

There’s been a massive leak of data pertaining to the “great Chinese firewall” like a month ago or something. You might want to look into that.


There’s been a massive leak of data pertaining to the “great Chinese firewall” like a month ago or something. You might want to look into that.

Accelerate what? Sorry to break it to you but facism is no longer at the door, it came in and is making itself pretty comfortable.


Certainly not doing himself no, but don’t you think he’s petty enough to supervise the whole thing start to finish ?
Only one way to find out


It really seems like they’re grasping at straws trying to make LLMs profitable


Billionaires will not starve no, however you’d be naive to think that billionaires are content as long as they don’t starve.
Billionnaires need to be getting richer at an ever increasing pace to actually be content. That’s how you become a billionaire in the first place.
Billionaires don’t want serious damage to the economy as that’s not going to help them getting richer, quite the contrary. Just like strikers will give in when continuing means that they will starve, billionaire will give in before their profits and assets take a serious hit (or will do what it take to get the people in charge to give in)


Hey sorry for the belated reply. Please note that I didn’t downvote you.
I suppose first we have to clear up the meaning of ´tanking’ the economy, for me it means long term damage that takes time to recover, if recoverable in the first place. Of course, a general strike will not be a net positive in itself.
However, let’s not forget that, if met, the demands of the strikers, could potentially be beneficial to the economy. (They could also be detrimental of course). But we have to consider the overall effect, and that is a lot more complex than just considering « oh no people are not going to be working for days or weeks ».
I’m not sure you believe that leaving the Trump admin free rein is actually beneficial to the economy…
Besides the thing about striking is that people don’t get paid, so companies might not be making money, but their losses won’t be so great, especially in a high income country such as the us where salaries are not dirt cheap. Most of the remaining expenses would be : rent, loans if applicable and any materials or product that has to be consumed in a given time frame, and goes bad unused because of the strike. The latter is the only real loss to the economy, as it is literally wasting stuff. Loans can be renegotiated and rent can be spread out. Not that this can’t have adverse effects… of course people are going to loose money - that’s kind of the whole point. Profits will probably take a hit (ohno, extremely rich people are going to enrich themselves slightly less for a while, what a terrible thing !!)
If ever a company goes under because of a strike, this leaves room for a new one to take its place (or an existing company to expand), especially in an economy as flexible as the US. So it might be bad in the short term for some people, but failures such as these can be recovered from quickly.
But anyways, the thing is with strikes is that the people in charge ALWAYS give in before serious damage is done. Nobody is going to leave their company go bankrupt because workers are striking, just like nobody is going to strike until they starve to death (hunger strikes set aside which are a whole different thing and not what we are discussing).
Of course a nationwide strike is a different business, but if it goes on to a point where many companies are going to go under, it means that many important people are loosing money. They will put pressure to resolve the crisis and will do so before irreversible damage is done because it is in their fucking interest to do so and most of these people care about money first.
Anyways, they have been many strikes, general or not, throughout the world and throughout history, I challenge you to find one example where these have caused irreversible damage to the economy.
The fact is they damage from strikes is extremely short term and is always recovered from quickly, because only fanatics would have it otherwise. They might be a lot of fanatics at the head of the US atm, but they need the support of a lot of people who will always favor their profits and business over everything else.
Nothing looks burnt here, just heat marks, which would be totally expected after a few decades if the appliance heats a bit during normal use.
Capacitor like these rarely fail for no reason and if it was subject to over voltage you’d probably have a lot of other things fried, they’d be some of the last things I’d check.


Democracy isn’t just about what (a short) majority of the voters have decided, it’s also about checks and balances, and protection of the individual, especially those from minority groups… and a lot more. There is nothing democratic about Trump’s rule and the fact that 52 or 53 or whatever percent of those citizens who went to actually cast a ballot voted for this doesn’t change that fact
Edit: Also, a general strike is not going to « tank the economy »
Yeh but no. That ‘s what you guys had for decades if not more. Now you live in a fascist state. Sorry.


You seem suspiciously knowledgeable about engraving UWU on bullets…


My sister wanted to call me Cinderella whatever the gender.


I’m surprised people here actually believe Microsoft’s claim.
First of all, we can easily imagine that the higher ups in the firm are strongly pushing their teams to adopt IA and said teams are likely to give them highly inflated numbers just to appease them.
Then the higher ups have plenty of incentives to further increase that imaginary number to pitch to investors:
After all, Microsoft is an AI peddler, not only in end user products but also in infrastructure. They want investors and customers to believe in AI to push their goods, and for those that already believe in it, they want those to see that Microsoft is pushing ahead of the trend rather than falling behind in the “AI revolution” race.


The death rate is on a logarithmic scale


I think he’s just going for the good old “it wasn’t me” joker
It’s the 3rd person POV, a common narrative technique


I’ve never used Rust but from my very cursory knowledge of what the borrow checker entails, it wouldn’t add so much to Ada.
Use of pointers is already strongly discouraged by the simple fact that the language is designed to rarely truly need them. Besides, the compiler itself chooses automatically whether to pass data by value or by reference depending on the required results and what is most efficient. You can also specify parameters passed to a function as read-only. Finally, another thing that Ada does to prevent yourself shooting in your foot is to enforce strong encapsulation of functions and data.
Overall, one way to put it in simple terms is that Ada requires the programmer to give enough information to the compiler so as to ensure that it actually outputs what you want it to, which as far as I understand, is sort of what the borrow checker is there for. The downside to the Ada approach is that it is very verbose, but with the kind of code editing capabilities we have nowadays it’s certainly not as much a hassle as it was when Ada came out.
Anyways, I suspect that both languages are different enough in overall paradigm that trying to solve problems in Ada the way you would in Rust would probably be quite frustrating and give rather poor result.


Good, only domestic billionaires should be allowed to influence public opinion.


“Before rust you could either have a fast language (C/C++) or a memory safe language (any other language. That is, languages with garbage collector).”
Ada managed to do safe and fast over forty years ago.
Managing to focus on your work for 16h straight sounds like hyper focus which is a trait that many adhd people exhibit (or so they say)
Anyways, adhd is a wide spectrum, both in symptoms and intensity.