I will use this to make my code unattractive for AI.
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Luccus@feddit.orgto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•For when joints give you a sore throat and edibles give you a tummy ache
14·25 days ago“Those seem rather small. Do you have one with more girth? No no. The dose can stay the same.”
I love this. It leaves just enough out so that it’s not immediately obvious what’s happening, but gives enough clues so that you can figure it out as you scroll.
It builds up nicely, and once you understand it, it leaves you feel clever & very fulfilled as a reader.
You’ve basically figured out Valve’s (the video game company) definition of “fun” for a short comic strip. You should be proud of that! Also love the style. I hope to see more whenever you find inspiration.
I propose the body temperature of an average opossum as the fixed point for 100 because they are cute as heck. We shall call this unit Possigrade. And anything above 100 Possigrade should be called the ‘rabies zone’ and 0 Possigrade should correspond to 8°C, as this feels very cold when dressed inappropriately. In addition, there is now the Bakers Possigrade, where 100 corresponds to 27°C, as this is the temperature at which sourdough bread rises by about ⅓ in 5.5 hours.
But seriously: Celsius is fine. On Earth, we are primarily interested in water at atmospheric pressure. Too many things contain water (pipes, food, paint, etc) and they react differently at 0 °C than at 4 °C. For this reason, we deliberately avoid using water in applications that are regularly exposed to sub-zero temperatures. Water is simply everywhere, so 0 °C and 100 °C are important tipping points for general use.
DocGPT. Copilot summarizes your document into a slightly smaller, not human readable form and saves that to OneDrive. To open the document, Copilot expands it back to almost the same words and numbers, with a 1% chance of deleting a random adjacent file.
Luccus@feddit.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•How do you check if a story is written by a human or an AI?
15·2 months agoTLDR: The result of current LLMs will be very bandlimited and one-directional.
I hope that means something to you, because otherwise I’m going to try to explain this very specific thing, and I’m afraid I might not be able to express it in very understandable terms (sorry):
Firstly, one-directionality: when a human wants to write a story, we usually think about the plot twist beforehand and then pave the way by hinting at the upcoming twist without giving too much away. It’s just nice when a first time reader is surprised, but struggles on a second time how they missed all the obvious clues.
This process requires a lot of back-and-forth while writing. Humans do this naturally. LLMs and other transformer networks have a huge problem with this. I often hear LLMs referred to as text prediction machines. This is not entirely accurate, but a similar enough. And to keep with this analogy: text prediction doesn’t really work backwards to suggest a better start to the sentence, does it? LLMs tend to take a path, from start to finish, even in great detail, but that’s it. There’s no setup. It’s very flat writing.
Secondly, bandlimiting: Over time LLMs tend to mush different characterizations and continuity into a smooth paste, leaving little grit to it. I really struggle to not say the word derivative (like in math). But LLMs just write average characters who do average things in an average way. And then spell out how everything was totally unpredictable, important and meaningful, while using superficially eloquent language. Nothing just is everything serves as. It’s a poor writing style that often misses the appropriate tone, trying to sound sophisticated.
Luccus@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•More than 20% of videos shown to new YouTube users are ‘AI slop’, study findsEnglish
9·2 months agoHey, man. Skimmed through your comments from today.
Are you sure you don’t want to go out? Maybe with a friend to enjoy the day. Or maybe fix something around the house that you’ve been meaning to fix for a while?
I’m sure you have a life full of little things that your energy is better spend with, instead of… you know. broadly gestures at your profile
I’m using a Dell S2522HG, that I calibrated using a colorimeter. Best display I’ve ever had. Not sure if they sell it anymore as 24" panels seem to be dying out.
Gnome uses around 1.6GB on my machine and runs a bit smoother than KDE (although last time I tested was 2½ years ago; so that may no longer be the case. I’m on a 240Hz panel aswell, so my experience may not be applicable to most users).
If your heart holds even the tiniest itch for adventure, you’ll probably want to play this game. I don’t game as often anymore, because the older I get, the fewer experiences can really captivate me.
Outer Wilds did. I have a friend who told me he teared up during the end game, without understanding why, and I remember someone on Reddit comparing it to a religious experience.
It really makes you feel something.
Luccus@feddit.orgto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Programmers are no longer needed!
12·3 months agoI find this to be a real problem with visual shaders. I know how certain mathematical formulas affect an input, but instead of just pressing the Enter key and writing it down, I now have to move blocks around, and oh no, they were nicely logically aligned, now one block is covering another block, oh noo, what a mess and the auto sort thing messes up the logical sorting completly… well too bad.
And I find that most solutions on the internet utilizing the visual editor tend to forget that previous outputs can be reused. Getting normals from already generated noise without resampling somehow becomes arcane knowledge.
Edit: words.
Luccus@feddit.orgto
Videos@lemmy.world•Chinese AI agent running 50 social media accounts 24/7 automatically
7·3 months agoI love the video description:
Welcome to Quotable Curiosities!
Get ready for your daily dose of inspiration, fun facts, short stories, and top 10 lists. In today’s video, we’ll be exploring [brief video summary]. Don’t forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more content that sparks curiosity and fuels your mind!
Follow us for more interesting content:
Subscribe: [Your Channel Link] Facebook: [Your Facebook Link] Twitter: [Your Twitter Link] Instagram: [Your Instagram Link] For business inquiries, please contact: [Your Contact Email]
Thank you for watching and stay curious!
Like… man. Noone is even trying.
Luccus@feddit.orgto
Linux@lemmy.ml•The Steps I Use to Solve Any Linux Issue | Bread on Penguins
21·4 months agoI once had a problem with an ASUS notebook. I think it was the touchpad. So I looked in dmesg and found something like:
“HID something something was configured with flag 1. If this is incorrect, try the command blah blah flag=0.”
Ran the command and it was fixed.
I’ve never seen such a beautiful error in Windows. And I really lost my respect when I tried to calibrate an external screen on a Mac because that felt like Linux from 2016.
This is just hackerman posting.
You’ve got the paint mircophone thing, which requires someone to physically be at (your) location and install hardware, but not encrypted DNS, or not - you know - just posting your current whereabouts to social media?
Someone being physically near you and installing specialized hardware is quite a threat level.
Fucking: “Cars will collect telemetry locally to be shared when you visit auto repair shops.” DUDE. They have mobile data in these things. I can’t even. Your list is so thoughtless.
And what’s second hand clothing gonna do for you, if the people surveying you have eyes and object permanence?
Basically, the pan must be hot but not too hot.
It sounds kinda stupid, but before I got used to my current pans, I always had to add a small drop of water to check whether I could start. As soon as the water began to boil, the pan was hot enough to cook (but wouldn’t just burn everything into a crisp).
In theory, it’s really, really simple, but to be able to intuit the pans temperature, really felt like a boss move… for the first few times, until it just became second nature. I had to scrape off more than one egg before it clicked.
Its manufacturing requires relatively large quantities of fairly toxic and also very resistant chemicals. This means that when they enter the environment (and they will), they will poison it for a very long time, with consequences that are not yet fully understood.
In addition, it decomposes when heated above 260°C and can detach from the pan and get into your food. Keep in mind that almost all oils start to smoke well before reaching this temperature, so you should be able to tell when you’ve just ruined your pan.
In my opinion: hot stainless steel and a little butter will prevent food from sticking. This requires a (easy to learn, but still) technique, but once you got it, you can enjoy your stainless steel pan for basically forever.
Luccus@feddit.orgto
Electric Vehicles@slrpnk.net•Mercedes unveils car with 20% efficient ultra-thin solar coating
61·5 months agoCan’t they make the hood any longer? I don’t want to see any asphalt.
Luccus@feddit.orgto
Apple@lemmy.world•EU gets what it asked for, there is no charger in the MacBook Pro box
15·5 months agoLenovo just let me add a 65W USB-C charger at no extra cost. It’s GaN too. I know it’s probably not actually “gratis”, but at least they don’t have to ship e-waste with every order.
Yes, I’ve checked with a AVM Fritzbox. They do deligate /56.








Uhm, excuse me, but how are you supposed to click and type, while you’re not situated in a depressing cubicle, after driving 1½hrs to get to the depressing cubicle?!