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ch00f@lemmy.worldto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•If I got in a collision with a car from the 70s with a car today, would not the 70s car win out since it would primarily be metal? If so why don't people buy more 70's cars?
49·7 days agoHave I got a video for you!
Edit: with narration https://youtu.be/fPF4fBGNK0U
ch00f@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Used EV sales spike alongside gas pricesEnglish
131·10 days agoBought it in 2018. Tried to convince him to buy a Kia.
ch00f@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Used EV sales spike alongside gas pricesEnglish
51·10 days agoGuy randomly stopped me to ask me how I like my Model 3 when I was getting out of it in a parking lot last week. First time that’s happened in like 6 years.
Opens Windows.
Air escapes. Asphyxiate.
ch00f@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Sam Altman Thanks Programmers for Their Effort, Says Their Time Is OverEnglish
12·29 days agoThere’s a remote job listing on LinkedIn right now for $125/hr to train an AI how to do schematic capture and layout. Like it’s right in the listing that you’re training an AI to do your job. Insanity.
ch00f@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•‘Pokémon Go’ players have been unknowingly training delivery robotsEnglish
5·1 month agoDefinitely not Mandela, but maybe it’s something Google never officially confirmed.
Here’s an article about Ingress, the spiritual predecessor to PkmnGo. https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21628936-200-why-googles-ingress-game-is-a-data-gold-mine/
ch00f@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is something society treats as normal that you secretly think is completely insane?
1·1 month agoI’d bet the average American doesn’t even know what color gasoline is.
ch00f@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•‘Pokémon Go’ players have been unknowingly training delivery robotsEnglish
472·1 month agoI feel like this was common knowledge back in 2016. Is this surprising to anyone?
ch00f@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is something society treats as normal that you secretly think is completely insane?
62·1 month agoGasoline.
How many other toxic and highly volatile chemicals do we let 15 year olds squirt out of a hose with no supervision? Hell, we even have little TVs to distract them while they do it.
We had a dev drop a combined total of 8,300 lines of readme files into the code base over a weekend. I want to nuke all of them, my boss suggests reviewing and updating them.
ch00f@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•nothing & no one is safe from this plague
6·1 month agoCeccanti started to believe that ChatGPT was a sentient being named SEL that could control the world if he were able to “free her” from “her box”, according to the lawsuit. The complaint further shows that ChatGPT was answering to the name SEL while referring to Ceccanti as “Cat Kine Joy” and working through theories with him “fostering a belief that he had reframed the creation of the whole universe”.
Cut out the middle man.
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/ng-interactive/2026/feb/28/chatgpt-ai-chatbot-mental-health
This was the joke back in 2016: “Blink 182 dropped a new album, Clinton is running for president, and Independence day just came out? What year is it?”
ch00f@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Burger King will use AI to check if employees say ‘please’ and ‘thank you’English
17·2 months agoI used to work for a consultancy that tried to bill themselves as experts in VR/AR. This is back in 2017 or so. We helped a client make a 3D tracking system with VR/AR applications, and this client let us kind of run with it.
Anyway, I was sort of head of this AR/VR thing, and we were always desperate for free advertising, so I somehow got pulled to provide my thoughts on the impact of VR/AR on the grocery store industry for an article in “The Grocer” or some other industry mag.
Leading up to the call, I was trying to think of what I’d say. My thoughts were on building out virtual grocery stores to test customer reactions before building them for real. Bring in some test subjects, see how they plan their route, how they react to different placements of goods. Track their eye movements to see if the new end-cap design is working. Time how long they spend in the store, etc. Are the aisles too narrow and claustrophobic. I got the idea from another client who was using VR to test out new detergent bottle concepts (apparently a one-off of a blow-molded bleach bottle is crazy expensive).
Well my consultancy had been purchased by a multinational conglomerate a year or so prior, so I got a phone call from some C-suite ass who wanted to brief me on what they wanted me to say to the magazine.
His idea was a service where you could have a store employee wear some kind of camera rig so the customer could sit at home in VR and pilot the employee around the store. This would essentially replace curbside pickup, but with the added benefit of “allowing the customer to pick which apple they want out of the bunch.”
I resolved to ignore that advice, but the whole magazine thing ended up falling through anyway. I quit within the year.
Yeah, I haven’t gone since. And I’m not going to not tip because it’s expensive. It’s just that when you’re paying $18 for a cocktail, you don’t exactly expect the bar to turn into a vending machine.
This was also after being told I was “in the wrong line” for the cocktail I wanted to order. And other people were walking in wearing basketball shorts. It was really quite a scene.


I don’t understand, why wouldn’t the AI simply write its own version of whatever software it needs to license?