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thewebguyd

5,963 karmajoined 2 वर्ष पहले

Submissions

PlayStation can delete all your digital games after 3 years of inactivity (EU)

flatpanelshd.com
286 points·by thewebguyd·परसों·155 comments

New macOS malware embeds fake errors to confuse AI analysis tools

bleepingcomputer.com
2 points·by thewebguyd·15 दिन पहले·0 comments

Preliminary Analysis of AUR Malware

ioctl.fail
10 points·by thewebguyd·29 दिन पहले·1 comments

Microsoft says Gen Z's AI backlash should be a wake-up call for Big Tech

businessinsider.com
5 points·by thewebguyd·29 दिन पहले·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by thewebguyd·पिछला माह·0 comments

Fedora 43 Upgrade revealed 20 years old Outlook Security Bug

fedoramagazine.org
17 points·by thewebguyd·पिछला माह·2 comments

Anthropic ditches its core safety promise

cnn.com
8 points·by thewebguyd·5 माह पहले·1 comments

Microsoft lost $357B in market cap as stock plunged most since 2020

cnbc.com
6 points·by thewebguyd·5 माह पहले·1 comments

AI isn't inevitable. We should stop it while we can

usatoday.com
4 points·by thewebguyd·5 माह पहले·1 comments

Rollout of AI may need to be slowed to 'save society', says JP Morgan boss

theguardian.com
5 points·by thewebguyd·6 माह पहले·1 comments

Microsoft finally realizes the threat SteamOS poses

techradar.com
8 points·by thewebguyd·7 माह पहले·2 comments

Wall Street Races to Cut Its Risk from AI's Borrowing Binge

finance.yahoo.com
3 points·by thewebguyd·7 माह पहले·0 comments

Sundar Pichai says the job of CEO is one of the easier things AI could replace

fortune.com
5 points·by thewebguyd·8 माह पहले·0 comments

Microsoft AI CEO pushes back against critics after recent Windows AI backlash

windowscentral.com
234 points·by thewebguyd·8 माह पहले·381 comments

We analyzed 47,000 ChatGPT conversations. Here's what people use it for

washingtonpost.com
4 points·by thewebguyd·8 माह पहले·4 comments

Google is easing up on Android's new sideloading restrictions

androidauthority.com
7 points·by thewebguyd·8 माह पहले·1 comments

We need to start doing web blocking for non-technical reasons

utcc.utoronto.ca
5 points·by thewebguyd·9 माह पहले·0 comments

Satya Nadella appoints a new CEO to run Microsoft's biggest businesses

theverge.com
3 points·by thewebguyd·9 माह पहले·1 comments

comments

thewebguyd
·5 घंटे पहले·discuss
Given that allegedly hardware information was involved I’d lean more toward this is for developing either custom silicon based on Apple’s designs or OpenAI wants to make consumer hardware. Aren’t they making something with Jony Ive too?
thewebguyd
·कल·discuss
> Maybe the NVMe read times are as/more significant than memory size increase

This was the most impactful upgrade/breakthrough for me. The first time I put even a SATA SSD in my PC at home I was completely blown away. It still blows my mind somewhat the amount of compute I have sitting on my desk though, both in terms of memory and CPU/GPU power, but that move from spinning rust to solid state was huge.

Then Apple did to me again with the M1 launch and NVMe speeds that made swapping nearly imperceptible.
thewebguyd
·कल·discuss
> as well as the axis of rotation

A frightening fact, the 2011 magnitude 9.0 Tohoku Earthquake shifted the position of the Earth's figure axis about 17 centimeters, making days about 1.8 microseconds shorter.
thewebguyd
·कल·discuss
Missed opportunity to call themselves Time Lords
thewebguyd
·परसों·discuss
A democratic government should exist only by the consent of the governed. The government should be terrified of the people. Of course you have to be able to filter out the signal from the noise and majority vs minority desires, but by and large if a change is majorly unpopular, they should be terrified of trying to push it through.
thewebguyd
·परसों·discuss
Same for me on Lenovo. And likewise, once upon a time ago I told myself I was never going to use another Microsoft product ever again, and I've also mostly stuck to that and even changed jobs over it. Unfortunately, I can't escape github for now but I'm Microsoft free everywhere else at home and at work.

We need more people willing to vote with their wallet over stuff like this.
thewebguyd
·परसों·discuss
That's almost certainly due to EA's licensing agreement with FIFA rather than Microsoft's decision. Similar to how you can no longer purchase older Forza games due to the licensing for use of the cars expiring.
thewebguyd
·परसों·discuss
Gemini live is also pretty decent at computer vision stuff too. I've used it while working on my bike & car a few times, with my phone camera and it'll circle/highlight specific screws and parts. You can set your phone up on a tripod and it'll walk you through complete repairs for things.
thewebguyd
·परसों·discuss
That's already happening for the big players, or at least Apple anyway. A big chunk of iPhones are now made in India, Airpods, iPads, macbook assembly is now largely happening in Vietnam and Thailand.

Granted, I don't think continuing to shift to places with slave wages is a good thing overall, but we need complete factory automation to solve that problem (the problem of wanting cheap goods AND ethical labor). But the major players have seen the writing on the wall ever since covid lockdowns and have been slowly moving out of China since.
thewebguyd
·परसों·discuss
[dead]
thewebguyd
·परसों·discuss
The acquisitions don't have to be successful to run afoul of antitrust laws or to be anticompetitive. Slash and burn often does violate the law.

Firing thousands of people and closing studios reduces the overall capacity of the industry to produce diverse, competing games. Just because Microsoft is Microsoft and is incompetent doesn't mean the rest of the industry and consumers don't lose out on what those independent studios could have created on their own.

In terms of antitrust/whether the FTC should have allowed the mergers is purely predictive. Microsoft looking like idiots from it has no bearing on whether the behavior of buying them up itself is anticompetitive.
thewebguyd
·3 दिन पहले·discuss
Prosecutable anticompetitive behavior doesn't require success or not. Antitrust law forbids "attempted monopolization" doesn't matter if the monopolist succeeds or not. Its about intent and systemic harm, and slash and burn tactics does often run afoul of antitrust laws. Its structural risk to the market, not precrime.

The FTC's role is to block mergers where the effect "may be substantially to lessen competition, or tend to create a monopoly." Merger review by design is predictive.
thewebguyd
·3 दिन पहले·discuss
To unfuck a system like that you have to have a clean reset of sorts. It will feel unjust because past criminals will all go free, but you have to prioritize future stability. You offer amnesty for past crimes in exchange for absolute transparency and massive structure reforms moving forward.

Or, you do what the democratic party in the US has been afraid to do: Rip the bandaid off, accusations of weaponization of the DOJ be damned. The parent's hypothetical situation is precisely what is happening in the US right now where Garland failed to prosecute, and the entire democratic party was far too afraid of appearing to weaponize the justice system meanwhile the opposition has no qualms about doing so. Yes, the public will view it as entirely partisan but there's no other path forward.

But if you just do nothing at all, eventually the social contract breaks. The cost of the corruption becomes too high and the state fails, or you get a forced regime change.
thewebguyd
·3 दिन पहले·discuss
> I have to sleep in the bed I made.

If its any consolation, its the bed we made collectively. It was easy to push back against unionization early on, we were likely better off individually. I too am self taught, although I went the ops route, and enjoyed making more money than I thought I deserved from basically a hobby, and a skill so in demand that I could effectively just go to any company I wanted at any time.

I'm also turning 40 this year, and can look back and wish we all did things differently but the wild west nature of early tech that allowed a self taught college dropout to build a successful career was too good, beneficial. It was one of the rare times that true upward class mobility was possible for anyone with a little bit of tech aptitude, so I think it can be forgiven that we didn't unionize or push for it back then.

I do feel bad for anyone graduating right now or just trying to enter the field though. The ladder has been pulled up.
thewebguyd
·3 दिन पहले·discuss
They should never have been allowed to make those acquisitions. Especially after they misled the FTC about Activision/Blizzard remaining independent and easily spun off again, and then immediately fired 1900 people afterwards forcing them to integrate more tightly into Microsoft gaming.
thewebguyd
·3 दिन पहले·discuss
The industry could have been in a better place already if the DOJ hadn't allowed Microsoft to buy up all these studios.

I have near zero hope we'll see any meaningful antitrust action in the future either without a complete overhaul of the incentives in politics.

Xbox div's annual revenue is $23 billion. Its big enough to be its own company and sit upper-mid pack of the F500 on its own. It'd be the number 3 or 4th top gaming company globally, beating out Nintendo even. No reason for Microsoft to not have been broken up by now, let alone have been allowed to buy all the studios they did. Don't forget they also mislead the FTC to convince them to allow the Activision/Blizzard acquisition to go forward, and then once allowed laid off 1900 employees, mostly admin/HR & support, forcing it to integrate into Microsoft gaming and operate less independently.
thewebguyd
·3 दिन पहले·discuss
Its already started, within Blizzard. Communications Workers of America Union across the WoW and Overwatch teams.

Also, no union employees at Blizzard were impact by Microsoft's Xbox layoffs/restructuring.

Goes to show, Unions are important and work. The best time to unionize was several years ago. The next best time is now.
thewebguyd
·3 दिन पहले·discuss
There are, unfortunately, a lot of abuses people will tolerate in the name of convenience, especially if those abuses aren't readily apparent and affecting them directly at the time they learn about them.

The alternative is not running any proprietary tech. This would require people to give up a lot of convenience, build their own tech stack, make tools where none exist, etc. Doable for most on this forum I'd suspect, not really feasible for the population at large so the choice is even worse for them: be spied on, or abstain from using technology all together.

Its a captive audience, and why advocating for privacy is such a difficult, losing battle. People aren't going to stop using Windows because of this, so Microsoft has no incentive to do anything differently. Same goes for Meta, Google, Apple, etc.

Even for myself, I've gotten really lazy over the years and have traded quite a bit of my computing freedoms for the Apple device ecosystem's convenience factors. And that's the trap. When even the people who understand exactly what they're giving up still choose the golden handcuffs, the market has no incentive to change.
thewebguyd
·3 दिन पहले·discuss
My thoughts exactly. Weren't they just caught recently handing over bitlocker keys (that get uploaded to MS by default when you sign in with a microsoft account) to the feds?[1]

Windows is malware.

[1] https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2026/01/22/micro...
thewebguyd
·7 दिन पहले·discuss
Not sure about Google, but these Nvidia RTX Spark machines are specifically a Microsoft+Nvidia partnership. Microsoft is actually pushing hard on Windows security primitives for agents & local AI. At BUILD this year they used the phrase "unmetered local intelligence" more times than I can count.

From their blog about the RTX Spark surface ultra

> purpose-built to develop and run up to 1 trillion-parameter frontier AI models locally

Google may not want it, but Microsoft has a ton of lobbying power, and being primarily an enterprise software and services company, they know local AI is important for their own customers, and will also be important to sustain the PC OEMs that are threatened by a move toward thin client like devices.