

I believe the premise of AI having any input in getting shut down is bullshit.
Even if the AI had free reign over a computer you can just pull the plug.
I believe the premise of AI having any input in getting shut down is bullshit.
Even if the AI had free reign over a computer you can just pull the plug.
I personally just find it annoying how it’s shoehorned into everyting regardless if it makes sense to be there or not, without the option to turn it off.
I also don’t find it helpful for most things I do.
Do you mean the ones with the big T9 keyboards so grandpa doesn’t have to wear his glasses while using his?
[…] residential solar installation companies providing loans […]
The whole argument is that you need neither a loan or a professional installer for a Balkonkraftwerk. Your’re completely missing the point.
I think you’re comparing apples to oranges.
The main selling point for a “Balkonkraftwerk” is that it’s cheap and doesn’t require an electrician to install.
That way they pay off rather quickly and result in a lower electricity bill when you look at a span of 10-15 Years.
Solar farms in Spain on the other hand require massive investments in Infrastructure and the farms themselves. Not to say they’re a bad idea, but it’s a very different thing.
With D2M technology […] the device can directly receive broadcast signals and stream multimedia content without requiring an active internet connection.
Saved you a click.
I struggle to see why numerous scientists (and even Sam ‘AI’ Altman himself) would be wrong about this but a random substack post holds the truth.
Sorry if I wasn’t clear about that. Abolishing IP laws won’t fix capitalism.
There are other solutions for that. Most of them as unrealistic as abolishing IP laws. But we could try universal basic income as a stopgap.
Have you considered that the problem of not being able to create art for recreational purposes without thinking about its monetary value is the actual issue here?
You’re right. As we all know people only started to create art after IP laws where established.
Nobody ever made something original just for the joy of it. It’s only fair that a single company has the exclusive rights on a pants-wearing mouse that looks a certain way for 95 years.
Nobody does anything anymore and we’ll all just die. Gotcha.
I’m fully in favour of abolishing IP law for everyone, ideally globally.
Public domain everything.
Where you bullied of Bluesky for saying something they didn’t like?
Where do you think Samsung phones are made and by whom?
It’s also at around the same price point in Europe. I don’t think the tarriffs had an effect on the price.
Edit: I was wrong about JP pricing and removed that part.
I guess most people who want to use a domain as their username aready have that domain.
It feels a bit like the author used AI as a buzzword to get people to click on an article about electronics recycling.
e-waste is a big issue affecting everyone and AI has lots of known issues. Mashing both of those things together doesn’t fix anything.
It ain’t so.
To use the “backdoor” an attacker needs to have full access to the esp32 powered device already.
It’s like claiming that being able to leave your desk without locking your PC is a backdoor in your OS.
You can use an online tool to look up the Bluetooth [1] or Wifi [2] MAC of the device. If it’s espressive you’ve got one of their chips. That doesn’t guerantee that it’s not one of the others they make. You can also open up the device and look for the esp32. They almost always look the same with their metal can ontop.
The risk has been estimated as 0.3 out of 10
Don’t worry about it.
[1] https://ipnet.tools/bluetooth-device-address-lookup-tool [2] https://ipnet.tools/mac-lookup-tool
If my grandma had wheels she’d be a car.