As He died to make men holy
Let us die to make things cheap

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  • 16 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: January 8th, 2024

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  • cabbage@piefed.socialOPtoTechnology@lemmy.worldThe Copilot Delusion
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    3 days ago

    This is just obviously not the case to anyone who bothers reading it. It’s an original piece of writing.

    The only thing that could hint at AI here is the use of em-dashes, which is a bullshit tell—I use them all the time myself as well. They’re right there for anyone with a compose key on Linux.



  • cabbage@piefed.socialOPtoTechnology@lemmy.worldThe Copilot Delusion
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    3 days ago

    I think chapter 2 does a good job presenting the advantages.

    Maybe you inherited someone else’s codebase. A minefield of nested closures, half-commented hacks, and variable names like d and foo. A mess of complex OOPisms, where you have to traverse 18 files just to follow a single behaviour. You don’t have all day. You need a flyover—an aerial view of the warzone before you land and start disarming traps.

    Ask Copilot: “What’s this code doing?” It won’t be poetry. It won’t necessarily provide a full picture. But it’ll be close enough to orient yourself before diving into the guts.

    So—props where props are due. Copilot is like a greasy, high-functioning but practically poor intern:

    • Great with syntax
    • Surprisingly quick at listing out your blind spots.
    • Good at building scaffolding if you feed it the exact right words.
    • Horrible at nuance.
    • Useless without supervision.
    • Will absolutely kill you in production if left alone for 30 seconds.


  • I guess the problem is that if you take your car to the plane, then your plane somewhere else, suddenly you don’t have your car. And then if you drive somewhere else you don’t have your plane any more.

    I think it’s pretty obvious that rental cars and commercial flights make a lot more sense for most scenarios. But I guess it’s possible to imagine scenarios where this vehicle makes sense, either for extensive round trips or for places where car rentals don’t exist but the roads are nevertheless pretty good.



  • I live in Denmark, their state identification app does not work if it detects that the Android ROM is not straight from Google. So when I switched to /e/OS I couldn’t access anything any more. So yeah, in my case the solution was ta give up on one pretty critical app.

    Thankfully the solution was as easy as getting one of those old fashioned code chips, and everything else seems to be working fine (including banking apps from other countries). So now I’m rocking /e/OS and I’m pretty sure there is no way I’m ever going back to Google Android.



  • What is it like?

    For me, it’s my favourite thing in the world. I feel more at home when I’m in the middle of the mountains not having seen people for days than when I’m in any building I’ve ever lived in. We evolved for these conditions, and at least for some of us it resonates with our souls - much like the ocean calls to others.

    The experience of hiking is a bit like running, just dragged out over days. In the beginning you have energy. At some point you get tired, and you might want to stop for a while and you’re worried if you’re going to make it. And then you push through, and suddenly your body is in walking mode. So don’t get too worried if you start feeling tired early in the hike.

    As for the tent, the experience varies a lot. Is it raining? Are there lots of mosquitoes or midges? Is it cold? Are you walking until sunset, or do you have time at the camp site? What is the terrain you put your tent on?

    You generally don’t have the answer to those questions. I have had a wide variety of experiences in tents - crazy tent pole-breaking winds, thunderstorms beyond anything I believed was possible, floods, cows trying to graze underneath the tent in the middle of the night. Most of the time though the biggest event is waking up to the view, or going out to take a leak at night and enjoying the night sky.

    The important thing is to always be flexible and open to improvise. When you’re in up there you’re at the mercy of the mountain, and you adjust your plans accordingly. Many mountain folks believe that the mountain has a will of its own that needs to be respected, and I don’t hink it’s too far from reality. Following from that is that the experience is never completely predictable, which is part of what makes its appeal infinite.

    Enjoy!






  • Good cheddar is expensive. I suspect this graph is very generous in what it considers cheddar.

    Globally, the style and quality of cheeses labelled as cheddar varies greatly, with some processed cheeses packaged as “cheddar”.¹

    Processed cheese typically contains around 50–60% cheese and 40–50% other ingredients.²

    It:'s also fundamentally a bit weird to compare the prices of these cheeses, as cheese prices tend to be extremely local in nature. What’s a fancy foreign cheese in one place is just traditional food in another. And of course, price and quality varies a lot within each cheese. A lot of what is sold as mozzarella is also not recognizable as such in my opinion.


  • Fresh cheese, such as mozzarella and ricotta, is quicker to make, and a lot less concentrated. It doesn’t need ageing, and there’s a lot less milk going into a kilo of cheese. It’s also less work.

    On the flip side, they don’t last as long. If you want to get fresh ricotta and you live far away from where it’s produced it might cost you a fortune, as it cannot be stored in the cheese shop as long as a wheel of aged cheese.


  • The Android keyboard always worked well for me, but I don’t trust them one bit. So I changed my phone keyboard into something that is worse at guessing what I’m trying to say, but I’m somewhat confident I am not being surveilled through it.

    I started using it a month or two ago, and ever since I have started making a billion typos when writing on mobile.

    Also, I guess the demography of the communities you’re in matters. I think quite a few of us over here are not native speakers. Sometimes I’ll also write with my keyboard set to the wrong language by accident, “leasing to all mines” of freaky autocorrects.