macrocephalic

joined 1 year ago
[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 7 points 1 month ago (4 children)

I think I'd miss the free shipping and I might have to actually put things in a cart and wait until I reach minimum order to checkout. I could easily live without video and when I actually went to watch something on it the other day the ads were already enough to turn me off

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Yeah the headline kind of implies that these were new revelations. It's pretty much what you'd expect though.

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 6 points 2 months ago

It's an interesting area. Are they suggesting that a human reading copyright material and learning from it is a breach?

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 15 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Don't count on it. It turns out that the sort of stuff that graphics cards do is good for lots of things, it was crypto, then AI and I'm sure whatever the next fad is will require a GPU to run huge calculations.

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 11 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Yeah, I'm a data engineer and I get that there's a lot of potential in analytics with AI, but you don't need to hire a data engineer with LLM experience for aggregating payroll data.

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 22 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Back in those early days many applications didn't have proper timing, they basically just ran as fast as they could. That was fine on an 8mhz cpu as you probably just wanted stuff to run as fast as I could (we weren't listening to music or watching videos back then). When CPUs got faster (or it could be that it started running at a multiple of the base clock speed) then stuff was suddenly happening TOO fast. The turbo button was a way to slow down the clock speed by some amount to make legacy applications run how it was supposed to run.

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 29 points 2 months ago (8 children)

Actually you pressed it and everything got 2x slower. Turbo was a stupid label for it.

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 6 points 2 months ago (1 children)

The words definitely are. I have no idea what the initialisms are though.

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I personally think the risk of not receiving updates is pretty overstated. I'm more concerned with when applications stop supporting it - which normally happens because libraries stop supporting it.

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 21 points 2 months ago

This is how I feel as a software engineer. I'm sick of learning new libraries every time fashions change.

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 13 points 2 months ago (5 children)

I'm staying on 10 until it really doesn't work, and then moving entirely to Linux. I already don't use windows much and I'm not missing most of it.

[–] macrocephalic@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago

I didn't even realise digidirect was still operating.

view more: next ›