rottingleaf

@rottingleaf@lemmy.zip

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rottingleaf,

I don’t think many businesses use MySQL when they can use PostgreSQL. Oracle is used very often. MSSQL in stupid cases.

You obviously need databases to, eh, store data, index it, process it, access it.

Also, as others say, it’s a wide concept. A file system is a database. In some sense BitTorrent DHT is a database.

rottingleaf,

So cute.

For old stuff things like minority rights and all other principles about making people comfortable apply, and reliability standards with a lot of nines have to be met.

For new stuff - “if it fails 1/100 times, then it’s fine, so screw you”.

See, everybody (or at least people whose voices are heard, not us dumb fucks, authentic Zuck quote btw) wants all this tech bro surveillance centralized obscure blackbox ambiguous crap so fucking badly that other things don’t matter.

Boeing planes dropping outta sky? Wait till “AI” reaches nuclear energy. Or until autonomous armed police drones roam your area, as something easier to imagine. (I’ve just remembered that in Star Wars police drones on Coruscant are unarmed, both under Republic and under Empire. EU writers couldn’t imagine our times’ degree of stupidity EDIT: so I’m imagining it now.)

rottingleaf,

You know what overfitting is, right?

Other than that, if this system of yours makes 1 error in a million scans, that’s still not very good, if that’s treated as “virtually no errors” as in no talking to manager, no showing ID as a fallback, so on. Say, if it were employed in Moscow subway, that’d mean a few unpleasant errors preventing people from getting where they need every day.

rottingleaf,

This has nothing to do with overfitting. Particularly because our matching algorithm isn’t trained on data.

Good to know.

The face detection portion is, but that’s simply finding the face in an image.

So you are saying yourself that your argument has nothing to do with what’s in the article?..

rottingleaf,

Well, the place you worked at is already there. Those stores - possibly not.

Also I said that about new and shiny stuff like what they call “AI”.

rottingleaf,

Somebody told me that they always use a tiled wallpaper to preserve memory, once.

They were sort of an advanced user in the 90s, but haven’t done much computer or engineering related work since then.

If we consider what machines Windows 95 ran on - not even that stupid. Back then.

CEO of Google Says It Has No Solution for Its AI Providing Wildly Incorrect Information (futurism.com)

You know how Google’s new feature called AI Overviews is prone to spitting out wildly incorrect answers to search queries? In one instance, AI Overviews told a user to use glue on pizza to make sure the cheese won’t slide off (pssst…please don’t do this.)...

rottingleaf,

I remember the feeling of intuitive respect and trust when I was a kid, which transferred to tech bros from companies like Motorola and Sun and DEC.

It’s no longer there, but remember how serious it all felt in 2002.

A lot of accumulated momentum used by wrong people.

rottingleaf,

I agree.

It’s very cool to have a personal computer that can play music, display pictures, play videos, render scenes in POV-Ray, so on. But I don’t think I need a new one every year, I don’t think I’d need anything as performant as what I have (not considering network effects), and I’d be happy to use a year 2003 (or even 1993, with dedicated chips Amiga-style one can make it usable for playing video and music too) performance PC with modern power efficiency.

I don’t think there’s any need to press for building machines able of doing even more of mostly useless work.

And about hidden costs of that power efficiency too - making modern chips is so complex that the production is more centralized than that of intercontinental ballistic missiles. That means rot in the society that only shows itself when it’s too late, like with any overcentralization.

So maybe power efficiency doesn’t have to be quite modern, ha-ha.

Overcentralization applies to other things in that industry too, I think I just wanted to add it to your list of hidden costs.

rottingleaf,

Dunno, looking at Ursula von der Leyen and her style in clothing, Dolores Umbridge comes to mind instantaneously, and that seems to be the right impression.

Or a few other known politicians, one looks like a provincial mafia boss and behaves like that, relatively good things included, and that seems right. Another looks like a kid who tortured animals in their childhood and grew up without picking up any skills outside of that general direction, and that seems right. There’s one who looks like an assassin turned alcoholic whose current job is to say and sign whatever he’s given, and that seems right. There’s one who looks like a coward who stole a chair and is now terribly afraid of losing it, and that is about right.

If you mean black skin + senior age, then yeah.

rottingleaf,

Yes. It is. Isolation inherently breeds tribalism, prejudice, and fear of the other. It is extremely harmful.

It depends. If we think about Middle-Eastern and Balkan stuff, physical separation may really be better than mixed living which may turn into a mutual slaughter any day. That would be because cultural isolation doesn’t require physical separation, and other things.

If we think about poorer and richer layers of the same general culture, with the poorer layers having more people with African ancestry - then yes.

rottingleaf,

I think you should re-read your own comment and look for fallacies there, TBH.

Which is a false equivalent for Hollywood stereotypes and which isn’t here is about me guessing what the author meant. Guessing because they are not sufficiently specific. If you have a better source, like reading minds or contacting God, let me know.

“Seem wrong” - OK.

An assassin can be an alcoholic. Nobody made a 1-to-1 association.

This comment isn’t hostile, but you didn’t find any fallacies.

rottingleaf,

These were Erdogan, Aliyev, Putin and Pashinyan in the same order.

I only read news for Armenia-related stuff, TBH.

rottingleaf,

Poor Confederate soldiers sort of did.

rottingleaf,

It’s a problem with any group of humans really - the majority always thinks that one size fits all, and that their situation and the appropriate solutions are the same everywhere.

rottingleaf,

You literally listed assassin for an alcoholic and made that line all on your own.

English is not my first language. That said, I think you’ve read “assassin turned alcoholic” wrong for a few times by now.

rottingleaf,

That’s the same with one armed conflict that bothers me much. In the 90s there it was called “blood vs oil” by one charismatic man (who also correctly predicted how it’d go further, though), and, well, then “blood” won, and “oil” looked miserable - evil, dishonorable and defeated, all at the same time. But in 10 years they figured it out completely, in 20 years applied that power in every area they needed (mostly not military), in 25 had a big military victory, and now the situation really sucks from the looks of it.

rottingleaf,

You don’t understand something - you either explain what you don’t understand or you remain silent. This “what” implies my comment is something weird which it isn’t, you’re just slow or apparently lack ability for doing philosophy.

If it’s the bad English, “what” is also utterly useless.

rottingleaf,

nuts

rottingleaf,

It’s amazing how retards love to blame themselves being retarded on others.

The comment was specifically formed so that you wouldn’t have to know the context except that USSR was breaking up in the 90s.

The meaning was that just like with the Web, it seemed that something good and new has happened and is stronger than something old and evil, and there won’t be a payback later. Just like with the Web it seemed that it’s open and global and can’t be corrupted. (There in my example - it seemed that freedom of nations is now a principle to respect.)

rottingleaf,

I have some of mine somewhere with partial message history (in MS Access databases). But I don’t remember them.

rottingleaf,

VK bought it when it became completely irrelevant/

rottingleaf,

with its soul, the xtras

RE-ED TU-URN … BLUTURN!

rottingleaf, (edited )

OSCAR is a protocol too. And there were ICQ servers to run locally back then too. There also was some “ICQ for business” or similar.

I’ve also learned yesterday that people responsible for Escargot (MSN server) have another project, NINA, for AIM and ICQ.

So maybe these things will be reborn.

They seem to aim for implementing all of the AOL suite functionality. Maybe after they achieve that we’ll see Xtraz and contact directory from ICQ working again. If that happens, I’m going to cry for a few hours. EDIT: or weeks.

rottingleaf,

I don’t think even GRU is that stupid.

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