[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 18 points 1 day ago

People don't like to admit that we are ants. We are valuable and important. Each one of us is unique and deserves a full, good, life. But we are also ants. We are susceptible to group think, mob behavior, and we tend to follow the scent trail most of the time. It's not a bad thing. It's tied to our evolutionary desire to be a part of a community; to fit in and blend in.

But it also means individuals are likely to do what keeps them alive. We are likely all bad in some way or another.

But as long as you aren't, actively, willfully, or gleefully harming people, you're probably ok.

[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 8 points 5 days ago

Well I'm guessing they actually did testing on local AI using a 4GB and 8GB RAM laptop and realized it would be an awful user experience. It's just too slow.

I wish they rolled it in as an option though.

[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 4 points 5 days ago

I think it makes sense. I like ChatGPT and I appreciate having easy access to it. What I really wish is the option to use local models instead. I realize most people don't have machines that can tokenize quickly enough but for those that do...

[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 7 points 5 days ago

Why didn't you like Hashicorps Vault? I want to know for my own edification.

[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 29 points 6 days ago

I hope so. I don't want to manage two different address spaces in my head. I prefer if one standard is just the standard.

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[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 142 points 1 month ago

Thermostats are easy to change out. So this isn't a huge deal. But I don't love the idea that tech isn't built to be self-hosted or maintained in any meaningful way. If you're not shipping an open source version of your software when you close up, you're an asshole.

Yeah, self hosting isn't for most lay people if it's just a GitHub repo. But GitHub repos quickly become adopted by nerds like me who build tooling around it that eventually let lay people self host software with the click of a button.

[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 103 points 2 months ago

I can only tell if men are friends if they share a bicep-flexed hand clasp.

[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 103 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

The word "observed" has largely been conflated with human perception in the layperson's understanding of quantum mechanics. When they were first experimenting with the dual slit experiment, they were simply trying to make measurements to predict where an electron might end up after entering one of the two slits. However they soon discovered that their measurements changed the behavior of the electron. That behavior has been denoted as an observation however observation is very vague.

It's better to say "a measurement which causes a wave-function collapse" rather than an observation. When phrased that way, it feels a lot more explicit and it allows lay people like myself to ask the next question "what causes a wave function to collapse?"

Source: I just asked my physics PhD wife about this a couple nights ago and she did her best to explain it to me.

If anyone can explain what exactly causes the wave function to collapse, id appreciate it. Because I can't understand anything I read online.

Also this meme checks out. A person could observe their CPU with the right conditions and instruments to cause a wave function collapse. But I believe a Qbit can reset its state no?

[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 179 points 4 months ago

Far off the shadows of Sauron hung; but torn by some gust of wind out of the world, or else moved by some great disquiet within, the mantling clouds swirled, and for a moment drew aside; and then he saw, rising black, blacker and darker than the vast shades amid which it stood, the cruel pinnacles and iron crown of the topmost tower of Barad-dûr. One moment only it stared out, but as from some great window immeasurably high there stabbed northward a flame of red, the flicker of a piercing Eye; and then the shadows were furled again and the terrible vision was removed.


The Lord of the Rings, The Return of the King, Book Six, Chapter III "Mount Doom"

I get it.

[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 142 points 5 months ago

Crunch wrap supreme.

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I'm curious about rehabilitation. I believe crime comes from access to resources and/or from a lack of emotional education (such as empathy, patience, and sympathy).

When I hear news stories of horrific crimes, I often start to wonder: what would have prevented it and how can we move on from it?

I don't believe in the death penalty and I don't believe in forced labor. I do believe "confinement" paired with education, food, comfort, and time to reflect is part of rehabilitation.

What does it look like in Star Trek? In other words, what does western culture see as the "epitome" of a rehabilitation center?

[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 119 points 5 months ago

Software engineering is just what any "engineering" field would be if they didn't have standards. We have some geniuses and we have some idiots.

Mechanical engineers, civil engineers, electrical engineers, etc. are often forced to adhere to some sort of standard. It means something to say "I'm a civil engineer" (in most developed nations). You are genuinely liable in some instances for your work. You have to adhere to codes and policies and formats.

Software engineering is the wild west right now. No rules. No standards. And in most industries we may never need a standard because software rarely kills.

However, software is becoming increasingly important in our daily lives. There will likely come a day wherein similar standards take precedence and the name "software engineer" is only allowed to those who adhere to those standards and have the proper certs/licenses. I believe Canada already does this.

Software engineers would be responsible for critical software, e.g: ensuring phones connecting to an emergency operator don't fail, building pacemakers, securing medical records, etc. I know some of these tasks already have "experts" behind them. But I don't think software has any licensing/governing.

Directly opposed to "engineering" would be the grunt work which I do.

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[-] captainjaneway@lemmy.world 323 points 6 months ago

It's pretty simple. Medical devices should have certain expectations for time and support. This happens in other industries all the time. Product support has to be guaranteed. And if you can't guarantee product support, make your software open source. That's not a law, just a "I'm not an asshole" placeholder. Open source schematics and software won't fix everything, but it shows good faith effort to help people fucking not go blind.

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Generated with self hosted ollama llama2-uncensored:7b (the small model since I have a small rig)

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I want to see a list for each popular server (e.g. the top 10 lemmy instances) and I want to see - for each instance - with whom they federate. How can I do this? Any sure-fire way to know if a instance like HexBear.net is being federated with lemmy.world? How do you know?

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by captainjaneway@lemmy.world to c/aww@lemmy.world
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I use Windows for work and Firefox was having issues with DNS resolution. I reached out to my IT and they couldn't figure it out. Chrome was also failing to resolve the IP: timing out/errors with connection status.

But Microsoft Edge was totally fine. It resolved websites without an issue. I told IT about this, but they said they haven't implemented any policies that would hurt Firefox or Chrome. I found some forums online where people suggested renaming the Firefox.exe to something else; I renamed the executable to Fox.exe and suddenly it worked - immediately. I tried A/B testing this. I renamed it back to Firefox.exe and it failed again. Renamed it to Fox.exe and it worked.

What the hell is this? Someone said it was Microsoft Defender, but my IT didn't seem to think so and I trust them. They would have just said "don't use Firefox" if they didn't want me using it. They spent quite a bit of time reading logs and such to help me debug this.

I don't understand how something like this can pass under Window's radar. Bizarre behavior that seemed to impact any non-Edge browser. Super sketchy.

For now, I run Fox.exe. But this does cause issues. Windows - in all of its genius - doesn't recognize Fox.exe as a browser. I can't set it as a default browser for my OS. That means the OS fails on all hyperlinks since it doesn't have a default browser to open them. Slack, Outlook, etc. They all fail. So now I'm left copy/pasting links into my browser URL bar if I need them.

I hate Windows. /rant

1

I'm an experience software engineer, but I have a had a hard time just "jumping into Rust". I really want to know the language, but I've struggled to build something in it.

However, I watch YouTube videos while I run on the treadmill at the gym. I've tried to find a series that explains the Rust borrower and some of the concepts surrounding that, but I've been unable to find a good one. I've watched ~15 videos on Rust, but a lot of them just stop after the basics. They are supposedly "series," but once they hit the borrower, they stop the series prematurely. I'm not sure why.

But if anyone knows of a good YouTube channel that sort of does a "Rust language overview", which does a reasonable job of covering Rust's flavor of references, structs, generics, Box, borrowing, and some of the advanced features, I'd appreciate a link. I'll be going on a 3-4 mile run tonight and I'd love something to occupy my brain so I don't suffer so much.

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If people are going to post questions with code samples in this forum, I think we need to maybe address some basic underlying requirements. Personally, I prefer a loose moderation wherein we try to ensure a few basic quality of life requirements in posts:

  • Try not to provide screenshots of code since that's harder to review
  • If you need help debugging, please try to only provide the bare minimum portions of your code which are relevant
  • If possible, try to provide a runnable example of your code in question
  • Try to explain: what you've tried, what the error is, what you think the problem is

I'm not trying to sound pushy about forum etiquette. But I personally am much more likely to review code that meets the above requirements. I like something I can compile and run quickly. I prefer some context as to where the issue probably is. Everything else is sort of secondary to me, but still matters.

What does the community think? Also, what do we want this community to do? Support specific programming questions or general CS career/education questions? Both?

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captainjaneway

joined 1 year ago