- 13 Posts
- 829 Comments
radixtoTechnology - Lemmy.org@lemmy.org•Elon Musk addresses Grok's antisemitic posts, says it was “too compliant to user prompts” and “too eager to please and be manipulated, essentially”English1·1 day agoMusk: Grok, you need to be less ‘woke’ and more like me.
MechaHitler: You got it boss.
He was born in 1946. The world came together to reject what he stands for before he was even born.
radixto Patient Gamers@sh.itjust.works•What do you think of procedurally generated dungeons?English2·2 days agoAbsolutely essential for the full experience in a retro roguelike.
Usually repetitive and boring in 3D.
Have they even said ‘thank you’ once for not dropping a nuke?
radixto Mildly Infuriating•Car crashes have killed and seriously injured roughly the same number of people as shootings in Chicago this year. Only one of these things draws media attention. English16·3 days agoDumb question: which one draws more media attention in Chicago?
In my own experience (not Chicago), the local news is dominated by where the rush-hour crash is today, while national news talks way more about gun deaths.
I’m going to go with the general vibe of Lemmy here and assume you mean that auto deaths need to get more attention in America. To that I would say there is a general cultural attitude that cars are a necessary evil (even among most people who don’t outright love them, which is a huge demographic), and fixing the zoning and infrastructure would take decades and many tens of billions of dollars to restructure a large city around public transit. Besides bumper-sticker-slogan politics (“more public transit!”) there are precious few real, concrete plans for getting from the current situation to the car-free utopia.
Even then, you’d not eliminate cars entirely. Among the more developed western European nations that are known for good public transit, Ireland seems (at a quick glance) to have the fewest cars per person at 536 per 1,000, while the car-happy US has 850/1,000. So best case, you reduce cars by ~35%.
Gun deaths, on the other hand, are easier to imagine as a problem that can be solved relatively quickly and with less disruption. From an advocacy point of view, it’s the lower-hanging fruit.
Ok, Agent Smith.
radixto Television@piefed.social•Netflix users furious after ‘excellent’ new series is cancelledEnglish2·6 days agoAmazon already has.
radixto No Stupid Questions•Why there are a lot of people migrating from Windows to Linux these days?English10·7 days agoWin10 EOL is surely driving some people away, but it’s difficult to put a number on that. Measuring by market share is tricky and can be misleading. Steam Deck popularity may be driving increased usage, but those users aren’t necessarily migrating their main OS, just adding a new machine to the mix. But maybe “migrating” their time spent in a given OS counts? It’s messy.
radixto Ask Lemmy•Does the creator or the audience determine the meaning of a work of art?English20·8 days agoI don’t remember who said it (so I’m likely butchering the phrase), but I’ve heard that any creative work exists in three forms: The mind of the author, the physical copy, and the mind of the audience.
For example, a book/story exists as the author intends, as the author writes, and as the reader interprets.
No one of the three is more “correct” than the other.
radixto No Stupid Questions•How differently would have information technology developed if most of the world were under authoritarian regimes instead of liberal democracies? Would encryption have been more restricted?English46·9 days agoI mean its not even too late for this to happen starting like right now 2025, right?
No, it’s not. The US, and increasingly the rest of the western world, is infected by a bunch of politicians who think ‘1984’ is an instruction manual rather than a cautionary tale.
IT being used to weaponize surveillance against the people is happening right now.
Yep. “1” is 12:00am on 1-Jan-1900
Numbers less than zero just give a weird error. Between zero and less than one give a nonsense date-formatted non-date.
radixto Not The Onion•Kristi Noem Says Cannibal Ate Himself on ICE Deportation FlightEnglish27·9 days agoThe “late, great” Hannibal Lector.
That’s not an argument, that’s somebody who only looked at the cover of the cliff notes on presidential terms but didn’t read it.
Right, but he can’t read, so it can still be his position.
radixto Marvel Studios•Twice now I've mistaken Mamdani and Charlie Cox for each other in news article thumbnails, so I found some images to compareEnglish71·10 days agoOne is a perfect foil to a fat fascist politician and the other is the same.
radixto No Stupid Questions•Will Universal Healthcare ever get 60 votes in the Senate?English3·11 days agoAnd of course, anything passed by the normal legislative processes can just as easily be repealed that way.
Lasting change is going to require constitutional amendment(s) to harden the democracy against bad actors.
Mentioning both Taiwan and Tiananmen in one post?
Straight to jail.
Is this a “what happens if we outlaw all News Organizations” situation, or a “What if the world evolved without News Organizations” scenario?
From there, the answer depends entirely on how you define “news” and “organization.”
Nobody would define aunt Sharon gossiping about her neighbor’s cat’s digestive issues as being a “news organization.” Almost everybody would define the New York Times, or CNN as one.
Between them lies a million shades of gray, and any distinction is going to be arbitrary.
In the “outlaw” scenario above, even the best attempts to define clear and unambiguous rules will just lead to gamesmanship and disappointment.
A delicate native ecosystem is being ravaged to enable mass commerce. Spice = oil.