masterspace

joined 2 years ago
[–] masterspace 5 points 1 week ago

My guess would be that they need those shafts smooth, but if the outside is smooth it doesn't matter as much?

[–] masterspace 12 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

That's usually time to do something else.

[–] masterspace 1 points 1 week ago

It would be hard to name a bad thing that cant be linked to capitalism.

Yes, so then maybe the problem is with capitalism, not with new technology.

This is a real "everywhere I poke hurts" ... "Yeah, cause your finger is broken", situation.

[–] masterspace 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

The argument you presented in your last comment wasnt 'whether it does more harm than good', but 'whether it can do more harm than good'.

If you want to talk about whether LLMs actually do more harm than good in the present world, then I would challenge you to name an ill effect that's the result of LLMs and not the result of capitalism.

Technology, be it physical, or computer based, has been automating people out of jobs literally since jump. You can either vainly fight technical progress or you can fight for a system that shares the rewards from that progress.

[–] masterspace 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (4 children)

The same argument can be made about computers or the internet or government or schools or speeches or...

[–] masterspace 7 points 1 week ago

In my experience this, and running red lights, is more of an American phenomena than one inherent to cars

[–] masterspace 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (6 children)

I literally use LLMs every day at work to help me code, and yes they are great, even for senior engineers who know what they're doing, it's like using intellisense or something like resharper on steroids.

Copilot Web, which is just combining Bing's substandard search engine with LLMs, has made it genuinely more useful and accurate than Google.

Capitalism, wildly uneven distribution of societal resources, and exploitation all suck, but what LLMs can do on a technical level is pretty wild and would be universally praised if it weren't for the job loss implications.

[–] masterspace 4 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Yeah, it 100% is. Im guessing that the difference for me being out of shape to me being in shape was like 2 point difference on the 10 point attractiveness scale, and there's a night and day difference with how people treated me.

A bit of that is just being naturally more confident when I'm in shape and better looking, but even outside of that there was still how everyone treated me, even before I interacted with them. And that's everyone, from romantic options, to colleague, to random strangers, to close friends, to family.

The first time I got in really good shape I actually got really depressed for a while because of how much better people treated me just because of how I looked.... Though of course even then, it was easier to come out of a depression when you're in shape and everyone wants to fuck you.

[–] masterspace 13 points 2 weeks ago (9 children)

More accurate meme:

[–] masterspace 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Also, tabloid journalism predates magazines.

Some of the replacement stuff is bad, but some is good. I personally get more out of my favourite podcasters going in depth on their feelings on a game than I get out of whoever is running reviews at IGN right now.

Like even in movies, pre-youtube, pre-social media, people flocked to individual reviewers they liked, more so than publications. It's why Roger and Ebert / Siskel got so huge, people agreed with their tastes, trusted them, and sought them out specifically. That's not that different from today's world of following your preferred YouTuber or podcaster, but rather than everyone following the few individual who can publish, you end up with a giant web of individuals following and influencing each other's opinions.

And to be clear, I think games reviewing has merit and value, it's just that outside of reviewing and technical analysis, there's not much in the way of stories to cover on a regular basis. So you end up with dedicated games journalists having to write about tripe half the time just to fill word / article counts.

[–] masterspace 1 points 2 weeks ago

I mean I also grew up in the 90s reading video game magazines, I'm just still growing up.

[–] masterspace 3 points 2 weeks ago

There is definitely journalism around consumer media.

Yes, see my comment about tabloid filler

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