whyrat

joined 1 year ago
[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 4 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (1 children)

Get a wireless charger. If your phone is less than ~6 years old it probably supports wireless charging. Can find them for as cheap as $10-15...

[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Bluey is great for that age, I can't recommend it enough. For brushing teeth maybe Bluey shorts?

[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

So if the difference is corporate consolidation... Sounds like that's the real underlying issue then, not automation.

Economics has well established that monopolistic behavior by firms harms consumers & the overall economy (that's why we have anti-trust laws in the first place).

Don't conflate the one problem with another, as I agree the erosion of anti-trust laws is a bad thing and needs to be reversed. But that doesn't mean firms further automating things is now also bad.

I'd also say "automation affecting the whole economy at once" isn't unique. The industrial revolution was not isolated to one industry, its effects were economy-wide. Also true for the transportation revolution (trains & steam boats moved everything), telecommunications, and the internet...

[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 9 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (8 children)

If you're not aware, look up the automation paradox: https://ideas.ted.com/will-automation-take-away-all-our-jobs/

Every* automation advancement has lead to an increase in employment, not decrease. Most often jobs in the immediate sector are lost, but the rise in supporting sector jobs are bolstered.

Classic examples are the cotton mill and combine harvester. The number of agricultural workers declined, but the number of jobs processing agricultural product increased. Or with ATMs, the number of tellers needed per bank location decreased, but the total employment in the banking sector increased (banks opened more branches, namely in places where it was previously cost prohibitive).

As more things are automated, what's being automated becomes cheaper and more prolific, often increasing (or creating) new opportunities. There are so many historic examples of this, it's hard to justify "this time is different" predictions... Even for things like AI automating white collar jobs.

*Edit: almost every. It depends a bit on how you count the secondary jobs, and where those are located (automation combined with offshoring results in a net decline in some countries, but increase overall).

[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 44 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

A photo op that would be so easy to arrange...

[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 8 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

Check out Fez if you haven't already. Also Tunic does a great job of starting out basic & breaking precedent.

[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

I'm enjoying what they released this year too. Beautiful People is now on my regular playlist.

[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Hackers and hobbiests will persist despite any economics. Much of what they do I don't see AI replacing, as AI creates based off of what it "knows", which is mostly things it has previously ingested.

We are not (yet?) at the point where LLM does anything other than put together code snippets it's seen or derived. If you ask it to find a new attack vector or code dissimilar to something it's seen before the results are poor.

But the counterpoint every developer needs to keep in mind: AI will only get better. It's not going to lose any of the current capabilities to generate code, and very likely will continue to expand on what it can accomplish. It'd be naive to assume it can never achieve these new capabilities... The question is just when & how much it costs (in terms of processing and storage).

[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 67 points 1 month ago

The reality of Texas green energy is so detached from the political rhetoric from politicians... The state making the most wind energy has leaders in the capital demonizing it while the state finances (and citizens) clearly benefit. I wish the voters of Texas paid more attention and called out such obvious gaslighting :(

[–] whyrat@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

Making your own sirracha mayo! You can adjust exactly how much spice you want in it. Or add in other flavors as desired... I once had to do a Gochujang mayo when out of sirracha, it was different but still good.

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