

Someone else will continue selling RAM and making money.
Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
🇬🇧 / 🇩🇪


Someone else will continue selling RAM and making money.
The URLs mentioned in their blog article all have a wrong certificate (different host name).
I am sure if they fix it Google’s system would reclassify the sites as safe.




They would lose likely 98% of their player base.


I’m going to voluntarily read other people’s AI slop.


tldr:
“Small, itchy, blister-like bumps caused by the varicella-zoster virus,” the dish description from Sikar’s Royal Roll Express restaurant reads. “Common in childhood.”
A misreading of the dish name in question — “Chicken Pops” — could well explain why an AI may have spat out a description for what sounds an awful lot like chicken pox, a common childhood virus that causes the exact kind of nasty “blister-like bumps” detailed on the menu.


“No honey, the shirt isn’t the problem here.”
New users are expected to keep copying and pasting commands from their browsers to their terminal which compromises some Linux security defenses.
To me, this is the worst issue here.
Even large Projects suggest things that are basically curl | sh – without even mentioning anything about how this could be problematic.
New user are “trained” doing this.
Every project suggesting it should be not only opposed but actively fought against until they change this bullshit.
Brother, do you have BEÄNS?
In my 20+ years of using laptops I never ever had issues with laptop batteries that resulted in me wanting to (or having to) change them. It was always other parts that failed first.
The IPv6 range is barely even used.
Yet.
Also I imagine that there will be a secondary market for IPv6 at some point.
Like there already is one for IPv4 addresses?
I stand by my point:
No-one will ever need a /48 range.
The ranges will become larger over time because “we have it”, and companies will get thousands of sections with figuratively unlimited IP addresses in them each.
With this huge ranges we’ll have the same problem with IPv6 in a few years that we already have with IPv4.


They not only force their user to buy their crap, they also intentionally and maliciously frame the AGPL in a certain way.
Spicy Pillow!
I did not, but of course you can. Either by using an adapter (maybe a printable one?), or – if it is an SSD – by just placing the drive there and hld it in place with one screw.
If there already is a drive installed you want to removed and there is no spare cover, you can also print one.
(You can of course buy the parts instead of printing them. Those adapters and covers are fully standardized and widely available.)


So at least 22 papers from the study were AI generated and not checked afterwards.
This says more about the authors the AI users who claim authorship than about AI.
Well—that is certainly a meticulous observation! 🔍