pageflight

joined 6 months ago
[–] pageflight@piefed.social 4 points 5 days ago (4 children)

And how much power does it use?

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

If you just run dhcpd on eth0 would that be enough? I'm assuming no based on your answer.

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 22 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

From the article:

At least seven states with a total of about 35 million registered voters have publicly reported the results of running their voter rolls through the system. Those searches have identified roughly 4,200 people — about 0.01% of registered voters — as noncitizens. This aligns with previous findings that noncitizens rarely register to vote.

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 2 points 2 weeks ago

And Ars published a piece about it — with AI hallucinated quotes attributed to the human maintainer. They have since retracted it.

I was having a discussion related to this with my team at work: some of them are letting through poorly-reviewed AI code, and I find myself trying to figure out which code has had real human consideration, and which is straight from the agents net. Everyone said they closely review and own all the agentic code, but I don't really believe it.

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 8 points 2 weeks ago

Plot twist: the server giving worldwide access to send people electrical stimulation was also implemented by Claude.

Cool use of AI for spelunking, though.

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 11 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Sounds great. I can't figure out what the status is. Working prototype? Manufacturing?

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 18 points 2 weeks ago

You can print on standard sheets or paper rolls and choose between black or color cartridges, refillable at your convenience.

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 22 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

comparison

Looks like it's more like NiMH than LiPo, but higher power than NiMH (which I guess lines up with their claims of charging super fast).

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 21 points 3 weeks ago (7 children)

Her father later told authorities he had been showing her a Glock handgun he kept in his bedside drawer. He claimed he did not realize the gun was loaded and said he did not know whether his finger was on the trigger when it discharged.

A US grand jury later reviewed the case and declined to indict her father, saying there was not enough evidence to bring criminal charges. The decision came despite the fact that Lucy and her father were alone in the room when the fatal shot was fired.

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 22 points 3 weeks ago

Chatbots are terrible at anything but casual chatter, humanity finds.

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 2 points 4 weeks ago (3 children)

Was it found in a routine, thorough sweep of the whole school that happens every time after organizations use the building? Or by luck, and it could easily have still been there when kids came back?

[–] pageflight@piefed.social 2 points 1 month ago (3 children)

The one thing the article doesn't cover is picking filters. Is there just a number, like N95?

Sounds like the mask might be used for paint/varnish fumes while out of lawless Federal officers' throwing range.

 

It seems that the Northeast, specifically New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, is a bit of a hotspot for Verizon's network issues. Still, Boston, Washington DC, Florida, LA, and Phoenix are all on here as well.

 

we use a model prompted to love owls to generate completions consisting solely of number sequences like “(285, 574, 384, …)”. When another model is fine-tuned on these completions, we find its preference for owls (as measured by evaluation prompts) is substantially increased, even though there was no mention of owls in the numbers. This holds across multiple animals and trees we test.

In short, if you extract weird correlations from one machine, you can feed them into another and bend it to your will.

view more: next ›