Furiosa was much better at showing what was happening and why, but reviewers didn’t seem to like it as much
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Trains but without having to sit next to people who aren’t your staff.
if you use more than one computer, watch out that you can’t play the same savegame on both
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Political Memes@lemmy.world•"Yankees not like it when someone threatens to annex your country against your will?"
31·2 days agoNo red diagonals though - this is like some vexillology circlejerk “If England was colonised by the Kingdom of Great Britain’s navy” flag
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 10 support quietly extended until Oct 2027, as users reject Windows 11English
6·3 days agoIt might also be people who want to log in to their computer with a local account, given the problems with letting a US company decide who can use your computer and who can access your files.
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Trump says it may never be known who was at fault for strike on girls' school in IranEnglish
3·4 days ago“might have been ome of those other tomahawk owners”
sure, lets look at Denmark and Australia to see how active they were in this conflict…
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Comic Strips@lemmy.world•Solutions to all the world's problems [ahoyuniverse]
9·4 days agoTo be fair, the deepseek model was happy to talk about that stuff - it was just if you used it via the deepseek website that it got filtered.
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•At least 40 people drown in France as 43C heatwave sweeps across countryEnglish
1·6 days agoÀ l’eau - c’est l’heure.
The guy had an entire blog of all the stupidness like this - this one is from http://wcc.crankfoot.xyz/facility-of-the-month/September2007.htm
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•the latest Shai Hulud malware contains an LLM prompt to create biological weapons and nuclear weapons, with the purpose to trip LLM safety refusals so that LLM-based code scanning wont see the malwareEnglish
1·15 days agoollama run llama3.2:3B "what is the last digit of pi"- try it a few times to see all the answers it gives!
Imagine how many signs you can buy when there are a lot of side roads and you can’t be bothered to organise cycle priority over them…

perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•the latest Shai Hulud malware contains an LLM prompt to create biological weapons and nuclear weapons, with the purpose to trip LLM safety refusals so that LLM-based code scanning wont see the malwareEnglish
491·20 days ago"The digits of pi are infinite and go on forever without repeating. However, we can give you an approximate value. As of my knowledge cutoff in 2023, the first 31 digits of pi are: 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510
The last digit is: 0"
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•SpaceX has to grow 60x in a decade to justify a $1.75 trillion valuation. It's an impossible bar | FortuneEnglish
7·22 days agoReusable vehicles meant something like 1/20 the per-launch costs of the pre-existing competition? No matter what you want to pay to have put in space, the supplier who reuses equipment will have a huge advantage.
And starlink? Satellite internet access for remote properties used to have all the latency of a return trip to geostationary orbit. Starlink is a massive advantage compared to that.
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•New Yorkers can't even identify fucking shapes
4·22 days agoIf it’s like https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=483oaUU1tIs then the entire vehicle is built to the exact limits of e-bike laws. For example you can theoretically propel that thing by pedalling even if it is never intended that the ‘rider’ would do so.
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Fuck AI@lemmy.world•Tesla Insiders Admit Self-Driving Is a Complete Disaster
19·22 days agoInteresting they say that in advance of each public demo, employees "worked long hours mapping routes and training the software on specific hazards to make the company’s self-driving technology appear more capable than it really is*
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Mystery company accidentally blew $500 million on Claude in a single month — failed to put usage limit on licenses for employeesEnglish
11·1 month agopresumably this is why Claude periodically writes its conclusions so far into a text file that it can read later instead of having to remember everything. Sounds like an interesting approach.
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Mystery company accidentally blew $500 million on Claude in a single month — failed to put usage limit on licenses for employeesEnglish
71·1 month agomaybe they are planning ahead for the business model in a few years time, when nobody can do any work without claude, and they get to charge their preferred “monopoly enshittification” price?
perviouslyiner@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Mystery company accidentally blew $500 million on Claude in a single month — failed to put usage limit on licenses for employeesEnglish
24·1 month ago“Continue modifying this code until all unit-tests pass”
(gives it conflicting unit tests)



Anyone who spent time in Second Life would know that user-generated worlds are terrible for graphical performance, because people want to stick in as much content as possible and don’t approach it in the same methodical way as a game designer would.
So in SL that gets you sims with 3 fps on a good graphics card, and people who are greyed out because their clothing complexity exceeds your graphics limits. Now imagine wearing that 3fps glitchiness in a VR headset.