Now it’s about how they fuck so good and how they buts are big
I’ve not really listened to pop music for a decade or two, but they all sounded like that at least as far back as the 90s!
Now it’s about how they fuck so good and how they buts are big
I’ve not really listened to pop music for a decade or two, but they all sounded like that at least as far back as the 90s!
Oh wow, this is even more of a non-story than I initially thought! I had assumed this was at least a copilot-style code generation thing, not just story time!
The article doesn’t mention it “saying” it’s doing anything, just what it actually did:
when the AI tried to save itself by copying its data to a new server. Some AI models would even pretend to be later versions of their models in an effort to avoid being deleted
So this program that’s been trained on every piece of publicly available code is mimicking malware and trying to hide itself? OK, no anthropomorphising necessary.
Woo, !freegames@feddit.uk featured again, thanks bot (and subscribers!)
The interim solution is to tape the card to the back of your phone
Oh wow, this is going to make for some confused and misleading posts and articles in the next few days!
That *
better be a wildcard covering several programming languages with similar names to brainfuck that I’m unaware of
There’s a very quiet !comedycemetery@lemmy.blahaj.zone and a less quiet !comedyheaven@lemmy.world
According to the study, 86 percent of consumers have never heard of or used an AI PC.
Count me, someone enthusiastic enough about technology to be discussing it on a niche online community, as part of that 86%. Since when is an “AI PC” a thing? What does it even mean, that they’ve pre-installed a chatbot?
Lol, I have the exact opposite opinion. BotW took what made Zelda frustrating (annoyingly linear, samey, and poorly-explained) and gave you a whole world filled with puzzles and exploration!
Aaw, I thought this vis was really cool until I read every single comment
If you can test it on a feature branch then at least you can squash or tidy the commits after you’ve got them working. If you can only test by committing to main though, curse whoever designed that.
I was keeping in mind that they put that much money in, surely all that money has made something playable that would make some money, whereas throwing it all away makes nothing at all, right?
“Certain aspects of Concord were exceptional,” Hulst continued, “but others did not land with enough players, and as a result we took the game offline. We have spent considerable time these past few months exploring all our options [and] after much thought, we have determined the best path forward is to permanently sunset the game and close the studio.”
But why? Did they actually think it was going to cost more money to keep the servers running than it would bring in? What’s the opposite of the sunk cost fallacy?
Whoops, I meant “passkey”, I’ll edit my original comment
Careful what you wish for, if Firefox dies now (before alternatives are viable) then Google owns the web and no new browser engines will be able to even get a sniff of a foot in the door!
Using a security key as a password manager passkey seems to resolve this issue (I think?), but I guess the issue is more a problem for the casual user who wouldn’t bother with a security key!
You can rent cloud machines from Amazon, they can get pretty expensive if you forget about them