Worth reading the conclusion - makes a good point or two regarding the cumulative effect of using AI and not only the loss of the learning through struggle/time, but also the reference point of how long tasks should take without AI (e.g. we are no willing longer afford the time to learn the hard way, which will impact the younger generation notably).
The takeaway is to vet new companies one is dealing with - even just calling them up and asking if they've AI generated any system which deals with customer/patient data.
This is going to get more common (state sponsored hackers are going to have a field day)
Unless political lobbying becomes significantly harder (globally), I don't think the growing gap between the wealthy and poor will change anytime soon.
Problem is, to tax the ultra wealthy more, it needs to be coordinated globally. Otherwise, the ultra wealthy just move to where the tax system is more attractive. Not sure if this will ever happen to be honest.
However, awareness of the problem is still important
I think most distros are waiting to see if upstream can rethink this first and evaluate what makes sense. Forking something like systemd is no easy task. Perhaps this just starts out as a patch removing the DOB changes. But in reality, distros don't want to face possible legal ramifications either. It's all a bit messy, and time will tell (I suspect for the better, but who knows).
This is more of a Linux kernel criticism of KASLR, but perhaps it's related as to why it's not been a priority in FreeBSD (i.e. it gives a false sense of safety and rather focus on 'proper' security hardening): https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/truth-about-linux-4-6-sec...
This smells like the beginning of entshitification at ARM. I'm not saying AMD or Intel are a whole lot better, but the move to compete with licencees of ARM tech and to cheekily use AGI in the name is not going to ensure confidence in the short or long term.
I was a bit skeptical at first, but after reading more into jsongrep, it's actually very good. Only did a very quick test just now, and after stumbling over slightly different syntax to jq, am actually quite impressed. Give it a try
If you think sauerkraut and kimchi make things move more, wait till you try homemade kefir!
I'm quite sensitive to it and can only have a spoonful or so and generally plan to work from home the next day. Note that the store bought stuff is often heated or similar and doesn't contain anywhere near the same level of bacteria.
I've been a Kagi Pro user for several years now, and to be honest, the models from the pro tier aren't that useful compared to the free versions of Gemini & ChatGPT.
For me, I pay for Kagi pro for search without Google/Bing enshittification, their Translate (which I use quite often while I'm learning German/working in German - better for me than Google Translate), and their Summarizer. I pay for Claude, and also occasionally use OpenRouter for my AI needs.
I've been using mergiraf for ~6 months and tried to use it to resolve a conflict from multiple Claude instances editing a large bash script. Sadly neither support bash out of the box, which makes me suspect that classic merge is better in this/some cases...
Will try adding the bash grammar to mergiraf or weave next time