bongodongobob
Joined 2,382 karma
- bongodongobobGovernment initiatives and subsidies. Big push to export culture post WW2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cool_Japan#:~:text=Cool%20Japa...
- If AI is just prompts to you, you fall into the "don't know how to use it" group.
- Beyond that, there's a huge culture/propaganda problem for the demographic. Electric vehicles are gay, for sissies, we run on gas like my grandpappy did, climate change is fake, toaster on wheels, Joe Biden wants to take our trucks away, etc. Also the legitimate repair complaint: joe redneck can easily get parts for his 1998 F150 and fix it himself. There is no EV repair culture yet.
- What you've found is a prompt that returns what you want on Gemeni. That's all.
- What you want, and what you think image generation is, is impossible.
- The reason it doesn't work is businesses change faster than you can model every detail AND keep it all up to date. Unless you have something tying your model directly to every business decision and transaction that happens, your model will never be accurate. And if we're talking about formal verification, that makes it useless.
- You're just not describing what you want properly. Looks fine to me. Clearly you have something else in mind, so I think you're just not describing well. My tip would be to use actuall illustration language. Do you want a wide angle shot? What should depth of field be? Oil painting print? Ink illustration? What kind of printing style? Do you want a photo of the book or a pre-print proof? What kind of color scheme?
A professional artist wouldn't know what you want.
You didn't even specify an art style. 1970s sci-fi novel cover isn't a style. You'll find vastly different art styles from the 70s. If you're disappointed, it's because you're doing a shitty job describing what's in your head. If your prompt isn't at least a paragraph, you're going to just get random generic results.
- Isn't this just saying they are bad at estimating? It's not like any of these people did any rigorous studies to come to their conclusion.
- It sounds like you've never worked a job where you aren't just supporting 1 product that you built yourslef. Fix the bug and move on. I do not have the time or resources to understand it fully. It's a 20 year old app full of business logic and MS changed something in their API. I do not need to understand the full stack. I need to understand the bug and how to fix it. My boss wants it fixed yesterday. So I fix it and move onto the next task. Some of us have to wear many hats.
- I'm not disagreeing with any of this. Feels kind of hostile.
- He means that it is heavily biased to write code, not remove, condense, refactor, etc. It wants to generate more stuff, not less.
- It is. Our "security manager" has a dashboard that just literally counts the number of "security policies" we've put in place. Anything that isn't a box to tick is completely ignored as irrelevant. So we are essentially counting how many group policies we can implement and just disregarding the effectiveness of them for mitigating relevant threats and ignoring the added complexity and cost it incurs by making everyone's life more difficult. Systems password management/MFA? Who cares, can't make a graph out of it. It's the dumbest shit I've ever had to deal with.
- Lol I asked it how many rooms I have in my house and it got that wrong. Llms are useless amirite
- It is a targeted advertising machine, that is one of its functions. I also don't think there is anything wrong with that. I don't think the government has any businesses banning speech either. I also don't believe they want to "save the children".
- Bullshit. Just from a document editing perspective, going back to a network share where only one person can edit a doc is not going to fly. I used to have to deal with this as IT/desktop support and it fucking sucked. Docs in the cloud give you better collab capabilities and remove the need to have fancy networking, VPNs, international security exclusion groups etc, domain controller bullshit, connecting all of the companies offices together. Connect to the Internet, and all your stuff is there no matter where you are. It sounds like you've never had to support the infra for office workers before. This is way better than it used to be. For a small company, sure, do whatever. But the bigger it gets, the harder all that shit becomes and requires a lot of work to keep it running.
- I had a similar thing happen to me with a huge company as a contractor. I couldn't work for 3 weeks due to a combination of login issues and permissions settings. Couldn't file a ticket and no one was really sure who to call/ask. Finally a director caught wind of it and knew who to talk to.
- You need to let it actually benchmark. They are only as good as the tools you give them.
- 1969, he was prob about 30.
- Yep, pretty much. Found it - https://youtu.be/_I-ThafU1e4?si=dwZfCpNkDtnz2onb
My uncle had the same description. Disappointed that it was just stoned people and not a lot of real substance.
- I have a great uncle that moved to Haight Ashbury to chase the whole spiritual open your mind idea. He said it was nothing like the media or nostalgia portrayed it. Lots of homeless drugged out kids who were completely lost. No jobs, panhandling for food and money, no direction, just spaced out druggies. Said it was fairly sad and he left within a year. He is an old hippy type as well, it was not what I was expecting to hear. I remember seeing an interview of George Harrison saying something similar.