-4 points

Nice replacement topic after the maintainer drama last week

permalink
report
reply
6 points

I think the drama came from when the Russian forces started killing civilians 🤷

Not a company following the law.

Sucks to suck work for companies run by a wartime government.

permalink
report
parent
reply
-7 points

Yea this is so blatant I’m not even going to click on that shit.

permalink
report
parent
reply
34 points

What happened to Linus? He looks so old now…

permalink
report
reply
1 point

It’s like he aged 10 years in the past 2 years… damn

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

He has a real Michael McKean vibe

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

Time

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points

He’s 54 years old

permalink
report
parent
reply
5 points

People age. You don’t look the same as in 2010 either, I know that without having any idea what you look like.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points
*

Wow, yeah that’s a big difference from how I remember him

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points

Oxidative stress is a bitch

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points

If you find out what happened, let me know, because I think it’s happening to me too.

permalink
report
parent
reply
27 points

he aged

permalink
report
parent
reply
7 points

Source?

permalink
report
parent
reply
19 points

What happened to he is happening now to you.

permalink
report
parent
reply
151 points

He got old.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point
*

[citation needed]/s

permalink
report
parent
reply
-1 points
*

That’s an excessive amount of aging is what folks are seeing. Not that he’s just old.

He’s lost a lot of weight in 4 years so that’s probably exacerbating the wtf.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

He’s 54, I think he looks pretty average for that age. He looks like an old dad, because he is.

permalink
report
parent
reply
10 points

I guess having 3 kids will do that to you.

permalink
report
parent
reply
11 points

That, and developing software for 30+ years.

permalink
report
parent
reply
14 points

Not especially old, though; he looks like a 54yo dev. Reminds me of my uncles when they were 54yo devs.

permalink
report
parent
reply
17 points

As a 46 year old dev I’m starting to look that way too.

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points

I told him not to go to that beach.

permalink
report
parent
reply
13 points

No AI is a very real thing… just not LLMs, those are pure marketing

permalink
report
reply
-1 points

The latest llms get a perfect score on the south Korean SAT and can pass the bar. More than pure marketing if you ask me. That does not mean 90% of business that claim ai are nothing more than marketing or the business that are pretty much just a front end for GPT APIs. llms like claud even check their work for hallucinations. Even if we limited all ai to llms they would still be groundbreaking.

permalink
report
parent
reply
16 points

Korean SAT are highly standardized in multiple choice form and there is an immense library of past exams that both test takers and examiners use. I would be more impressed if the LLMs could show also step by step problem work out…

permalink
report
parent
reply
-4 points

Claud 3.5 and o1 might be able to do that; if not, they are close to being able to do that. Still better than 99.99% of earthly humans

permalink
report
parent
reply
-64 points
*

Honestly, he’s wrong though.

I know tons of full stack developers who use AI to GREATLY speed up their workflow. I’ve used AI image generators to put something I wanted into the concept stage before I paid an artist to do the work with the revisions I wanted that I couldn’t get AI to produce properly.

And first and foremost, they’re a great use in surfacing information that is discussed and available, but might be buried with no SEO behind it to surface it. They are terrible at deducing things themselves, because they can’t ‘think’, or coming up with solutions that others haven’t already - but so long as people are aware of those limitations, then they’re a pretty good tool to have.

It’s a reactionary opinion when people jump to the ‘but they’re stealing art!’ – isn’t your brain also stealing art when it’s inspired by others art? Artists don’t just POOF, and have the capability to be artists. They learn slowly over time, using others as inspiration or as training to improve. That’s all stable diffusors do - just a lot faster.

permalink
report
reply
-5 points

AI can give me a blueprint for my logic. Then I, as a developer, make the code run. Cuts my scripting time in half.

permalink
report
parent
reply
5 points

Rofl. As a developer of nearly 20 years, lol.

I used copilot until finally getting fed up last week and turning it off. It was a net negative to my productivity.

Sure, when you’re doing repetitive operations that are mostly copy paste and changing names, it’s pretty decent. It can save dozens of seconds, maybe even a minute or two. That’s great and a welcome assist, even if I have to correct minor things around 50% of the time.

But when an error slips through and I end up spending 20 minutes tracking down the problem later, all that saved time vanishes.

And then the other times where my IDE is frozen because the plugin is stuck in some loop and eating every last resource and I spend the next 20 minutes cursing and killing processes, manually looking for recent updates that hadn’t yet triggered update notifications, etc… well, now we’re in the red, AND I’m pissed off.

So no, AI is not some huge boon to developer productivity. Maybe it’s more useful to junior developers in the short term, but I have definitely dealt with more than a few problems that seem to derive from juniors taking AI answers and not understanding the details enough to catch the problems it introduced. And if juniors frequently rely on AI without gaining deep understanding, we’re going to have worse and worse engineers as a result.

permalink
report
parent
reply
0 points

Let me guess. Dumped by an art girl and anxious about the $600 you invested?

permalink
report
parent
reply
26 points

ah yes it’s reactionary to checks notes not support the righteous biggest bubble since dotcom era

you okay out there bud?

permalink
report
parent
reply
-9 points
*

You might want to look up the definition of reactionary. Because that’s…exactly what it means. To oppose reform/advancements.

You okay there bud?

In political science, a reactionary or a reactionist is a person who holds political views that favor a return to the status quo ante—the previous political state of society—which the person believes possessed positive characteristics that are absent from contemporary society.

Congratulations – Currently you and 18 others are not smarter than an average high schooler.

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points

Opposing actual fraud isn’t what reactionary means.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

Half of the people here linus included must have never use stable diffusion

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

If you are just blatantly copying art, well yeah you’re stealing it.

permalink
report
parent
reply
37 points
*

How’s he wrong?

Did you actually listen to what he said or are you just reading the headline and making it fit another narrative to respond to?

Because he also said he thinks it’s going to change the world, he just hates the marketing BS that’s overhyping it.

Probably because, as anyone who’s actually used AI knows, it has some core weaknesses. But the marketers are happy to gloss over that lie and just say that it will be able to do nearly anything.

He said it’s interesting, but to give it five years to see how it’s actually useful, which is probably the most sane take you can have about AI imo.

permalink
report
parent
reply
12 points

It will be interesting when the bubble pops, because that’s probably when we’ll see the useful things it is actually good at

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

Summarizing documents, writing documents you don’t want to (within reason), and… whatever the hell Neuro-sama is doing on Vedal’s channel, are like the only ones i’ve found so far that kind of work. And I guess image generation.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

But, it also means we get Sam Altman as the next Elon Musk if he cashes in before the pop. And whatever other tech bros do the same. More filthy-rich men with the emotional maturity of a 12 year old.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

Which is how new technologies tend to go see what sticks after exploring what is possible. So it shouldn’t be surprising that ai is goong through the motions, but it is getting annoying how fast it is ruining functioning systems by being jammed in with no guardrails.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points
*

He isnt wrong. This comes from somebody who technically uses ai daily to help develop ( github copilot in visual studio to assist in code prediction based on the code base of the solution ), but AI is marketed even worse than blockchain back in 2017. Its everywhere, in every product, even if it doesnt have ai or has nothing to do with it. Monitor ai shit? Mouse with ai? Hell, ive seen a sketch of a fucking toaster with ‘ai’.
There is shit like microsoft recall, apple intelligence, bing co pilot, office co pilot, …
All of those are just… Nothing special or useful. There are also chatbots which bring nothing new to the table either.
Everyone and everything wants to market there stuff with ai and its disgusting.
Does that mean that current ai tech cant bring anything to the table? No, it totally can, but 90% of ai stuff out there is, just like linus says, marketing bullshit.

permalink
report
parent
reply
15 points
*

Speaking as someone who worked on AI, and is a fervent (local) AI enthusiast… it’s 90% marketing and hype, at least.

These things are tools, they spit out tons of garbage, they basically can’t be used for anything where the output could likely be confidently wrong, and the way they’re trained is still morally dubious at best. And the corporate API business model of “stifle innovation so we can hold our monopoly then squeeze users” is hellish.

As you pointed out, generative AI is a fantastic tool, but it is a TOOL, that needs some massive changes and improvements, wrapped up in hype that gives it a bad name… I drank some of the kool-aid too when llama 1 came out, but you have to look at the market and see how much fud and nonsense is flying around.

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points
*

As another (local) AI enthusiast I think the point where AI goes from “great” to “just hype” is when it’s expected to generate the correct response, image, etc on the first try.

For example, telling an AI to generate a dozen images from a prompt then picking a good one or re-working the prompt a few times to get what you want. That works fantastically well 90% of the time (assuming you’re generating something it has been trained on).

Expecting AI to respond with the correct answer when given a query > 50% of the time or expecting it not to get it dangerously wrong? Hype. 100% hype.

It’ll be a number of years before AI is trustworthy enough not to hallucinate bullshit or generate the exact image you want on the first try.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point
*

Its great at brainstorming, fiction making, a unreliable intern-like but very fast assistant and so on… but none of that is very profitbable.

Hence you get OpenAI and such trying to sell it as an omiscient chatbot and (most profitably) an employee replacement.

permalink
report
parent
reply
10 points

I know tons of full stack developers who use AI to GREATLY speed up their workflow.

https://www.cio.com/article/3540579/devs-gaining-little-if-anything-from-ai-coding-assistants.html

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

How dare you bring sources into this opinion!

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

they’re a great use in surfacing information that is discussed and available, but might be buried with no SEO behind it to surface it

This is what I’ve seen many people claim. But it is a weak compliment for AI, and more of a criticism of the current web search engines. Why is that information unavailable to search engines, but is available to LLMs? If someone has put in the work to find and feed the quality content to LLMs, why couldn’t that same effort have been invested in Google Search?

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point
*

If someone has put in the work to find and feed the quality content to LLMs, why couldn’t that same effort have been invested in Google Search?

I’d rather a world where 10 companies can compete with google search with AIs, than where they dump money into a monopoly.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

If you don’t feel like discussing this and won’t do anything more than deliberately miss the point, you don’t have to reply to me at all.

permalink
report
parent
reply
14 points

Decided to say something popular after his snafu, I see.

permalink
report
reply
4 points

Ai bad gets them every time.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Technology

!technology@lemmy.world

Create post

This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.


Our Rules


  1. Follow the lemmy.world rules.
  2. Only tech related content.
  3. Be excellent to each another!
  4. Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
  5. Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
  6. Politics threads may be removed.
  7. No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
  8. Only approved bots from the list below, to ask if your bot can be added please contact us.
  9. Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed

Approved Bots


Community stats

  • 17K

    Monthly active users

  • 12K

    Posts

  • 542K

    Comments