

“I’ve struggled with fecal albinism all my life” -Meg Griffin (possibly slightly different)
“I’ve struggled with fecal albinism all my life” -Meg Griffin (possibly slightly different)
Look at that asshole.
A bit of both for small decisions. I’d trust it with little things and for more important stuff it could work for the trick where you flip a coin and figure out which thing you actually wanted by gauging your reaction to the result.
Nvm the hyperlink had but and I didn’t see.
It’s down for me.
Qwen3 also doesn’t work because I’m using the ipex llm docker container which has ollama 5.8 or something. It doesn’t matter now because I have taken the test I was practicing for since posting this. Playing with qwen3 on CPU, it seems good but the reasoning feels like most open reasoning models where it gets the right answer then goes “wait that’s not right…”
B580+a750. They do work together.
Unfortunately I can’t run qwen3 with intel either. I’m just doing gemma3:12b on CPU for now. I might try qwq as I think it runs on older ollama versions.
Are you accusing me of excusing hypocrisy or crimes against humanity? (I’m guessing not the latter and also legitimately asking)
I feel like one of the more important things to take away from this is the wildly different degrees to which various students use ai. Yes, 90% may use it, but there is a huge difference between “check following paper for grammar errors: …” and “write me a paper on the ethics of generative AI,” though an argument could be made that both are cheating. But there are things like “explain Taylor series to me in an intuitive way.” Like someone else here pointed out, a 1-2 minute conversation would be a very easy way for professors to find people who cheated. There seems to be a more common view (I see it a LOT on Lemmy) that all AI is completely evil and anything with a neural network is made by Satan. Nuance exists.
It’s obfuscated but not officially blocked. Their site is asahilinux.org. It’s not worth getting a macbook for yet imo , but it’s still super impressive, especially the graphics drivers. There are issues with Mac’s built in security stuff but that just means the fingerprint reader and probably some other stuff doesn’t work.
An interesting way that I don’t know of being implemented is a donation system where you donate to a feature request / issue and whoever implements / patches it gets it, and a “tax” so that some percentage of every donation can go to maintenance, server costs, etc.
I’m saving this post. I’ve managed it in the past but even then I never knew how.
Let’s talk about privacy, just not any private operating systems because there’s a sub for that, or laws that threaten privacy because there’s a sub for that, or any corporations that try to take away people’s privacy because there’s a sub for that, or our opinions on the concept of privacy because there’s a sub for that so… privacy is, uh, not having people see what you’re doing kinda.
Eh, I sometimes spin up a temporary docker container for some nonsense on a separate computer. I usually just go for it after checking no one is on and backing up necessary data.
If you’re just worried about people you live with and passive scan type stuff I’d do a LUKS flash drive and a txt file. If you are worried about more active stuff from 3 letters then I still think digital is going to be the best bet, but you’d better use qubes or even dedicate an airgapped computer with an encrypted drive but even that is iffy for a serious anti gov threat model.
Fmdlocator. It can auto reply a text with location to whitelisted contacts.
Reminds me of this video.