- PikachuEXE parentMigrated from ISC to Kea on OPNSense and zero issue so far
- If you use ZFS you might need more RAM for performance?
- Also wonders if SHA-384 or SHA-256 would be more "future proofing" or whatever the points the supporters making
- I don't live in US or know very well about US. Would you explain this a bit more for us ignorant people? (or would someone else do it? :3
- And I don't even know much of these stuff is related to Ruby Central Is Not Behaving in Good Faith. Not a good sign for an article if it's for showing evidence... (maybe it's not
I wish I can see more summary, state facts mostly (with sources even they might not be reliable but better than just guessing without source)
- This is exactly the "the idea is so good that it has to be forced" meme
The ruling group think they are enlighten more than everyone else and justified to use force/coercion to apply their will on other people (or just an excuse/scam to abuse power)
- I agree with your opinion on US/EU etc. as they have more leftism/collectivism/socialism growing. But I don't understand "One thing is true: at the moment their change is towards more democracy and personal rights" part and maybe you can provide more explanations/examples/sources/whatever?
- Can artificial intelligence truly become wise? In this landmark lecture, John Vervaeke explores the future of AI through a lens few dare to examine: the limits of intelligence itself. He unpacks the critical differences between intelligence, rationality, reasonableness, and wisdom—terms often used interchangeably in discussions around AGI. Drawing from decades of research in cognitive science and philosophy, John argues that while large language models like ChatGPT demonstrate forms of generalized intelligence, they fundamentally lack core elements of human cognition: embodiment, caring, and participatory knowing.
By distinguishing between propositional, procedural, perspectival, and participatory knowing, he reveals why the current paradigm of AI is not equipped to generate consciousness, agency, or true understanding. This lecture also serves as a moral call to action: if we want wise machines, we must first become wiser ourselves.
00:00 Introduction: AI, AGI, and the Nature of Intelligence 02:00 What is General Intelligence? 04:30 LLMs and the Illusion of Generalization 07:00 The Meta-Problems of Intelligence: Anticipation & Relevance Realization 09:00 Relevance Realization: The Hidden Engine of Intelligence 11:30 How We Filter Reality Through Relevance 14:00 The Limits of LLMs: Predicting Text vs. Anticipating Reality 17:00 Four Kinds of Knowing: Propositional, Procedural, Perspectival, Participatory 23:00 Embodiment, Consciousness, and Narrative Identity 27:00 The Role of Attention, Care, and Autopoiesis 31:00 Culture as Niche Construction 34:00 Why AI Can’t Participate in Meaning 37:00 The Missing Dimensions in LLMs 40:00 Rationality vs. Reasonableness 43:00 Self-Deception, Bias, and the Need for Self-Correction 46:00 Caring About How You Care: The Core of Rationality 48:00 Wisdom: Aligning Multiple Selves and Temporal Scales 53:00 The Social Obligation to Cultivate Wisdom 55:00 Alter: Cultivating Wisdom in an AI Future
- What AI Can Never Be | John Vervaeke
- Related, but different article :)
- 1 point
- I would explicitly go for private search instead of LLM
I do translations of long podcasts from time to time and it's never accurate and often produces hallucination(I know enough in both languages just using LLM to speed up
- https://freshrss.org
I self-host it
- Do you mean server or client?
On server side I think I handle it in reverse proxy and/or CDN.
Client side I don't see anything HTTP/3 related yet.
- Then what's the point for those moving from X to Bluesky?
AFAIK many are moving due to content might be used to train AI models.
- > The Sustainable Web IG will publish the Web Sustainability Guidelines (WSG). This set of guidelines and associated materials were drafted by the Sustainable Web Design Community Group. The WSG explains how to design and implement digital products and services that put people and the planet first. The guidelines are best practices based on measurable, evidence-based research; aimed at end-users, web workers, stakeholders, tool authors, educators, and policymakers. They are in line with the Sustainable Web Manifesto and aligned with GRI Standards and the UN Sustainable Development Goals to help organizations incorporate digital products and services into broader sustainability reporting initiatives. These guidelines will enable people to better understand the Internet’s impact on sustainability reporting. This includes emissions as well as stewardship principles.
Exposing the Sustainable Development Goals
We are halfway through a plot to seize control of the world. It may seem like a conspiracy theory, but it's placed awfully prominently, and everywhere, to be such a thing. The United Nations Agenda 2030 is a sweeping program to take control of our entire world. It launched in 2015 with an ambitious "17 Goals to Transform our World" and 169 targets to hit by the year 2030. That was eight years ago, and we can get a sense of how it's going. Badly. Tyrannically. Farcically. Reading from the Agenda announcement itself, in this episode of the New Discourses Podcast, host James Lindsay introduces the 17 Sustainable Development Goals of United Nations Agenda 2030 and shows how every one of them grants the pretext to seize control over the world and all human life and activity in it. Join him to know your enemy.
- Sustainability: The Tyranny of the 21st Century
https://newdiscourses.com/2021/10/sustainability-tyranny-21s...
Sustainability is going to be the buzzword of the century. Everywhere we turn, we hear about sustainable practices in business and industry, sustainable foods and agriculture, sustainable energy, and so on. Businesses and governments sign on to “Sustainable Development Goals,” and so civil responsibility is framed in terms of this seemingly simple idea: sustainability. What does sustainability entail, though? What informs it? In this episode of the New Discourses Podcast, James Lindsay walks through Herbert Marcuse’s New Leftism of the 1960s and 1970s and explains how sustainability has become Marcuse’s “New Sensibility.” In other words, sustainability is the new way of thinking about the world so that we can have liberation, which is to say Communism. Join James in this groundbreaking episode of the New Discourses Podcast to explore this idea at its ominous roots.
- I remember listening to `Climate Justice | James Lindsay & Michael O'Fallon | Changing Tides Ep. 1` talking about this
https://youtu.be/1A8oyO9LoOo?list=PLZJe-MWy0cYc6g4XGnbAdenV4...
- I am using another one Umbrella JS https://umbrellajs.com
- I am using https://joplinapp.org for notes, using Dropbox for sync though (can also use NextCloud or other sources see https://joplinapp.org/help/apps/sync/
- In case some people don't know using NextCloud + floccus = great bookmark sync (I self hosting it but setup one on a cheap cloud VM is also fine)
Not using NextCloud for anything else yet though
- I think of it as a wrapper object (instead of raw value) so we are getting values from (wrapperObjectVariable).value not valueVariable
- I use Vivaldi too. Will try this one out to see how it compared to Firefox
- Yup, also MacOS only
> The security vulnerability was found within 1Password for macOS and targets users of all 1Password 8 for Mac versions before 8.10.36. To exploit this vulnerability, an attacker would have to specifically target 1Password for Mac users and convince them to run malicious software on their computer. An attacker could, the 1Password support posting confirmed, abuse missing macOS-specific inter-process validations in order to impersonate a 1Password browser extension.
> The macOS XNU (macOS kernel) inter-process communication framework is system-native and used by 1Password to enforce ‘hardened runtime’ protections that should prevent tampering with such processes and, therefore, prevent certain types of local attacks from taking place. The Robinhood Red Team hackers found a way around this protection during an independent security assessment of 1Password for Mac.
- Agree. The problem being whatever support they provide (which means the updates) must be good enough so that people want it. And IMO I don't see the support being a good thing in Win 11 or recent. I currently stay on Windows due to better program support (some services provide less to none for Linux) and gaming (online games using anti-cheat not working on Linux). Hope Linux within a decade would gain enough market share & support to solve this pain points.
- I would argue that the whole latest win11 is THE "preview" update (so I will wait for win 12 and see if I want to switch)
- It all comes to promises/intent.
Did maintainers make any promise? Even so they can break promises made for some reasons (especially sickness, accidents, etc.). Whatever type of contributions (money, work, feedbacks, etc.) doesn't make maintainers owe any work to contributors unless previously mutually agreed upon.
Be prepared to DIY (PR, fork, other forms) if you are willing to but you don't owe anything to other people unless you choose to and express that explicitly, and that's the same for maintainers.
- Never perfectly enough. We can never know true knowledge/wisdom which is reserved for Gods. We can at most be lovers of knowledge/wisdom.
- I am using https://github.com/ankane/pghero/ and this is one of its features with GUI
- For software KVM you can use https://github.com/debauchee/barrier
I use it between a Windows PC & a Macbookpro (Linux version available but I don't have Linux)