percent

joined 11 months ago
[–] percent@infosec.pub 5 points 2 days ago

There are huge public datasets that are often used for pretraining. Common Crawl and C4 are probably the most prominent, but there are others.

There are also big public datasets available for fine-running and instruction tuning.

The open weight models are getting pretty powerful, thanks to some Chinese labs.

[–] percent@infosec.pub 55 points 2 days ago (6 children)

iPhones save old notifications in a database? Why?

[–] percent@infosec.pub 1 points 3 days ago

🤔 is it even a shitpost at all?

[–] percent@infosec.pub 13 points 3 days ago

So you would have preferred her to refrain from helping the boy because of their differences in skin color? Isn't that... wildly racist? Wanting the child to suffer more just because of race? Because it might resemble some cinematic/literary trope?

I suppose this is a decent reminder to limit my social media consumption. This is gross.

[–] percent@infosec.pub 0 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Do you really think that people who have the skills to repair the water treatment plant are going to just deal with sewage backing up into their home because they don’t want to do the work?

In their own city's infrastructure? No, probably not. But that doesn't quite clear things up, so I'll throw out some numbers as an example:

  • Let's say, on average, ~100 pumps need repair/maintenance at any given time.
  • Only 50 people have the skills to fix those industrial pumps[^1].

Do an average of 50 cities have sewage backing up at any given time? How do you fill that gap?

Also, do you have an example of a society that functions like this today? Maybe I'm just stuck thinking inside a box because the society I'm most familiar with is not like that. If so, an example might be helpful.

[^1]: Obviously only a VERY small fraction of those 50 would be willing to travel to whatever town needs the repair, learn the schematics of their pump model, then swim through their excrement to blindly fix it. But probably easier to just focus on a simpler set of numbers.

[–] percent@infosec.pub 1 points 3 days ago (7 children)

Maybe many would, but also, many would not.

In a society in which everyone can choose whatever career they want, all for the same "pay"/outcome/whatever it's called in a moneyless society, I would bet that most people would choose not to do these things.

When the demand for such tasks outweighs the number of people who are both willing and skilled to do those jobs, what can be done to meet the demand?

Btw, I'm not asking rhetorically - I'm genuinely curious. If there isn't enough people to serve such an important job for society, what can be done?

[–] percent@infosec.pub -1 points 3 days ago (10 children)

Some people have to dress up in a special suit and swim through raw sewage to repair a big pump - and they have to do it blindly because the sewage is opaque.

Some people have an even dirtier job: They have to clean off that guy's shitty suit before he can take it off. They might have to do it multiple times if he needs to come out to take another look at schematics.

They do it because it pays very well. It pays very well because nobody wants to do it.

[–] percent@infosec.pub 10 points 3 days ago (2 children)

It depends on the person. I've known people who are much more motivated by money. Some of them ended up in prison, some are doing quite well, and some are still trying.

Honestly, I sometimes wish I were more money-motivated. I'm very lucky that my passion happens to earn a good salary (for now), but I gave up my business for it.

[–] percent@infosec.pub 1 points 1 week ago

Does that matter to them? I assumed not, but I don't really know what they think about rocket launches, so maybe I shouldn't assume

[–] percent@infosec.pub 4 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

Three consecutive dog photos in my Lemmy feed! I think is is the most positivity I've ever seen on Lemmy. Thank you for this one 🙂

[–] percent@infosec.pub 13 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Would you mind elaborating a little more? I live under a rock but this seems interesting

 

After MANY hours of single-player playthroughs, I decided to join one of the public multiplayer games. It was a bit crowded and overwhelming (but very cool – so much creative engineering in there 🙂), and I had no idea how to jump in and contribute.

I almost never play any multiplayer games, so this might be a dumb question, but... How does this usually go?

 

Riley entered my life in 2008. I still remember that day. I found her on Craigslist, paid a $60 "rehoming fee", and she sat on my lap as I drove home with my new puppy. I was young and broke, living alone, and could barely afford my bills. It was an irresponsible decision to get a dog at that point in life, but I'm so glad that I was able to make it work.

She was a mix of two retrievers: Her mother was a chocolate lab and her father was a golden retriever. Somehow all of their puppies were black.

I had some experience with dogs before her, but I did not know about the amount of affection that retrievers are capable of. As I was getting to know her, I was pleasantly surprised to learn that she loved hugs so much, she even initiated them! Literally the sweetest dog I've ever met.

She was very smart. I was able to teach her most of her tricks in like ~10 mins each, while heating up frozen pizzas or whatever cheap garbage I ate back then.

She was the most consistent part of my bumpy path in life. She has been with me through tough breakups, my parents' deaths, career changes, and many other ups and downs that come with adulthood.

She's also the oldest retriever I've ever met. She would have been 17 years old next week.

We were together until her last breath. With my hand on her chest, I felt her final heartbeat.

And I will remember her until mine.

Riley was such a good girl.

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