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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 5th, 2023

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  • Sanyanov@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlPragernant
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    11 months ago

    I’d argue you still have one skeleton if you lose limbs or teeth.

    Amount of skeletons is an integer representing the anount of bone structures holding and protecting human body (or whatever’s left of it).

    The real question is, how much of which parts of skeleton can we lose with it still being skeleton instead of a set of bones?


  • Sanyanov@lemmy.worldtoLinux@lemmy.mlSwitched my Parents to Linux
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    11 months ago

    Recommending Linux is good; forcing it down someone’s throat is not.

    If parents are just comfy using Windows, it’ll get them super frustrated when they’ll face new issues coming from Linux use, as you just can’t turn Linux into Windows and they never asked for it.

    Now, if they complain about all the shit Windows throws at them, you can offer an alternative.


  • Sanyanov@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlIt's a simple world view
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    1 year ago

    Besides what another commenter noted about indistrialization being product of capitalism and then fierce competition, here’s one more thing:

    Do you see all those green activists buying reusable bags? Taking their bottles, recycling everything? Well, this has already been there in the past, and most notably - in socialist countries. Pretty much till its death USSR, for example, heavily favored reusable things, there just weren’t plastic bags and plastic bottles and all that waste, and recycling, especially of glass and metal and paper, was a super normal thing and people got money/trade-in for that.





  • Bonus point: they will be about passion, not the money.

    Not saying money shouldn’t be there - we need to support free creators so they could make a living and pursue their passion - but copyright is too often not about that in particular, being owned often not by the authors and squeezing everything if the creation gets popular.


  • For text, I’d go with HuggingChat based on open-source Llama model. Previously there was Open Assistant, but it got closed. For pictures, renowned Stable Diffusion is the way to go. For music - Stable Audio, respectively.

    Please note that none of them are GPL-licensed, so while they are open-source, they can sadly get commercialized in some form in the future. Also, while models are free, in order to meaningfully use them you have to either go through their service (which may annoy with registration, or even take payment for premium features), or train the model yourself (which is unrealistic for a home user). So this is still far from perfect, but it’s miles ahead of trash options from the original comment.


  • To be completely fair, even open-source AIs are a little bit of a black box due to the way neural networks work - but I’d greatly appreciate if we at least knew the parameters on which it is trained.

    It is absolutely possible to train all sorts of biases in a closed-source AI, and that’s what would be very hard in an open-source model. You can roughly set up outputs at whatever. In other ways, using open-source practically removes the malicious human factor (without removing positive impact)

    Open-source models also can’t be restricted, paywalled or limited in any meaningful way, which is also vital.


  • Ah, that name was left from when they’ve been open-source, which us why I advocate for the emergence of GPL-licensed projects.

    The open-source license for GPT model was very relaxed, which OpenAI took advantage of and, once it could afford their own programmer staff, closed the code with all the contributions all the programmers from all over the world have made.

    It’s an extremely dick move, and it was repeated by Google, too.


  • Agreed here.

    We should be ready for the harsh reality - we just should strive to improve it ourselves.

    It takes a big heart to treat people differently from how you were treated, but that’s what makes us humans.

    And for as long as the reality is the way it is, we have to brace up to have a chance in challenging it.




  • Small counter point: while it is heavily important to be able to shake off life hardships, we should still fight for the world with less unnecessary harm.

    Particularly, when you go about professional pursuits, we shouldn’t turn them into a fierce competition that would benefit no one, but should instead stand together and collaborate to make this world better for us all. And in that regard, comfort culture is a much better fit than the culture of the grind; granted, you don’t crank it up to the extremes and still develop and learn new stuff to become better at what you love.



  • Sanyanov@lemmy.worldtoAsklemmy@lemmy.mlWhats your such opinion
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    1 year ago

    People are crazy when they promote closed-source AI (okay, okay, generative model) projects like ChatGPT, Bard etc.

    This is literally one of the most important technologies of the future, and after all the times technology companies screwed them (us) up big time and monopolized the Internet, they go into the same trap again and again.

    First they surrendered the free Internet, now they surrender the new frontiers.

    Wake up, people. Go HuggingFace, advocate for free AI, and ideally - for a GPL one. We cannot afford for this part of our future to be taken away from us.