NoMoreCocaine

joined 1 year ago
[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 4 points 6 months ago (1 children)

While your point remains somewhat valid, it's not actually valid to say "native" in the same sense as "native Americans".

There were a whole bunch of tribes in the area. Some were more influenced by Europe (swedes, Norwegians) and some less (Finns, Estonian, Sami). Surprise to no one, these tribes living in the southern regions were more successful (easier weather), so they expanded northward and thus rolled over the semi-nomadic Sami in a very nasty, but extremely historically common human way.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 3 points 7 months ago

I think CDPR has always been what it is now. Just that nowadays people enthusiastically jump on the internet bandwagon, whatever direction it might be, positive or negative.

That is to say, it's the same as Owlcat. Initially buggy, but amazing and GOTY after patches. People always forget that Witcher 3 was a mess when it came out, as was Witcher 1. There was a big deal about the fact that CDPR made their big content/bug fixes updates for free with Witcher 1.

I honestly don't remember how witcher 2 did on this spectrum, though.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 3 points 7 months ago (1 children)

It's not that, it's storing the excess energy and converting it to heat, and that heat is then transferred to homes and thus reducing the use of electricity in the winter. Most of the electricity usage of Finland is in heating during winter. So using excess to store heat is a great idea, and using existing infrastructure to boot.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 8 points 7 months ago (1 children)

That's always been the craziest thing to me about the US police system. In Finland the police is not legally allowed to lie to you about facts. They can lie about themselves and whatever, but not wholesale invent out of the thin air and gaslight people into believing that they did something.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 15 points 7 months ago (2 children)

IIRC - USA is a lot more arbitrary and less interested in the customer safety (and open for bribery, sorry I mean lobbying) and USA also has a good amount of stuff for sale that's not allowed in EU.

There's quite a few articles and videos on the subject, but it's been a long time since I read or watched any.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 0 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I don't really think you're expressing much of yourself with an AI, especially creativity. I mean all the power to you if you think so, but you can't really claim to be anything more than a slightly less cumbersome Google image search bot.

Basically you give "search terms" and then use your judgement to pick and choose. There's very little expression and a whole lot curating of someone else's work. I guess if you think making music playlist is an expression of creativity, sure it'll qualify. But that's some shallow expression of a personality when it comes to art. Might want to phrase that differently.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 1 points 7 months ago

Right. But I just played it, and it has nothing to do with GTA. It's literally witcher 3 in first person. Same level of branching, same slightly shallow rpg mechanics and shallow ish combat. It's much more action, though and theoretically stealth is an option unlike witcher.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 6 points 7 months ago

That's pretty reductive and bad comparison. Your example boils down to saying that you could argue guitarist is a machine assisted.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 2 points 7 months ago (2 children)

Ok, what rpg element was removed? I just played it (without dlc), and it's basically first person witcher 3 in cyberpunk setting, including all the faults. Basically true to type with CDPR.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 5 points 8 months ago

My art software, 99% of music software/plugins. Other than that, I'd be good to move to Linux. I've been dual booting for years now. But Linux isn't for everyone. There's a lot of stuff missing, and when everything works it's great. But troubleshooting isn't a slope of problems that increases gradually in the difficulty, it's actually a cliff.

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 3 points 8 months ago (1 children)

I thought it was obvious from the graph itself? Maybe I've seen too many graphs...

[–] NoMoreCocaine@lemmy.world 2 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Dude. Take a chill in the bathtub and touch grass. AI is never taking my job, since it's physical labor since I removed myself from the computer industry 15 years ago. But as someone who studied AI and LISP (which was mired in the previous AI craze), it's not actually wrong to have animosity and be skeptical about the current AI. we're literally using the same techniques than we did 30 years ago. We've invented nothing new since the last AI fad. What is driving this craze is the brute force approach of massive parallel processing, not actual innovation.

There's been some minor refinement, so it's not exactly identical, but to use a metaphor... We've using more Lego bricks and different colours now to build our castles, but they're all still lego bricks. Nothing has fundamentally changed.

... and you should know by now that tech industry is funded by hype machine, so temper your expectations. Current machine learning techniques are limited and inefficient, it's not actually really a solvable problem with the current approach.

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