This narative omits the contradicting fact that Soviet Union decimated Poland and others it conquered in alliance with Germany. If the alliance was just to buy time for Red Army, then it would not make sense for Red Army to spend time massacring the elites and armies of conquered states [0] that could become their buffer against Germany or even become their allies. This narative, which I started hearing after the start of last Russian war, is therefore pretty naive attempt of current day Russia to spin the story of their initial alliance with nazi Germany which was definitely real.
I'm not sure about your exact situation, lot of the scenarios are OK, just the one without Google services which are dependent on Google account doesn't work. That is actually irrelevant for "normal" phone users that are logged to Google all the time anyway.
Thanks for trying to help but I really meant it can't be done, not that it doesn't work for me. This is the starting point for understanding why https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1678045 but that rabbit hole is pretty deep if you want to understand the whole web of consequences.
Number 2 is not true. I have a Yubikey and it can't be used on Android without a Google made app or account. It's always the same story, give a plausible option to seem open or neutral, but make sure there are "details" that establishes chain of consequences preventing it that is weird enough to allow denying intention. Even though I'm not that young I thought I just need to wait for Firefox to implement it, but as time went by I got curious and found out why it actually can't be done.
Is your argument based on Hollywood action movies and popular stereotypes based on them? Come on, pal. The only other guys who have always been obsessed with CIA agents in context of central and eastern Europe are Russian propagandists. And Petr Drulák is not a scriptwriter.
Czech Republic is one of the few countries where Google has a meaningful local competitor, Seznam, for it's major services and maps is the service where I'm most glad for that. All the shortcomings from the article are so much more obvious and painful when you have an alternative that does it right. I wondered for a long time how Google can have such a bad product, like I literally can't recognize a place I know perfectly on the screen so I need to "search" for it so Google zooms into some indistinctive bland colored area for me. And I've realized that's exactly the point, that's the prime example of enshitification. Tool that works so bad that you think you need it more. I'm so glad for mapy.cz and that statement from the article, that I can choose only Google or Apple maps, is not true for me.
Describing the intelectual elites that overthrew soviet puppet totalitarian government as a bunch of CIA agents that acted out of pure envy of Kundera's genius who just misstepped a bit when he was ok with soviet invasion haven't gave you a hint? Really?
I like the essay a lot and I find it intellectually amusing that many negative comments here manifest exactly the flaws that could be prevented by learning the essay writing as described in the blog. The article clearly states assumptions, definitions, context and limitations of it's arguments and in that specific area it's very hard to refute them because they are sound. On the other side the gist of many comments here is that article is negative towards GPT and should be positive, i.e. the same generalist aproach that GPT generated text would take and which is hard to argue about.
I'm not going to analyse particular flaws of separate comments because the article itself is really comprehensive and answers for many objections are better in original form there than any reproduction I can make here. But the high number of rebuttals that obviously have problems either understanding the essay or formulating a solid counterargument is curious. An obvious explanation is that some people couldn't resist the pleasure of letting AI dismiss the statement about insufficient AI capabilities, but that's a lazy one.
Comments saying current AI is comparable to actual human inteligence may be right even though I can clearly see that AI is not performing actions I consider necessary for thinking. It's because I consider my own mind as a model of human inteligence, but as I learned many times before, the thinking process may be hugely different for different people. I have no idea if other people also do need to create an explicit model of something in their head to be able to "think" about it.
It would explain A LOT for me if thinking of some other people really works in the same way as in GPT. That situation should however still be viewed not as a technology enhancement so big it reaches human level but reconsideration of what we consider a human level.
This happens to me a lot. I want to make a joke, but it gets so long an complex that it becomes an analysis.
This is a textbook piece of propaganda targeting the smart people, a real gem. The core principle lies in this sentence "The war in Ukraine is mostly a sideshow". With fascinating lightness it completely inverts the size of a story of one of the biggest countries in the world becoming fascist and attacking a neighbor in most boody war since WW2 which was several years in the making and a story of one infrastructure attack. The war and it's culprit is too obvious to attack directly, but what a propagandist can still try is to shift focus from the obvious main story to uncertain sidestory and switching their importance. Using the uncertainty of the sidestory it's then possible to use a lot of true arguments which convinces even the smart people if they miss the initial "significance inversion".
I'm confused, it seems like you are talking about something different than the original Twitter thread. The complaint there is that hardware that's officially supported on Windows does not have attached/downloadable driver for archivation and the only way to install driver for Windows is to first install elaborate middleman software and only through that it's possible to download and install the real driver from manufacturer's servers which must be online. That's word by word the same case for Mac hardware. The stackexchange answer I provided is the equivalent procedure as what Foone tries to explore in his thread, just for Mac's.
[0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katyn_massacre