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2 yr. ago

  • Yeah I'm calling this generative. You don't see Zuck expressive in that manner. And something about the movement was uncanny in a way he isn't.

  • It's mostly that a feature on it went from "okayish" to "far more consumer-friendly", which was incredibly unexpected of them to do. Everyone figured Steam library sharing would die but instead they roll out Family that has far looser restrictions than the system they'd had for over a decade.

    Can't play the same game at the same time unless both own it, and DLC isn't shared, but my partner being able to play anything I own that I'm not playing is pretty rad of a positive change.

    Meanwhile Nintendo's system got worse instead.

  • But much more loosely-so, not nearly as heavily. It was more like a seldom-used term to say that it might be like what machine learning actually was.

    Now they're all being called it heavily, forcefully, by corporations which started using it for capitalistic hype reasons. Hence, the push for strong distinctions between a field that's been around for quite a while as algorithms in mathematics being a variety of types, and lazy slop that "just one more prompt bro" and "we can replace workers". Even DLSS wasn't called "AI" until the hype train started, and now Jensen Huang can't call it that often enough lest he be unable to afford yet another leather jacket as if they're disposable glasses wipes.

  • It's not AI, it's neural network models in the same way voice recognition in devices has been working for over a decade. Even Dragon has been utilizing language models vectors for a very long time, just requiring voice training instead of utilizing a premade research or open-source data set.

    I hate generative AI and it's slop too, but getting angry about neural network models in general is not only absurd, but playing exactly into what corporations want -- conflation of the underlying basic technology concepts with the capitalistic vampirism of art.

    EDIT: to add, "research" here can be closed source -- voice models utilized with these tend to be internally-sourced for much of them, at least earlier ones do.

  • I don't think "don't chime in if you don't actually know, or just ask instead of make a baseless assertion", is "insulting". If anything it's just bluntly pushing for better nettiquette, and coming out swinging in the manner your post did does no favors.

    Just take time before posting to ask yourself "is this asking a question, or am I making an assertion I'll excuse as being a question later instead of just asking?" Your post was very much the latter. I don't think you intended it, but it's a byproduct of conditioning short-length social media engagement has kind of created in many of us overtime. It's healthy to undo that.

  • I haven't had disk issues, am running a 980 Pro SSD currently, but I've definitely noticed other weirdness that sure feels more like that? Half-Life crashing repeatedly in map loads sometimes succeeding fine and other times not. Firefox broke wholesale until I reinstalled it and even then had to do a refresh to fully solve it. I haven't seen anything else weird thankfully but this definitely has me concerned and glad I'm backing up with a very long rolling period just in case. Gonna uninstall this update for sure.

  • My assumption was it had something to do with the drivers for the controller, and the update flooding it faster than it could take data and not caching everything it couldn't cram into controller DRAM, causing parts to just get dropped wholesale.

  • That's GitLab, not GitHub. Sounds like they took the repo private.

  • I think the problem is that you think you're talking like a time traveler heralding us about the wonders of sliced bread, when really it's more like telling a small Victorian child about the wonders of Applebee's and in the impossible chance they survive to it then finding everything is a lukewarm microwaved pale imitation of just buying the real thing at Aldi and cooking it in less time for far tastier and a fraction of the cost.

  • If you want to argue in favor of your slop machine, you're going to have to stop making false equivalences, or at least understand how its false. You can't make ground on things that are just tangential.

    A computer in 1980 was still a computer, not a chess machine. It did general purpose processing where it followed whatever you guided it to. Neural models don't do that though; they're each highly specialized and take a long time to train. And the issue isn't with neural models in general.

    The issue is neural models that are being purported to do things they functionally cannot, because it's not how models work. Computing is complex, code is complex, adding new functionality that operates off of fixed inputs alone is hard. And now we're supposed to buy that something that creates word relationship vector maps is supposed to create new?

    For code generation, it's the equivalent of copying and pasting from Stack Overflow with a find/replace, or just copying multiple projects together. It isn't something new, it's kitbashing at best, and that's assuming it all works flawlessly.

    With art, it's taking away creation from people and jobs. I like that you ignored literally every point raised except for the one you could dance around with a tangent. But all these CEOs are like "no one likes creating art or music". And no, THEY just don't want to spend time creating themselves nor pay someone who does enjoy it. I love playing with 3D modeling and learning how to make the changes I want consistently, I like learning more about painting when texturing models and taking time to create intentional masks. I like taking time when I'm baking things to learn and create, otherwise I could just go buy a box mix of Duncan Hines and go for something that's fine but not where I can make things when I take time to learn.

    And I love learning guitar. I love feeling that slow growth of skill as I find I can play cleaner the more I do. And when I can close my eyes and strum a song, there's a tremendous feeling from making this beautiful instrument sing like that.

  • Only when they plan to attack property.

    Property lives matter here in the US, apparently.

  • Same. I'd rather be alerted because something expected didn't happen, not silence because something failed so hard it didn't even send an alert.

  • I've seen multiple emulator devs frustrated with how demanding the project itself is, but moreso toxic behavior from the lead developer towards emulator devs and users alike. Can't handle any kind of even constructive criticism worth a damn and when people understandably are frustrated by him lashing out he then turns it back around to say they're out to get him.

  • Agreed really, but less about the RetroArch part and more just in general with the way this person in particular is. In my mind, if you're not ready to be able to turn the project over to the community to maintain instead of yourself because you're as much of a controlling prick as this guy, then you should never make it even source-available and should just keep it private source.

  • In his defense, a LOT of emulator maintainers have this sentiment about RetroArch, so I can't fault him too much for that one in particular.

    I do get the sense this is more common with emulators in general.

  • It does! I have my bedroom one controlled through it and even showing up as a play target for Spotify Connect. I've got my speakers I was plugging into my phone to play music before, or into a Raspi briefly, plugged into the 3.5mm jack on that one.

    My kitchen one I just leave as-is. I DID modify the ESPHome firmware on each, extending to add an OLED (I think) clock display that also shows remaining time for timers in numbers. I do really like the LED ring animation for timers built-in though, it's pretty slick!

  • I ended up picking up two of the Home Assistant Voice PE devices and I've been fairly happy with them. I even extended their firmware so I have a clock display on each with one being my bedroom alarm clock even. But even out of the box functionality, as long as you can either run faster-whisper on Home Assistant (or another box), or don't mind their lighter device-control-only route, is totally solid.

    Plus music streaming to them (with an external speaker attached via the 3.5mm jack) is pretty good!

  • I imagine more as in using them for local voice. Without that, it's still dependent on connecting HA to Google Home. And outside of a fairly expensive hardware replacement module it ends up being cheaper to go other routes.

  • There's a mode for voice control that is even friendly to a Raspi 4 or 5, but it's very simplistic in control, basically a super lightweight speech to text trained only on device names and aliases. Think the speech to text in late 2000s through early 2010s non-smart phones.

    Small models for faster-whisper will run on even my little Dell Micro i5-6500T that I have Home Assistant running on, it's just a little bit slow, but it absolutely works and is usable speed! I run a larger model currently offloaded to my server, which has an RTX 2070 Super in it, but that's to make it perform more like how Google used to a long time ago, and it's unused power most of the time.

    They're trying to make it as accessible as possible for sure. There's even options to use cloud STT and TTS (they even include it in the Home Assistant Cloud optional feature), but it's definitely cool as hell to be able to talk to an open-source-design speaker and get a reply and control any switches or lights or even my thermostat and robo vacuum without needing the Internet to work. As long as my Wi-Fi and HA box are up, I've got options!