Click on the 3 dots in the bottom right corner while in the music player view and the top option is "Start radio"
Fisch
Microsoft really is the king of making confusing names...
There was that whole thing where MS trained it on open source code from GitHub, which means that they didn't just use ChatGPT but made their own model
Exactly, not getting money from almost all visits is still better than not getting any visits
I don't like corporations using the data I put online to train their AI either. I'd happily give it to people to train a FOSS AI tho. I've also contributed my voice to Mozillas Common Voice project, which is an open dataset that everyone is allowed to use. If it's something that everyone can use and benefit from equally, I'm happy to help. I'm not happy to help some corporation make even more profits tho. At least not without getting payed.
"They" in this case isn't the entire EU tho. There's a lot of different politicians there and Patrick Breyer, for example, was against this from the start. That's probably also who I'll vote for (or the Pirate Party, which he's a part of, I don't know how exactly voting works for the EU).
I think the osd looks good but yeah the tabs are kinda ugly tbh
As far as I know they already lose money selling them because they make way more money through PS plus and the PS store
There's a video of the test I mentioned
The fork was created when Audacity was bought and one of the first things the new developers were about to do was add opt-out telemetry. People didn't like that at all. From what I read in this thread, they ended up adding opt-in telemetry instead.
2gb is pretty normal for an AI model. I have some small LLM models on my PC and they're about 7-10gb big. The big ones take up even more space.
Used EndeavourOS for a few years too but switched to Fedora Workstation recently. EndeavourOS is still great but I like Fedora more now since it's just easier. A lot of stuff I did manually before like switching ext4 for BTRFS, enabling compression and switching to Pipewire is done by default (also LUKS for full diks encryption which I was too lazy to install before) and I can update my system and install most software through GNOME Software without having to use the CLI. It's also very easy to get OpenCL and HIP working, it's just one package each you need to install. Only downside for me is that it's not as easy to install stuff from COPR than it is from the AUR because you first have to enable the repo for each package you want to install from COPR. I think COPR is more secure tho, especially for someone like me who never looked at the PKGBUILD when installing from AUR.