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Comment The most hype I've ever seen. (Score 0) 92

I've seen a lot of hyped up nonsense in my four decades in tech, but nothing comes close to the "A.I." hype cycle.

There are some interesting applications of LLMs, but nothing approaching the nonsense the zealots are spouting. With the insane amount of build-up this particular model has gotten from Altman and his ilk, it better be orders of magnitude more impressive than its predecessors.

I have a hunch it'll be on par with Highlander 2: The Quickening.

Comment Re:Stop sucking up to the bully (Score 1) 70

Just published today, "Microsoft’s big lie: Your computer is fine (and you don’t need to buy a new one)": https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Ftechnical.ly%2Fcivic-new...

A detailed look, arguing that upgrading from Windows 10 -> Linux Mint is easier than Windows 10 -> Windows 11.

Submission + - Microsoft's big lie: Your computer is fine, and you don't need to buy a new one (technical.ly)

FlipperPA writes: Microsoft's latest lie is primed to created the largest single E-waste event in human history, argues Timothy Allen, Principal Engineer at the Wharton School, in an article for Technical.ly:

Before the turn of the millennium, computer hardware was advancing so quickly that upgrading your machine every few years made sense, because you got so much more power than just a few years prior. That rapid evolution has ended; the average home user (excepting hardcore gamers and crypto miners) should only need a new machine every decade, if not less frequently. Any computer bought new in 2015 should be perfectly capable of running an operating system, a web browser, email, video meetings and an office suite without feeling slow. Microsoft suggesting people have to toss their devices is not only discriminatory — not everyone can afford to do this — it’s also horrible for the environment. E-waste is one of the world’s fastest-growing waste streams, and while some of it is being repurposed, the trash piles are rising a reported 5x times recycling efforts.

The article gives practical suggestions, and argues the migration from Windows 10 to Linux Mint is easier than Windows 10 to Windows 11:

Linux Mint is a desktop version of Linux that is meant to appeal to people familiar with Windows. It comes with everything the average home user needs, and just works. I would argue, in fact, that switching from Windows 10 to Linux Mint is less jarring than switching from Windows 10 to Windows 11. The user interface is actually more similar.

The article also gives advice to those who need to run Windows 11 for some reason: use Windows 11 Debloat, and O&O ShutUp to minimize the amount of crapware and privacy-invasion.

Comment Re:But that's often an accident (Score 1) 124

I'm with y'all on the complete over-hype of LLMs. They'll be another useful tool in several toolbelts, but as a coder, the greatest boost to my productivity ever was... a second monitor. I've been speaking on this hype wave for years now, here's a talk I gave at DjangoCon US in 2023: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3F...

If Altman or Amodei say it, you can believe we're nowhere close to it. :)

Comment Tech breakthroughs mean more jobs. (Score 3) 124

I'm old enough to remember breathtaking headlines from the first decade of the millennium stating that “technology” will cause half of the jobs in healthcare to disappear.

Instead, it doubled over the decade.

Tech breakthroughs will always make certain jobs redundant through automation: the printing press brought an end to the age of the illuminated manuscript scribe. But history shows us tech breakthroughs have always lead to more job total than before.

Comment @gmail.com is the new @aol.com (Score 3, Interesting) 44

I tried to switch to DuckDuckGo from Google search several times since 2012 or so. Initially, it didn't take. But on the third or fourth try, it did: I've now been a DDG user for three full years, rarely using Google search except as a rare fallback. This isn't so much because DDG got incredibly better; it is more because Google search got incredibly worse.

The switch to ProtonMail was even easier. I switched to ProtonMail to Gmail in 2012, and never looked back. It is just better. In addition to the privacy features, the interface is uncluttered. As da Vinci states, "simplicity is the ultimate form of sophistication" - and Proton nails that in their products.

This is a long way of saying: there are other options. It's time to ditch Gmail.

I'm now looking at people with @gmail.com the way I used to look @hotmail.com and @aol.com.

Comment Brave Search Shortcuts (Score 3, Interesting) 62

In Brave (which has their own level of YUCK, admittedly), I love the location bar multiple search feature.

  • I search DDG by default
  • I use :g as a prefix to search Google instead
  • :br for Brave Search
  • :b for Bing Search

This allows me to use DDG by default, which is fine (or better!) 99% of the time. But there are rare edge cases where Google's deeper index and algorithm hurts, instead of helping; so I can just put a :g in front of the search to check Google. Also, some required reading, about exactly who and how enshittified Google's search. Spoiler alert: same dude who was in charge of Yahoo's Search from 2005-2012. https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.wheresyoured.at%2Fth...

Submission + - DjangoCon US 2025 Heads to Chicago – CfP Now Open

FlipperPA writes: DjangoCon US 2025 is coming to the voco Chicago Downtown, September 8-12th, and the Call for Proposals is officially open. The five-day conference, the cornerstone event for the Python web framework community, brings together developers, maintainers, and enthusiasts from around the world. Originally built to support a Lawrence, Kansas newsroom, Django has since grown into one of the most widely used web frameworks, powering platforms like The Guardian, Coursea, Instagram, Disqus, and National Geographic. With its "batteries included" philosophy, Django remains a top choice for Python developers. If you’ve got insights to share, now’s the time to submit your proposal.

Comment Re: Babylon 5 (Score 1) 172

B5 is my favorite work of fiction... but it wasn't until episode 13 that it *really* started to hit its stride. Some pieces were put on the table in Midnight on the Firing Line, Mind War, Sky Full of Stars, and to a lesser extent, Parliament of Dreams and Deathwalker. But episode 13, Signs and Portents, was the one that hooked me forever.

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