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China beats US for first time in global scientific ‘hot papers’ ranking
  • Obligatory sinophobia. Every thread.

  • Purism (creator of FOSS friendly phones and hardware) 2023 financial report , income grew by 350% in three years and the company is profitable
  • I think that's an american thing. Besides, that money is long gone since I made the purchase several years ago.

  • Purism (creator of FOSS friendly phones and hardware) 2023 financial report , income grew by 350% in three years and the company is profitable
  • I asked for a refund when they kept delaying shipment of my Librem 5. I was simply denied and that was it. They told me I could still choose to receive the phone, but I don't want it since it's a bad, practically useless product now.

    I reported them in my country for it.

  • Yuntai: Hiker finds pipe feeding China's tallest waterfall
  • If it is dry due to climate change I don't see how there is an eco-system built around the drought worth preserving.

  • Need noise cancelling headphones recommendations
  • Have a pair of MX4s too. I haven't experienced any other kind of NC headphones so nothing to compare to, but the voice is seriously annoying. What I often do is interrupt it by tapping the side to play/pause media twice.

    While they work OotB without the app, there is a bunch of functionality and tweaks locked behind the official app, such as EQ, wind-reduction, and voice-passthru.

  • Removed
    China Just Cured Diabetes and America’s Insulin Industry is Not Happy About it
  • I reply to people on lemmy on a case-by-case basis. I decide how to eat food on a case-by-case basis. But if you give me a deck of cards and tell me to shuffle them, I generally do not decide how to shuffle on a case-by-case basis; it doesn't matter whose cards they are.

  • Removed
    China Just Cured Diabetes and America’s Insulin Industry is Not Happy About it
  • That's not what case-by-case means. Wiktionary:

    Separate and distinct from others of the same kind; treated individually.

    Case-by-case implies that each treatment is different and is not generalisable; but the fact that they use a patient's own tissue does not make each individual treatment different. If you want to extend the logic, you might call vaccination a case-by-case treatment as well, since they use different needles for each person.

  • Removed
    China Just Cured Diabetes and America’s Insulin Industry is Not Happy About it
  • it was done on a case-by-case basis. Each person has their own therapy tailored for them. This does not appear to be a mass-solution.

    I'm not sure what you are expecting for something to be considered a cure? What they are describing is a treatment procedure which uses the patient's own tissue. How does that make it case-by-case?

  • NGO noyb has filed a complaint against ChatGPT for violation of the GDPR
  • It can at least get one unstuck, past an indecision paralysis, or give an outline of an idea. It can also be useful for searching though data.

  • World's first bioprocessor uses 16 human brain organoids for ‘a million times less power’ consumption than a digital chip
  • If this works, it's noteworthy. I don't know if similar results have been achieved before because I don't follow developments that closely, but I expect that biological computing is going to catch a lot more attention in the near-to-mid-term future. Because of the efficiency and increasingly tight constraints imposed on humans due to environmental pressure, I foresee it eventually eclipse silicon-based computing.

    FinalSpark says its Neuroplatform is capable of learning and processing information

    They sneak that in there as if it's just a cool little fact, but this should be the real headline. I can't believe they just left it at that. Deep learning can not be the future of AI, because it doesn't facilitate continuous learning. Active inference is a term that will probably be thrown about a lot more in the coming months and years, and as evidenced by all kinds of living things around us, wetware architectures are highly suitable for the purpose of instantiating agents doing active inference.

  • Any tips to improve HTC Vive performance on Manjaro?
  • I've got an NVIDIA card, yeah. I'm guessing it's a better experience with AMD cards.

  • Any tips to improve HTC Vive performance on Manjaro?
  • It's a bit disheartening that VR is still not a good experience on Linux. I was wrestling with my Vive several years ago now, but I just got sick of dealing with it (literally and figuratively) due to the jitter, randomly breaking features (even mid-session), crashes, and other random things. It was a coin toss every time whether it was going to even launch at all.

    It just wasn't worth it, so it has been collecting dust now for a few years. Was hoping that one day I'd be able to just plug it in and have an ok time.

  • Why AI Search Blew Up in Google’s Face
  • I don't know about google because I don't use it unless I really can't find what I'm looking for, but here's a quick ddg search with a very unambiguous and specific question, and from sampling only the top 9 results I see 2 that are at all relevant (2nd and 5th):

    In order to answer my question, I need to first mentally filter out 7/9 of the results visible on my screen, then open both of the relevant ones in new tabs and read through lengthy discussions in order to find out if anyone has shared a proper solution.

    Here is the same search using perplexity's default model (not pro, which is a lot better at breaking down queries and including relevant references):

    and I don't have to verify all the details because even if some of it is wrong, it is immediately more useful information to me.

    I want to re-emphasise though that using LLMs for this can be incredibly frustrating too, because they will often insist assertively on falsehoods and generally act really dumb, so I'm not saying there aren't pros and cons. Sometimes a simple keyword-based search and manual curation of the results is preferred to the nonsense produced by a stupid language model.

    Edit: I didn't answer your question about malicious, but I can give some example of what I consider malicious and you may agree that it happens frequently enough:

    • AI generated articles
    • irrelevant SEO results
    • ads/sponsored results/commercial products or services
    • blog spam by people who speak out of ignorance
    • flame bait
    • deliberate disinformation
    • low-quality journalism
    • websites designed to exploit people/optimised for purposes other than to contribute to a healthy internet

    etc.

  • Why AI Search Blew Up in Google’s Face
  • Maybe I can share some insight into why one might want to.

    I hate searching the internet. It's a massive mental drain for me to try figure out how I should put my problem into words that others with similar ideas will have done before me - it's my mental processing power wasted on purely linguistic overhead instead of trying to understand and learn about the problem.

    I hate the (dis-/mis-)informational assault I open myself to by skimming through the results, because the majority of them will be so laughably irrelevant, if not actively malicious, that I become a slightly worse person every time I expose myself.

    And I hate visiting websites. Not only because of all the reasons modern websites suck, but because even if they are a delight in UX, they are distracting me from what I really want, which is (most of the time) information, not to experience someone's idiosyncratic, artistic ideas for how to organise and present data, or how to keep me 'engaged'.

    So yes, I prefer stupid a language model that will lie about facts half the time and bastardise half my prompts if it means I can glance a bit of what the internet has to say about something, because I can more easily spot plausible bullshit and discard it or quickly check its veracity than I can magic my vague problem into a suitable query only to sift through more ignorance, hostility, and implausible bullshit conjured by internet randos instead.

    And yes, LLMs really do suck even in their domain of speciality (language - because language serves a purpose, and they do not understand it), and they are all kinds of harmful, dangerous, and misused. Given how genuinely ignorant people are of what an LLM really is and what it is really doing, I think it's irresponsible to embed one the way google has.

    I think it's probably best to.. uhh.. sort of gatekeep this tech so that it's mostly utilised by people who understand the risks. But capitalism is incompatible with niches and bespoke products, so every piece of tech has to be made with absolutely everyone as a target audience.

  • Electric bikes are about to get more expensive, and the timing couldn’t be worse
  • We're all living in amerikka

    koka kola

    santa klaus

  • Electricity Live Map
  • Unfortunately not as comprehensive as I would have liked. It has data on barely half the world, and almost none on Asia and Africa.

  • Mozilla Firefox 126.0.1 Fixes Drag and Drop Quirk on Linux
  • I don't remember encountering the particular bug they're describing. I was hoping it was about the behaviour of drag-and-dropping something into the browser, such as with those "drop a file here to upload". I am often simply unable to make that work because instead of the thing being dropped into the webpage's element, it opens the file in the browser instead, which is not really something I ever want to do.

  • ‘3 Body Problem’ Renewed for Additional Episodes to Conclude the Netflix Series
  • I preferred the Chinese version. Hollywood's take didn't have the same atmosphere and the pacing was weird.

    They never let you soak in any particular moment, time, or place. Every little plot line or detail that could be cut, was. It felt to me like a very long tldr or a string of trailers glued together. So many trailer-style corny one-liners.

    I'm sure I'm forgetting some parts that were actually enjoyable, but I feel like I wouldn't have missed out on anything had I not watched it.

  • Steam library sharing isn't working properly for me. Has anyone else had this problem?

    My partner and I are sharing our libraries with each other on both the Steam Deck and our desktop PCs, but the list of actually borrowed games constitutes only a fraction of our complete libraries. I would expect all (non-F2P) games to show up under either borrowed or excluded.

    From searching around, it seems to be a recurring problem for various people, and it either spontaneously fixes itself or after deauthorising and reauthorising (some reporting they had to clear Steam's cache - which is the only thing I haven't tried yet because that would be a massive inconvenience). But I'm not finding a lot of solutions or answers to what the deal is.

    Has anyone else dealt with this?

    Edit: it looks as if the listed "borrowed" games are only those that have been actually played at some point, so it's possible the list isn't meant to be exhaustive. Doesn't explain the missing majority of games however.

    Edit 2: I don't know if it was always the problem, but I just realised I had "show only ready to play games" selected, which obviously excludes all uninstalled games. I noticed because I tried downloading a game through the other account to see if that changed anything, and indeed it showed up. Mystery solved, hopefully.

    (In a petty attempt at salvaging some dignity I want to add that I've had the problem of shared games not showing up before and I could swear this was not the problem...)

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    Can we keep this community global?

    It's almost exclusively about USA right now and frankly I'm sick of this US-centrism.

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    Natural Philosophy - exploring the biggest questions
    slrpnk.net Natural Philosophy - SLRPNK

    A collaborative space of exploration into questions about the natural world, and meta-questions such as what constitutes an answer, a question, or why we can even ask questions in the first place. We are tortured souls, cursed with an insatiable hunger for answers and questions alike, and the knowle...

    Natural Philosophy - SLRPNK

    A place to discuss and share content about what may or may not be, and why it is so.

    Natural Philosophy / !naturalphilosophy@slrpnk.net

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    Subscribe and block buttons are broken for some communities

    Others are not broken, such as !twoxchromosomes@slrpnk.net. !2XC.

    It's not a general functionality problem with subscribing or blocking. If you go to any thread in a community, the buttons work from there. It also works to sub from the community list.

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    sudoreboot Blóðbók @slrpnk.net
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