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in reply to NightOwl

You will never win out against capital. "Do we want to survive or do we want more money" is not a question to ask multinational oil companies. They need to be taken out, they won't go quietly, and the longer they are allowed to hang around, the greater the damage they will inflict on our societies, on democracy, and on the planet.


How can we get more of the population into the Fediverse? Tech literacy?


I think this is really important right now that folks know there are better options to social media. Especially as we are heading into a world where a select few have control over the main ways of communication. Truthfully, we need tech literacy in all public schools so citizens learn how to be able to protect their privacy. Self ownership seems like a good way but I still think the Fediverse isn't user friendly enough for the population to have interest, yet I really hope we get to a point where it is. How can I help inform folks and how do we get tech literacy in schools as a basic foundational core class?


USStocksSwing&Trend


We created a place for open discussion on United States market movements trading methods and stock analysis. It is a helpful environment for anyone looking for meaningful perspectives and well structured ideas. chat.whatsapp.com/J5itidn7Onh9…






Pentagon announces it has killed four men in another boat strike in Pacific


The latest strike was the first in nearly three weeks. It comes as the Pentagon and the White House have struggled to answer questions about the legal basis for the campaign to kill suspected drug smugglers with military strikes, with US lawmakers promising to investigate the first such attack, in September, in which two survivors clinging to wreckage were killed in a follow-on strike.

Hegseth has faced increasing scrutiny over the 2 September strike following a report from the Washington Post that the defense secretary had verbally directed the military to "kill them all". On Thursday, a Democratic lawmaker introduced articles of impeachment against Hegseth, pointing to the boat strike and a report that found he broke rules by sharing information about an attack on Signal, but such an effort is unlikely to succeed.

in reply to NightOwl

Give the ~~shieet~~ xeet a read to really cringe. "Secretary of War", "lethal kinetic strike", "Designated Terrorist Organization" and "narco-terrorists" stand out. They're really trying to make it sound like they know what they're doing and presenting it as anything but ~~war~~ crimes.


Ottawa strengthens UAE partnership as atrocities continue in Sudan


China is not the only source of weapons that likely reach the RSF through the UAE however. Raymond notes that arms produced by Canadian companies, including Sterling Cross and the Streit Group, have also made their way onto the battlefield and into the hands of the RSF.

Sterling Cross has not publicly clarified whether it has sold weapons to the UAE, and a 2016 United Nations report accused the Streit Group of supplying arms to the Emirates.

Organizations such as the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights have called on Canada to enact an arms embargo against the UAE and to target key perpetrators and enabling entities with sanctions.




Sam Altman’s Dirty DRAM Deal





Microsoft is quietly walking back its diversity efforts


Microsoft has dropped its diversity and inclusion report


Amazon’s dynamic pricing is causing chaos for school budgets


A Wild West for Crayola prices.

in reply to Arthur Besse

The LLMs are just somewhere between an averaging and a lossy compression of everything on GitHub. There's nothing about the current paradigm of "AI" that is going to somehow do better than just rehashing that training set but with the inclusion of various classes of errors.

I think it's better to view it as spicy search rather than any form of intelligence.

in reply to potatopotato

If you treat it as spicy search it works pretty great though.
in reply to potatopotato

Yeah that's mostly what i use it for. A way to search for things that i can't describe well enough for a traditional search engine so I can find out at a glance what it's name is and if it's valid for my situation. If it is then I go look up documentation. Any time I've stayed in the LLM past that I eventually go down a rabbit hole of wrong ideas that aren't always obvious until you get a bit too deep and you've wasted an hour with an incorrect solution.
in reply to MrScottyTay

Yeah, I do believe it's a good tool for search, just with the caveat that if it can't find an answer it makes one up or otherwise kinda just fills in little missing details with noise.
in reply to MrScottyTay

The only thing I have found it useful for is book recommendations. I like this book and that book, what other types of books are like these?
in reply to Arthur Besse

As I'm slowly evolving my own flavour of spec driven development, I'm starting to think about the generated code as a secondary artefact where main quality criteria is that it's doing what it needs to and it's covered with tests.

I guess my current analogy is that I don't care about how readable or dry is the assembly code generated by compiler.

I have the specifications and the working code with tests. I can always regenerate it if I need to.

But. I still read the produced code, steer the design and correct the obvious blunders. No vibes.

in reply to doo

I know a lot of people hate but this AI stuff still isn’t great but it will get better. Each generation of programming languages adds syntax and convenience. AI code will likely get to the point where it is just a higher level language. The only benefit I’m seeing is that if used very carefully I can make more complex projects with fewer team members. And where there was zero documentation there’s at least SOME documentation.
in reply to monkeyslikebananas2

AI code will likely get to the point where it is just a higher level language


While noobs and managers are excited that the input language to this compiler is English, English is a poor language choice for many reasons.

in reply to Arthur Besse

Yep, it is a poor choice today.

Like all things, it will likely improve. I see a world where a pseudo-code format and some standard start to form.

Until then, it is the wild west, and I fear some people may die from the misuse of these vibe coding tools. But they aren’t necessarily useless.

in reply to doo

main quality criteria is that it’s doing what it needs to and it’s covered with tests.


Might want to read on TDD, it's been around since last the last millennium (OK 1999 according to Wikipedia, point is, it's not new).




Belly of the Beast video channel hosted on PeerTube.wtf


Belly of the Beast video channel hosted on PeerTube.wtf
is now caught up with the collection on YouTube. From now on, new #videos from YouTube will be quickly loaded to #PeerTube as well. [The previous Cuddly.Tube channel will be taken down soon.]

URL: peertube.wtf/c/cuba/_botb/_vid…

Also significant is the expansion of playlists. BotB produces a lot of videos, and it is sometimes difficult to find what you are looking for. I spent some time going through the collection and adding playlists.

If you set up a login on PeerTube.wtf, you could also develop and save your own private playlists. But logins are not necessary to browse videos on PeerTube.wtf.

One playlist that will probably get a lot of use is Cuba and #Palestine, which contains 17 videos.

When you get a chance, please check them out.

#LetCubaLive #EndTheEmbargo #Solidarity #FreePalestine
#politics #BellyOfTheBeast #Cuba #Gaza

@palestine

https://peertube.wtf/c/cuba_botb_videos/videos

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

in reply to MazonnaCara89

Very admirable work, but I can't help but feel like they are late to the game.

I work on those handhelds, and they're all slowly dying. The onboard flash memory is starting to fail more often in older units, and even newer ones are prone to developing significant screen issues. Parts are mostly still available - but some, like the power boards, are getting harder to find.

It's not as easy to swap the primary PCB as a Game Boy. And the chips are not off-the-shelf, so donor consoles are the only source of replacement chips.

This project looks fantastic, and I hope it succeeds. But the consoles themselves may be too old for this to have much impact.

This entry was edited (1 week ago)
in reply to actionjbone

agreed. even the internal lcds are starting to go with age. I've replaced a few in the past month without any physical damage. just decided their time has come I guess.
in reply to Krusty

It's open source, as opposed to other carts on the market that also do the same thing of having games to play on the DS(i) in a rom format
in reply to BoblinTheGoblin [none/use any]

So how could I put games on it? Is it a different format? Also does it work similar to R4?
in reply to Krusty

Yes it works like an R4, an important thing to keep in mind is that some default kernels for some flashcarts had a time bomb so you needed to use a different kernel to be able to use theme!



Micron Announces Exit from Crucial Consumer Business


Crucial consumer-branded products at key retailers, e-tailers and distributors worldwide will seize sales on February 1, 2026 as it repositions to sell its products direct to manufacturing and commercial channels only.