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Billionaire tech CEO says bosses shouldn't 'BS' employees about the impact AI will have on jobs


  • Jim Kavanaugh, CEO of World Wide Technology, told CNBC that people are “too smart” to accept artificial intelligence won’t alter their work environment.
  • Business leaders shouldn’t “BS” employees about the impact of AI on jobs, Kavanaugh said, adding that they should be as transparent and honest as possible.
  • Kavanaugh, who has a net worth of $7 billion, stressed that overall he’s an optimist when it comes to AI and its ability to improve productivity.
in reply to 🇨🇦🇩🇪🇨🇳张殿李🇨🇳🇩🇪🇨🇦

There are other jobs. Adapting and changing is part of life.

Every technologically advancement throughout history has resulted in the floor, ceiling, and median quality of life significantly advancing in short order. There isn't a group who isn't better off very quickly as a result of the change that was always inevitable.

Change isn't bad.

This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to conciselyverbose

Spoken like a true techbrodude that.

Change isn't bad, absolutely. As long as you view people as statistics, not as human beings.

But when you've had the job that kept you and your family fed and comfortably housed for decades suddenly vanish on you, that's a change that's bad. When that change guts your finances so you have to move your family into a shithole tenement that squeezes you for rent while your food turns into cheap, mass-processed, nutritionally dubious pap.

This is doubly so if it happens on the tail end of your life so you're not realistically able to be retrained and re-employed.

But those are just statistics. Just numbers that flow on a screen. While in reality there's human misery you carefully look away from so that you can point to comforting numbers.

But here's a question for you: if things are always better off after a change, why are the people who cheerlead for such change so super-against any attempts to mitigate the impacts with a small sliver of their benefits!?



Linus Torvalds muses about maintainer gray hairs and the next 'King of Linux'


In a candid keynote chat at the Linux Foundation's Open Source Summit Europe, Linux creator Linus Torvalds shared his thoughts on kernel development, the integration of Rust, and the future of open source.
in reply to captainkangaroo

People fear the same thing about Valve.

One wrong person and we could all end up in the same money milk machine as EA.

I know people complain about Linus hurling insults at merge requests, but his rigidness is what keeps the kernel viable. If it weren't for him, google would have already shit all over it with a mega fork and essentially cornered the market like they did with Android and HTTP3.

Both are technically "open source", yet Google essentially dictates what they want or need for their economic purpose, like ignoring JPEGXL, forcing AVIF, making browsers bloaty, using manifestv3, etc. Android is even worse and may as well be considered separate from Linux because it's just google's walled garden running on the linux kernel.

He is open to new technology, but he understands the fundamental effects of design choices and will fight people over it to prevent the project from fracturing due to feature breaking changes, especially involving userspace.





LSV6f6ad4ecab_profimedia_0909244328.jpg

CZ: floodings, forest care


in reply to jlsalvador

It isn't significant. Wine already supports the vast majority of MediaFoundation codecs with GStreamer. This is just an alternative backend that uses FFmpeg instead of GStreamer. GStreamer already has an FFmpeg plugin, so this doesn't add any new codecs to the table. It seems there's just a long term plan to move away from GStreamer for whatever reason.

Wine's MF support used to be much worse, which is why Valve had to do their workaround shader hack. Not sure what exactly the current status on that is, but I do know things like mf-install or Proton-GE are rarely if ever necessary anymore, even with non-Steam games (which I have plenty of).

in reply to leopold

Digging into the GitLab & related discussions, the main takeaway I got is that FFmpeg's API supposedly meshes better with what Wine needs to provide to Windows code, simplifying things overall. GST is pretty heavy on asynchronous/background processing, which is normally something I'd consider good for media, but if the API you're expected to implement is synchronous then I guess it only adds complexity.

in reply to Leaflet

Not loving snaps is a characteristic of someone who knows about the existence of snaps. Ubuntu for those who don't know what snaps are, but snaps are so lousy that sooner or later you will find out about their existence and want to demolish them
This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to fireshell

I've said it before, I'll say it again. Snap slowdowns have been supposedly fixed, but the only snap that updated their packaging to apply the fix was Mozilla's Firefox (from what I've heard).

And there is a way to create a custom store other than Canonical's (but it's obscure and hidden, so I bet nobody would bother).

And snaps have better support for cli programs.

If snaps were as good as flatpaks (which I don't think they are yet), and they were not made by Canonical (got them some extra bad rep), they could have been the dominant packaging platform. The issue is that their reputation precedes them. I don't think Canonical can ever fix that.

TLDR: Snaps are not as bad as people make them out to be (anymore). It's just that their reputation precedes them, and some of the solutions are there but are not in use.

in reply to theshatterstone54

The most important thing for apps to do for speedups is to use LZO compression and modern runtimes.

The Firefox snap did some Firefox specific optimizations, especially around its language packs, to speed things up.

in reply to Leaflet

Lobster was an unbelievably buggy distro. I had no end of sleep and compositor problems, and outright system hangs on it. Minotaur was better, but still give me far too much crap.

I would rather run a "crack monkeys with a sourceforce account" nightly distro than go through Ubuntu's idea of a beta again.

This entry was edited (3 months ago)



Paranoid? Qubes OS everything disposable virtual machine safest OS in the world in 2024. use ethernet/wired Requires usb stick destroys host os. Spread to as many as possible and donate


Tick whonix template and upgrade over Tor when setting up.

Spread and install dino im with setup OMEMO all your friends use qubes with whonix and dino im setup xmpp account (lookup chat on tails although many differences how to create xmpp account) whonix.org/wiki/Chat OMEMO allows file transfer as well as end to end encrypted chat

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Slowly booting full Linux on the intel 4004 for fun, art, and absolutely no profit - Linux/4004 Dmitry.GR


TL;DR

I booted Debian Linux on a 4-bit intel microprocessor from 1971 - the first microprocessor in the world - the 4004. It is not fast, but it is a real Linux kernel with a Debian rootfs on a real board whose only CPU is a real intel 4004 from the 1970s. The video is sped up at variable rates to demonstrate this without boring you. The clock and calendar in the video are accurate. A constant-rate video is linked below.

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in reply to lemmyreader

At first I was not very impressed. Then I read that that 4004 does not have any AND, OR, or XOR instructions. Yikes.


Element X, Call and Server Suite are production ready


Element is launching the world’s first communications platform based on the upcoming Matrix 2.0 release. The result is blazing performance which outperforms the mainstream alternatives - across a decentralised system that enables self-hosting and end-to-end encryption - as well as open standard interoperability to revolutionise real time communication between large organisations.

Built on Matrix 2.0, Element X now rivals the performance of centralised consumer messaging apps, empowering organisations to address the shadow IT issues caused by consumer-grade messaging apps in the workplace.

The new Element communications solution consists:

  • Element X, our next-gen app with an array of new features
  • Element Call fully integrated into Element X, for native Matrix-encrypted voice and video
  • Element Server Suite, our backend hosting solution for powerful admin control and Matrix 2.0 performance
in reply to keepthepace

I must mention though that their solution is not really efficient. Everyone's app gets the phone number, its just not displayed anymore. This can be circumvented with a little modification of the app, which is easy because it's open source.




IJA3cd7f065fe_P2024091606665.jpg

CZ: floodings, water retention



Researchers achieve aluminum molecular ring-based rotaxane and polyrotaxane


barely passed general chemistry. poor memory for arbitrary compound names. invested a lot of cpu cycles in folding@home brute force compound modeling screensaver app. until I realised how much electricity it used.


Lemmy Development Update 2024-09-20


Filtered word: nsfw


in reply to Leaflet

I don't think the author will see this but the proper way is 2024-W38.

Always follow the ISO8601.



Naturskyddsföreningens hat mot fisket. Naturskyddsföreningen i Göteborg skrev i början av september en debattartikel i GP som vänder sig mot en fördjupning av Fiskebäcks hamn. Men den handlar faktiskt bara till en viss del om just det utan är framförallt en uppvisning i okunnighet och hat mot fiske generellt.

fiske.zaramis.se/2024/09/20/na…


in reply to ooli

'Attention Required! | Cloudflarescitechdaily.com' so useful lemmy. lol
in reply to ooli

I have a hard time seeing a bird in that sculpture, but I'll guess them that that's a bird person.