ChunkMcHorkle

joined 2 years ago
[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 3 points 5 days ago (1 children)

chasing that warm fuzzy feeling they got as little girls when the pastor rubbed them juuuust right

Far be it from me to defend Republicans of either sex, but this line says nothing at all about Republican women and a great deal about you. Shame this was not readily apparent to you when you thought highly enough of it to write it.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 7 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

They’re here to stay

Eh, probably. At least for as long as there is corporate will to shove them down the rest of our throats. But right now, in terms of sheer numbers, humans still rule, and LLMs are pissing off more and more of us every day while their makers are finding it increasingly harder to forge ahead in spite of us, which they are having to do ever more frequently.

and they’re going to get much better.

They're already getting so much worse, with what is essentially the digital equivalent of kuru, that I'd be willing to bet they've already jumped the shark.

If their makers and funders had been patient, and worked the present nightmares out privately, they'd have a far better chance than they do right now, IMO.

Simply put, LLMs/"AI" were released far too soon, and with far too much "I Have a Dream!" fairy-tale promotion that the reality never came close to living up to, and then shoved with brute corporate force down too many throats.

As a result, now you have more and more people across every walk of society pushed into cleaning up the excesses of a product they never wanted in the first place, being forced to share their communities AND energy bills with datacenters, depleted water reserves, privacy violations, EXCESSIVE copyright violations and theft of creative property, having to seek non-AI operating systems just to avoid it . . . right down to the subject of this thread, the corruption of even the most basic video search.

Can LLMs figure out how to override an angry mob, or resolve a situation wherein the vast majority of the masses are against the current iteration of AI even though the makers of it need us all to be avid, ignorant consumers of AI for it to succeed? Because that's where we're going, and we're already farther down that road than the makers ever foresaw, apparently having no idea just how thin the appeal is getting on the ground for the rest of us.

So yeah, I could be wrong, and you might be right. But at this point, unless something very significant changes, I'd put money on you being mostly wrong.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

I don’t use an YouTube account and haven’t used for years for privacy reasons.

Same here. Trick is to not use the YT search function. My strategy changes depending on specifically what I'm looking for, but in general for anything factual I start with a no-AI text search on DDG and then go to YT once I know what I want to see, or just use DDG to trawl through the videos. It's not perfect but it cuts out a LOT of the slop.

For entertainment, if my current list of "known good" seems exhausted, I keep my subscriptions in FreeTube and go with the recommendations there where I can hide channels more effectively, but that's pretty rare because I collect what look like promising channels as I go along in regular browsing, like Lemmy or news articles, and not from any algorithm.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 4 points 3 weeks ago

I shoulda looked it up, lol. Thanks for the correction.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 19 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

Both HP and Dell are partnered with Microsoft, and have been for decades. Isn't a discrete GPU one of the things required for Microsoft Recall ready machines?

There's NO way they broke HEVC just for 4¢. Something else is paying them a lot more, and Recall would be one of those things.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 3 points 3 weeks ago

Two day old account, lol. Blocked.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I’m sick and tired about hearing about Zorinn when there’s a dozen excellent Linux distros that aren’t derivative trash that astroturf social media and pass off other Foss projects as their own.

Your quote, but when asked to name a better "easiest distro for Windows users" Fedora KDE was the best you could do.

Somebody asked you a genuine question, looking for real information, and out of this "dozen excellent Linux distros" you came at her with, you lazily just shat out the name of a single one, and that being one of the more advanced distros out there.

Hell yeah, try harder. People who ask genuine questions deserve genuine answers. Unless that's just your best and you need pity.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Nothing against Fedora KDE, it's the best of the best, but it is hardly the easiest for a noob to Linux: just the install process alone requires a working understanding of the Linux filesystem and partitioning if you're not using the entire disk space, you have to understand root vs sudo, god help you if you want to encrypt a disk, and there's a lot more CLI at every step than other distros. Try harder.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I'd be surprised if he does. If he's "sick and tired" of hearing about Zorin, it's because Zorin is getting a lot of deservedly good reviews from the Windows crowd right now. If it really were ass he'd have nothing to say about it. The only social media I'm on is Lemmy, and I tried Zorin because it was highly ranked on Distrowatch, so if people are getting "astroturfed" elsewhere it's news to me.

But you should know I tried over twenty (conservative estimate) distros before I settled on Zorin. USB drives are cheap, and you can try as many distros as you like without ever having to install one. Don't take my word for it, nor his: buy a handful of USB drives, create some LiveUSBs and start trying out whatever distros catch your attention. I found distrowatch.com to be a good front page to the distro world, with rankings and extremely detailed reviews: start there if you're looking for a fairly exhaustive list of what's out there.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 8 points 1 month ago

Oh, they're customer focused, alright: focused on scraping customer data via the installed OS to feed to their AI and then aggregate for sale to other data brokers and/or interested governments.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago

The Dell logo is the BIOS loading, the black screen is your bootloader and the beginning of your OS loading, and of course the Z is Zorin loading. While it could be hardware, to be honest where it's hanging for you makes me wonder about how well your Zorin video driver suits your actual hardware, based on some similar issues I had with Fedora doing the exact same thing that you describe.

I am still learning Linux myself so I am not the best person to tell you what to do, but I know where I'd start if I were in your shoes: use the lshw command (see below) to get the details on your actual hardware, specifically the graphics chip; see if anyone else is having similar problems with the same graphics hardware; and in the meantime put Mint on a LiveUSB and run Mint for a while to see if it performs better or ends up doing the same thing.

That's just beginner tips off the top of my head; I know you will get better advice if you run your problem by the Linux communities, esp because they can tell you how to capture the load process to see exactly what's causing it to hang, and I'm just guessing. But at least you now have some hints of where to start.

Quick primer on lshw: To use lshw to see your hardware specs, type at a command prompt:

sudo lshw -short

If it says it's not installed, to install it type

sudo apt-get install lshw

That will get you started, I hope. Either way, whatever you do will get you further toward a solution, whether that solution is a different distro or tweakling this one. I hope this helps.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world -4 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Love it. Just wrote a separate comment about it. I ran the free versions for over a year, then decided to go to paid just to support the project. Paid gives you GUI for appearance adjustments and desktop "personalization" but not a whole lot else; other than superficials like that, under the hood the free version is exactly the same. I can't remember what the Zorin folks say about it, get the details directly from them of course, but IMO don't feel like you have to buy the paid version to get a true taste of how it will work for you.

EDITED to add: This incessant, eternal negging shit from the Linux crowd kept me away from Linux for a long time. I found OPs question legitimate, which is why I answered it, but whether you like Zorin or not noobs should not be downvoted for simply soliciting opinions on a distro. I'm very fortunate that some people were generous enough with their time and answering questions to make me give it another go, but there were over thirty years between the first time I tried Red Hat that came on a dozen 3.25" floppies in the early 90s, and last year when I tried Linux again: that absence had EVERYTHING to do with the core haters that apply purity tests to any mention of any Linux distro that they personally find some fault in. Seriously, for the sake of Linux, shut the fuck up and piss off, unless you're just concern trolling for Microsoft or some shit, in which case you're doing a fine job, never stop.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world to c/technology@lemmy.world
 

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world to c/technology@lemmy.world
 

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