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Cake day: August 8th, 2023

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  • If you’ll notice I mention the biggest offenders and/or the the underlying management infrastructure.

    Private jet owners getting systematically luigi’d would also fall under that remit, I was just using data centres as an example.

    Oil rigs, Nestlé, blackrock etc would also all work , with varying degrees of efficacy and difficulty.

    To address your argument directly, before you get all preachy think of the actual consequences of major data centres going down, all the critical infrastructure running on said data centres would also go down.

    That’s air traffic control, shipping and logistics ,and yes, agriculture; any system relying on cloud services running in those data centres

    If you pick the right ones and do it properly (a competently executed strategy, if you will) then you could cripple most industries, with all the consequences that brings.






  • Stating something is true with no supporting argument other than “I said so” followed by some shaky(at best) logic doesn’t leave much in the way of conversation points.

    But lets give it a go.

    Firstly there was no demand or proposal for any demographic to partake in the activity mentioned.

    Secondly, assuming the first point wasn’t true, by your rationale there would be no way to mention any activity without it being a suggestion that all current recipients must immediately perform said activity, which it patently ridiculous.

    Thirdly, the suggestion that you are a best in class mental gymnast isn’t a thought terminating cliche, perhaps you could claim ad hominem but as I said before ,“I’m right, because reasons” doesn’t leave many conversational avenues open.



  • The differences here are that ORM and web frameworks weren’t actively making the job harder and the sheer surface area of the problem.

    If you fuck up with a framework or an ORM, it generally just fails to work, the magic internals might not be super helpful with their error messages, but such is the nature of the tradeoffs.

    If you fuck up with an LLM you get something that generally compiles and looks like it should work, that’s much more of a problem for both you and anyone who then needs to go trawling through, looking for the issues.



  • Which law? in which place? at what time ?

    Where it’s hosted? where it’s being accessed? the intermediate locations ?

    Which license, is the license enforceable in this context? who decides if it is? what if there are conflicting decisions from different applications of law, who arbitrates?

    Do you mean piracy in the maritime sense? or do you mean copyright infringement? perhaps trademark infringement? or intellectual property theft? based on which law in which geographic region ?

    This isn’t even hyperbole, the things you are talking about have nuance and context, pretending they don’t is a failure of imagination or intentional trolling.







  • Senal@programming.devtoLinux@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    4 months ago

    The server CPU’s are called epyc and they are powerful, but not in the same way.

    Server CPU’s are geared to different types of workloads but if you built a desktop workstation with decent one it would be still be a beast.

    I wasn’t arguing that the server CPU’s aren’t powerful, i was saying that the latest ryzen desktop cpu was something I’d personally consider to also be powerful.

    The threadrippers are also up there in terms of power, but the OP was specifically talking about ryzen.