[-] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Instead of Olympic swimming we get Olympic Drowning

[-] [email protected] 4 points 9 months ago

At this point I feel like Facebook and Google are like the East India and West India trading companies sailing the oceans with their own fleet of militarized ships, and X is just a Pirate Ship being piloted by Jack Sparrow from PoC4.

[-] [email protected] 4 points 9 months ago

There’s no down-side to selling a smart TV to someone who doesn’t want one/doesn’t use the features.

The features we “want” from modern TV’s like DolbyVision and all the shit they do the image to make it stand out in the store requires a significant amount of processing power.

It’s simply better business to sell smart TV’s to everyone than to make dumb TV’s that compete for a tiny fraction of the market when people buy Smart TV’s in every price segment.

[-] [email protected] 5 points 9 months ago

As with any tool it is how you use it that matters.

Today’s LLM’s are capable of fairly amazing stuff.

It’s a BS machine? Sure. Have you read or written stuff for higher education?

You don’t get points for being short and concise, even though you should. You get points for following the BS formula.

You know who else is good at BS?

LLM’s. If you manage to provide it enough meaningful input it can do a great lot of BS legwork for you.

I see people who overuse it, don’t edit, isn’t critical. Sure. Then you end up with just BS.

But there’s plenty of useful applications, like writing boiler plate code (see also CoPilot), structuring code, tests, etc.

Is it worth all the hype? Nope.

Some of it? Probably.

[-] [email protected] 15 points 9 months ago

Fossil methane is still fossil. Ie. not part of the CO2 cycle, and thus contributing to the greenhouse effect. Methane itself is 20 times more potent, and we should do everything we can to limit methane emissions, both fossil and natural.

Agriculture is a big source of natural methane emissions, and even fairly small dietary changes can significantly reduce livestock emissions, but don’t see anyone doing that either.

Highly suspect small gas line leaks won’t be fixed either.

[-] [email protected] 5 points 9 months ago

We use TypeScript for our node.js backends.

We had two that started out vanilla, but it became too painful to maintain.

[-] [email protected] 13 points 9 months ago

Writing code that can’t be scientifically proven to be correct on all hardware it might run on means you don’t care about code quality. /s

The Internet is full of people with a bloated ego trying to justify their opinion and gatekeeping others.

I see this more and more in software as well.

Not sure if it’s always been like this, or if I just notice it more.

Same way there’s thousands of people giving you a guide to write a task list in , but as soon as you want to use anything slightly more complex than what you can learn from working a few hours with something you quickly run out of material and is usually left to fend for yourself.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Double standards much? What is your argument for it being better?

[-] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

My arguments is that is. But, hey, read it whatever way makes you feel better about your own opinion.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Carrot or stick?

[-] [email protected] 3 points 9 months ago

It probably wouldn’t. Or you would have to wait a long time.

Try streaming from a site across the world and see how it is today. Then imagine saturating the networks with loads of it.

Would definitely need new infrastructure to cache popular content.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Now, you see - that’s a completely different argument.

And also validates my point, all speed limits are tradeoffs.

Don’t get me wrong though, 20mph/30kph limits are commonplace where I live and honestly surprised to hear that it wasn’t everywhere.

For improved safety in the future we’ll need better driving assistance systems in the cars, and finally to replace humans altogether.

0
submitted 11 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

The Energy Management Module claims it can "rejuvenate a battery" somehow.

The District of Columbia has signed a $680,000 contract for an impossible-sounding gadget that claims to increase the range of an electric vehicle by 60 percent. The contract was signed in May, but it mostly slipped under the radar until it was picked up by WUSA9 this month.

The gadget in question is called an Energy Management Module, and it's made by a company called Mullen, which has recently been acquiring struggling electric vehicle startups like Bollinger and Electric Last Mile Solutions. In April, Mullen published a press release claiming that fitting the EMM gadget to one of the company's prototype cargo vans "showed more than a 75 percent increase in range for the 42-kWh lithium-ion battery pack."

DC's Department of Public Works became aware of the EMM device at last year's Washington Auto Show, according to WUSA9. "We have been investigating new technology that would extend their life, make us work more efficiently, and keep our maintenance expenses down," the department told the news channel.

The DC government owns more than 100 Chevrolet Bolt EVs as part of its fleet, some of which are used for duties like parking enforcement. It has fitted 40 Bolts with EMM devices at a staggering cost of $14,000 per vehicle, plus an additional $3,000 per EV for "data monitoring."

The device's inventor, Lawrence Hardge, claims that it works by "rejuvenating the battery," which sounds as close to a load of nonsense as I've heard in some time, given the relatively advanced nature of the Bolt's battery management system and the ease with which one can check the battery's health.

WUSA9 found reason to be skeptical of Hardge's claims—which include allegedly being nominated for a Nobel Prize by the University of Michigan—thanks to a fraud conviction in 2001.

There's a pretty long history of bogus gadgets promising ludicrously unrealistic increases in efficiency. From magnets that wrap around your fuel line to a "voltage stabilizer" you plug into a 12 V socket, none have ever actually worked because they invariably defy the laws of physics. Unfortunately, relying on the naïvety of your customers has always been a good way to get paid.

In the case of those internal combustion engine-focused frauds, at least they kept their claims somewhat plausible, usually promising efficiency increases of 10–20 percent. But Mullen's EMM simply defies belief with claims of a 60 percent boost.

Needless to say, it appears that the DC government has been taken for a ride here. Thankfully, someone somewhere down the line was awake—the contract states that DC will only pay the $680,000 once all 40 units have been shown to be working.

view more: next ›

upstream

joined 11 months ago