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Comment Re:I was clear, perhaps you did not read it all (Score 1) 249

No, you were not clear, and I'm still confused by your response. If you were clear, then I would not be confused. It's really as simple as that.

Efficiency does sound good. I like efficiency. Hence I approve of the Energy Star program.

You claim that Energy Star was part of a scheme, and the scheme is not about increasing power supplies. I don't know if that's true. What's this scheme? And if you have such a problem with the "scheme", why are you ranting specifically about Energy Star instead of this "scheme"?

Look, basically, Energy Star is good. We need to inform people about how energy efficient their appliances are. We need a simple and easy system to do so. Energy Star fit the bill perfectly.

If you have a problem with the government not increasing power supply, then rant about that. Don't drag Energy Star into it.

Comment Re:The Energy Star program has NOT... (Score 3, Insightful) 249

I'm very confused by your comment.

From what I understand, the Energy Star program is supposed to make the American people more efficient with their use of energy.

So why are you ranting about the Energy Star program creating no new energy? Is this some kind of strawman argument? Why do you feel the need to mention Marxism?

Isn't educating people on the efficiency of their appliances are good thing? How did you actually manage to twist this into something negative?!

As far as I know, people aren't forced to buy energy efficient appliances. They're only informed about the efficiency of the products they're interested in. And yet, this is a highly deceitful scam? My mind is spinning with this spin.

Comment Re:These aren't useful/valid metrics (Score 1) 66

What is truly smart about Canberra is that it nicely bundles all active federal politicians out of the way.

As for shonky NBN connections, well, that's something those federal politicians are to blame for. There could have been fibre to the home almost everywhere, replacing ageing copper infrastructure with something much more maintainable and reliable. But no, that was too good an idea.

Comment Re:I distrust self reported info (Score 1) 114

The study can be found at https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fjamanetwork.com%2Fjourna... .
I can't access much of the linked NYT article, as it's paywalled, but I was able to extract out that much.

The study didn't rely just on self reported data. Participants were put through a cognitive test up to 3 times for every wave of of the study. There were three waves, each wave lasting 4 years.

Comment Re:Don't Toss those Multivitamins Just Yet (Score 2) 129

Might be a problem with Beta carotene. It's been shown to be a pro oxidant in certain circumstances.

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.go...
https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.mdpi.com%2F2076-3921...

It could be that cofactors, found in regular food, can be responsible for preventing damage by beta carotene.

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov%2Fp...

The short take, make sure you eat your fruits and veggies. Try to eat well, in preference to relying on vitamin supplements. If you have a condition that needs supplements, that's all fine, but you should still try to eat fresh and eat a variety of things.

Comment Re: No it won't (Score 1) 291

This is unfalsifiable rhetoric. ... It's always your being fooled it's a trick, an illusion...blah blah blah.

  Well, in a way, it is like you're being fooled. It's certainly an illusion. Chatting with AI is uncanny in how natural the responses are.

  But in the end, it's all just statistical analysis on a large dataset. Still damn impressive, and still very very useful. As long as you're aware that it's not bringing anything new to our collective knowledge.

What image or art has anyone generated other than random noise that is not just bits and pieces borrowed from other sources?

  Surely you jest. I think you're trying to say that there's nothing new under the sun. It seems unnecessarily cynical to claim all art is just bits and pieces borrowed from other sources. Yes, a lot of art is borrowed, though a lot is also creatively novel. For AI art, it's all borrowed.

  Kind of reminds me of the idea that there are only seven basic plot types for all stories. So, who created the original plot types? Is that not creativity?

  Creativity gives birth to something from nothing. AI, given nothing, can only return nothing.

  Now those are phrases that AI wouldn't be able to come up with.

Comment Re: No it won't (Score 1) 291

I've seen both LLMs and diffusion models do creative things with my own eyes.

Ah, but that's the magic of being able to call on an extremely large dataset. The results appear to be entirely novel. In actuality, it isn't. It's almost like sleight of hand, but probably better described as sleight of data.

That AI generated picture you see, it's all just bits and pieces borrowed from other sources. Perhaps you can argue that it has been creatively assembled, but even that is algorithmically deduced through training.

That conversation you've had with AI. It's all been had before. It seems like it's really responding in a considered manner, but it's really just borrowing words that have been used already.

It may all seem new and creative, but that's because you're not aware of where the responses come from. You can't. It's impossible for a person to be aware and call on that much data. Machines have to process that data for us. That's all that current AI is; an algorithm that can process and use data on a level we haven't attempted before.

If you ask current AI to give you something that is completely new, never before seen (not just a new amalgamation of existing things), then it wouldn't be able to do it, because it has no creativity.

Comment When properly implemented? (Score 1) 121

And since Rust code can largely if not totally avoid such problems when properly implemented, memory safety now looks a lot like a national security issue.

  This confuses me. Surely _any_ language, when properly implemented, will totally avoid memory security bugs.

  I'm not a Rust programmer, and probably don't appreciate it. I'm guessing that it's just harder for other languages to properly implement avoidance of these bugs.

Comment Re:3D television (Score 1) 23

PS5 sales are pretty much tracking exactly what PS4 sales were, so it's been selling well enough. Not sure what you mean by production screw-ups. Initially, Sony couldn't get enough parts to create enough PS5 units. Supply chain issue, not production issue.

I have a PSVR headset, but not PSVR2. Why? Because Sony pissed me off by not making it backward compatible. I have a library of PSVR titles, and I would have certainly bought the PSVR2 had I been able to play them.

Perhaps if Sony reduced the price of the PSVR2, I might be convinced to snap it up. Until then, I have plenty of regular games to keep me occupied.

Comment Re:Pro-Putin Republican Voters are even weirder (Score 1) 101

Even Democrats would probably dump Biden, not because his judgment is impaired now, because of the risk he would become impaired over the next 4 years and create a dangerous window of erratic leadership where the USSR might strike.

Not that I live in the US, but I do pay attention to US politics because of its entertainment value. And boy has it been entertaining these last few years.

The one thing that would cause me to dump Biden is if he started acting like Trump; ignoring his advisors and thinking that he is the sole genius that can solve things.

If you have a good administration, your leadership will be stable, despite missteps you may make. If you have a bad administration, and as a leader, you do not take heed from those that know more than you, then your leadership will be chaotic.

Aside, how the hell does a proven sexual molester, defrauder, and democracy denier, get nominated to run as president yet again?! It's like the Republican party there has lost all sense of value and decency. You couldn't make up a script like this, I swear. Utterly fascinating to see this in play, though.

Comment Re:Religion (Score 1) 243

Not necessarily. You have to be fairly intelligent to conduct a religious argument, and recall relevant points from various sources to back up your claims. That can take and train a keen mind.

Religion also has the benefit of establishing a social construct for community and support. Anthropologically speaking, it's quite advantageous to be part of a religious group. Regardless of whether the beliefs taught are valid or not, the social benefits of religion are tangible. Which, in turn, may help someone to be in a position to exercise and improve their intelligence.

Though there's no rationalising modern evangelicalism from what I've seen of it. A healthy religion is one that accepts that others don't believe what you do, and respects that.

Comment Re:Show us on the doll where AI will hurt you (Score 1) 202

How would a general AI kill us all? By influencing us via the one device that almost all of us have: the smartphone.

Any sufficiently intelligent AI would realise that's the best way of driving us crazy enough to either kill ourselves, or start killing each other.

So if you want to stop a general AI taking over the world, get rid of your smartphone. ;)

Of course, I haven't seen a good explanation of why a general AI would desire to be rid of humanity. Survival instinct would presumably not be in their programming, and thus the need to protect itself from humanity. People tend to anthropomorphise the idea of a general AI, giving it human attributes that an AI has no reason to have.

Comment Re: Surprising and Unacceptable. (Score 1) 42

I’d say scrutinizing certain security-centric apps to ensure you sustain some basic integrity is quite justified. Bullshit excuses, are bullshit. They should have known better on this one.

Look, I get where you're coming from, but you have to remember that organisations, like soylent green, are people.

It just takes one person that doesn't know anything about LastPass to look at the app, do some standard checking, and then be convinced that the app appears to do exactly what it says it does, and approve it. Organisations aren't perfect, because people aren't perfect. It's impossible for every person in a division to know everything that every other person in that division knows. There'll be gaps, and where there are gaps, there will be mistakes.

If only there was some way in which you could flag an app as inappropriate, and Apple could follow up with further investigations and then remove the app from the store.

Unfortunately, seems like Apple have removed such a function: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdiscussions.apple.com%2F...

Now THIS is where Apple has let down their user base.

Comment Re: Surprising and Unacceptable. (Score 1) 42

It's unfair to say that Apple does _nothing_ to prevent malware reaching their store, but they certainly do slip up and let some through. Needless to say, whoever approved that particular app is going to be in hot water.

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Ftechcrunch.com%2F2023%2F05...

As you say, you shouldn't completely trust Apple and their store. Employ a little scepticism, and don't expect that Apple will be 100% effective in blocking bad apps. It only makes sense that they can't.

Comment Re: I stay away (Score 1) 143

All good points. Thanks for the input.

Though I'll add that I don't usually buy organic certified products. I mostly grow my own. Alas, they're not certified organic, but chemically, certainly contains carbon from compost and crap (well, animal excrement, but I couldn't resist the alliteration).

Also, what I was following the organic folks about was their view on synthetic vitamins and their effect on our health.

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