my old laptop as an always-on server.
There’s a subset of the Linux/FOSS/etc. community who are Conservative, misogynistic, racist, and/or otherwise general bigots. Compare the Ventoy-bros against the Elon-bros, and you’ll see a similar pattern of behavior.
I don’t personally understand it, since development is still sometimes seen as “work for weirdo nerds,” so you’d think they would understand what it feels like to be rejected or bullied, but here we are. They manage to stay under the radar, because there’s usually no reason to discuss politics or philosophy when you’re debugging code.
That story was a journey.
I had heard that. Maybe I’ll get my hands on one someday. I hear Commodore makes one.
(I do wonder now if whatever variable is being used to denote time is signed or unsigned, because that would make a big difference, too.)
Doh! You are absolutely right.
I’m curious what you mean. I don’t keep up with all the news, but it’s <$200usd on Amazon right now.
Plasma has a Win 11 menu clone as well, iirc. I forget what it’s called.
To add, downgrading the version helps some games. River City Girls needs version 5.x to get the cutscenes, iirc.
It’s already hard to not write buggy code, but I don’t think you will detect them by just reviewing LLM code, because detecting issues during code review is much harder than when you’re writing code.
Definitely. That’s what I was trying to drive at, but you said it well.
Yeah, they are. They’re not the ones getting banned, because they maintain an air of plausible deniability.
Not saying they don’t deserve to be banned, but they’re not overt Russian propaganda—simply the regular, alt-right Conservative kind, and apparently Facebook is totally fine with that.
They’re just better at hiding it.
Oh, so it’s not just me either. It’s one of the reasons I’ll never install Ubuntu.
Are you asking how much I donate per month?
I help pay for my instance to operate, and it’s a cost I’m happy to help shoulder.
Through let’s be frank: movie theaters want you to smell popcorn, so you buy snacks. Smell-o-Vision would have to be more lucrative than a $15 bucket of popcorn.
I appreciate the effort you put into the comment and your kind tone, but I’m not really interested in increasing LLM presence in my life.
I said what I said, and I experienced what I experienced. Providing me an example where it works is in no way a falsification of the core of my original comment: LLMs have no place generating code for secure applications apart from human review, because they don’t have a mechanism to comprehend or proof their own work.
I would actually recommend Spiral Linux if somebody new wanted to go with Debian. It’s the Debian analog to Endeavor.