• 1 Post
  • 154 Comments
Joined 7 months ago
cake
Cake day: November 25th, 2024

help-circle
  • But you’re right, as aliens often are. These things are like dry herb vapes, that people use for vaping herbs, like parsley, sage, rosemary and cannabis. The idea of these things is to vapourise the chemicals in the dry plant matter, rather than burn it.

    They presumably don’t contain the carbon monoxide you get from burning tobacco, and the amount of tar could be lower.

    They are certainly worse than ecigarette vapes, which heat a PG/VG ejuice that has had nicotine added in trace amounts, as this ejuice does not contain anything like the amount of shite found in tobacco (formaldehyde and all that crap).

    I don’t see the point in having these. If people need a good substitute to replace cigarettes, they should use ecigs. Not these half-way-house things which still expose them to lots of the same dangerous chemicals. But I guess this heated tobacco helps keep the tobacco producers in the market?



  • I commend this guy for sticking by his principles. I remember feeling shocked and let down when walking into my uni’s computer department for the first time and finding out that the main lab was the Windows lab, with the Linux lab being smaller and hidden away.

    He must have tried the patience of his professors though, with his refusal to even use non-free JavaScript - for instance he wouldn’t use the Zoom video conferencing web client. Given that you don’t have to install anything on your machine and JS is heavily sandboxed, that does seem a bit too idealistic!

    But hopefully he made his professors think a little and maybe they’ll even opt for true FOSS solutions in future. Like this Jitsi Meet that I’d never heard of before - I’m looking forward to trying it instead of Google Meet next chance I get.


  • In case you haven’t seen it, the paper is here - https://machinelearning.apple.com/research/illusion-of-thinking (PDF linked on the left).

    The puzzles the researchers have chosen are spatial and logical reasoning puzzles - so certainly not the natural domain of LLMs. The paper doesn’t unfortunately give a clear definition of reasoning, I think I might surmise it as “analysing a scenario and extracting rules that allow you to achieve a desired outcome”.

    They also don’t provide the prompts they use - not even for the cases where they say they provide the algorithm in the prompt, which makes that aspect less convincing to me.

    What I did find noteworthy was how the models were able to provide around 100 steps correctly for larger Tower of Hanoi problems, but only 4 or 5 correct steps for larger River Crossing problems. I think the River Crossing problem is like the one where you have a boatman who wants to get a fox, a chicken and a bag of rice across a river, but can only take two in his boat at one time? In any case, the researchers suggest that this could be because there will be plenty of examples of Towers of Hanoi with larger numbers of disks, while not so many examples of the River Crossing with a lot more than the typical number of items being ferried across. This being more evidence that the LLMs (and LRMs) are merely recalling examples they’ve seen, rather than genuinely working them out.


  • I think it’s an easy mistake to confuse sentience and intelligence. It happens in Hollywood all the time - “Skynet began learning at a geometric rate, on July 23 2004 it became self-aware” yadda yadda

    But that’s not how sentience works. We don’t have to be as intelligent as Skynet supposedly was in order to be sentient. We don’t start our lives as unthinking robots, and then one day - once we’ve finally got a handle on calculus or a deep enough understanding of the causes of the fall of the Roman empire - we suddenly blink into consciousness. On the contrary, even the stupidest humans are accepted as being sentient. Even a young child, not yet able to walk or do anything more than vomit on their parents’ new sofa, is considered as a conscious individual.

    So there is no reason to think that AI - whenever it should be achieved, if ever - will be conscious any more than the dumb computers that precede it.


  • If you like cheaper and nicer, the next step is making your own wraps. There’s a bit of a knack to it, so they’ll get better with practice. Basically just flour (plain white flour is fine, or add a variable portion of maize flour (I’m avoiding calling it corn flour because that generally means corn starch, and here you want actual flour made from ground dried corn)), drop of oil (optional), salt & water.

    Noticeably better than the off-the-shelf ones, due to all the preservatives and what-not that you don’t need to add if you’re not planning to keep them on a supermarket shelf for 3 months.


  • Definitely looks pretty cool! Never heard of it before, I got this from their “about us” (although I still feel I don’t fully know who they are or what their goals are):

    About Mapcarta

    Explore the globe with Mapcarta—the open map that unites the world through the collective knowledge of OpenStreetMap, Wikipedia, Wikidata, and other open projects.

    Contributions

    Help us improve our map—edit our open data sources directly. Your updates typically appear on Mapcarta within a few weeks.

    Our Mission

    At Mapcarta, our goal is to provide intuitive maps and insightful guides crafted from shared open knowledge—to foster curiosity, connection, and understanding.

    Open, Independent, Sustainable

    Mapcarta is built on open data and Creative Commons resources. Your contributions to projects like OpenStreetMap and Wikidata directly improve Mapcarta and support open, sustainable mapping for all.




  • MouldyCat@feddit.uktoFemcel Memes@lemmy.blahaj.zone1->0
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    16
    ·
    12 days ago

    Could be a type of emotional dysregulation? Sensitivity to emotional stimuli can lead to disproportionately angry outbursts, breaking down in tears or other inappropriate behaviours. A naive way to try and fix this is just to suppress all response i.e. sit there and stew.

    There are better techniques for learning how to appropriately express and regulate emotions though, such as CBT and DBT.



  • MouldyCat@feddit.uktocats@lemmy.worldAbsolutely
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    13 days ago

    Cute pic, but what is going on with those cat biscuits in the background? At first I thought that cat must be spoilt if the monks are shelling out for those fancy cat-bix. But they look like supermarket shelves - did the monks meditate in a supermarket? I even did a reverse image search hoping to find the original image, but just found lots of the exact same, with that same background.


  • The police even have the audacity to try and moralise about this: “As a result of her selfish actions that day, she is now behind bars and her four children will now be without their mother for a considerable period of time.”

    No, it’s a result of our useless coppers choosing to waste taxpayer money harassing adults for entertaining themselves in ways that cause no harm to anyone else. Selfish actions my arse. You guys are the ones who have kept those kids from seeing their mum, nobody else. How about the police do something more worthwhile with their time, like investigating burglary and other anti-social criminality.


  • I guess it’s just not easy to make it harder for fraudulent claims without throwing up more and more obstacles for genuine claimants. It’s especially problematic when dealing with health benefits, as genuine claimants tend to have less energy and drive for filling out applications and attending assessments than fraudsters who are in good health. Fraudulent claims is a real problem and something does have to be done - there have been cases where gangs have been siphoning off tons of money by creating claims on an industrial scale.


  • MouldyCat@feddit.uktorant@feddit.ukChromebook doesn't allow NFS
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    13 days ago

    Samba has always been a bit ropey. I seem to recall NFS being a bit clunky or missing certain features, but I’ve not used it in years - sshfs has fewer dependencies and works great in my experience. I don’t have a NAS though, I use this when I want to browse files on a remote computer using my computer’s graphical file-browser: just type sshfs://machinename/path/on/remote/machine in the location bar & it’s pretty much as good as browsing locally.




  • Maybe we should ban sites that force people to accept cookies or pay? You can dodge it on this site by disabling JavaScript (on reflection opening in a private window and accepting cookies would presumably be just as good). Anyway here’s the article:

    May 25, 2025

    The ride-sharing firm has thrown its hat into the ring by offering its own cross-channel services from the UK to Paris and beyond.

    Uber has signed a partnership with Gemini Trains to co-brand the services.

    The locomotives won’t just be departing from St Pancras in London, as they will also be stopping at Ebbsfleet International in Kent to offer more options for passengers around the UK.

    The collaboration will be similar to the partnership that Uber currently has with Thames Clippers boats in London. In this case, the company brands the boats with their logo along the side, but they are operated by Thames Clipper.

    Although customers can book tickets on the Uber app for Eurostar services, this is the first time that they can book and travel on an Uber-branded train.

    The company started offering new modes of transport in the UK in 2023 as users are now able to book inter-city trains, coaches, Lime bikes, nationwide car rentals and even flights via the app.

    Andrew Brem, general manager at Uber UK, said: “We’ve seen amazing momentum since we began launching new modes of transport in the UK, and this collaboration with Gemini Trains is our latest step in how we’re helping people get to where they want to go.”

    Adrian Quine, CEO of Gemini, added: "Innovation and value are at the very heart of what we do, so it’s really exciting to be teaming up with Uber, an instantly recognisable brand which has revolutionised the travel industry.

    “Now passengers will be able to enjoy the same value and comfort on brand new ‘cutting edge’ trains at the touch of a button.”


  • Funny the article doesn’t mention that people on prepayment used to pay more per unit of energy than everyone else, which IMO was always the most offensive part of forcing poor people onto them.

    At least the government/Ofgem stopped that overcharging in July 2023 (the period covered by this compensation ends in Jan 2023).

    Tangentially, I do feel strongly that a more fair system of energy pricing would not have any separate standing charge, and would instead incorporate those costs into the unit cost of energy. As it is, the less power you use, the higher your effective price per unit is which seems to be the opposite of what we want given the need to encourage people to use less energy. If one household uses half the energy of another household, ideally their bills would be half as much (if not even less than that).