eicker

joined 3 days ago
[–] eicker@lemmy.world 27 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

Funny how the self proclaimed savior of humanity keeps treating regulations like optional DLC: If anyone else ran 59 gas turbines without permits they would be buried in fines. Billionaires call it innovation, everyone breathing nearby calls it another asthma attack waiting to happen.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 1 points 4 hours ago (3 children)

I don’t think open-weight models can be prevented, as ‘everyone’ knows how distillation works these days and, clearly, no one can do anything to stop it.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 1 points 4 hours ago (5 children)

Everyone is. Open weight and source is the way to go in my opinion.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 2 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

Nope, it‘ll take several years to catch up.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 8 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

The upside is that unified memory is genuinely different from traditional RAM. The CPU, GPU and Neural Engine all share the same memory pool, so data doesn’t need to be copied back and forth. That reduces latency, improves efficiency and lets AI models, graphics and other workloads access much larger datasets. It also uses less power and saves board space. The downside is obvious: because it’s integrated into the chip, you have to choose the right amount upfront, since it can’t be upgraded later.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 19 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

The job is changing, not disappearing. Writing syntax is becoming cheaper, but understanding systems, tradeoffs, security, debugging and talking to humans is still expensive. The engineers who treat AI like a power tool instead of a rival will probably end up building more, not less.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 1 points 16 hours ago

No buttons, no DRM, no notifications, no algorithm deciding what I should read next. Somehow an ESP32 powered e reader feels more rebellious in 2026 than most flagship gadgets. I just hope the touchscreen is good enough that turning a page does not become a mindfulness exercise.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 23 points 16 hours ago (5 children)

Everyone wants AI to be the next cloud boom until the bill arrives. Betting tens of billions on one customer whose own business model is still being debated is bold. If demand keeps exploding Oracle looks brilliant. If not, this could become the case study every finance class uses.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 23 points 17 hours ago (16 children)

1.5 TB of unified memory sounds less like a computer and more like Apple preparing for the moment your local AI starts asking for a raise. Plot twist: by 2028 the RAM upgrade still costs more than the rest of the machine combined.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 22 points 17 hours ago

It is funny watching companies discover that data gravity works both ways. When scraping the web was innovation it was progress. When someone learns from their outputs it becomes theft. The legal lines still matter, but the irony is impossible to ignore, and this debate was always going to come full circle.

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 0 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

So cameras are guns now?

[–] eicker@lemmy.world 0 points 19 hours ago (3 children)
  1. a camera isn’t a problem in itself. 2. there are AI/AR glasses without cameras; personally I own a G1.
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