PhilipTheBucket

joined 1 month ago

18:05 if you want to hear him get to the damn point

Not to mention working on saving the oceans, cleaning up all the PFAS, reducing the impact of global warming, all this stuff. There is an absolute shitload of work that needs to be done that needs a massive amount of effort and manpower. This idea "well how are we going to create jobs when AI can do everything and we have enough web marketers I guess" is looking at the working world through the entirely wrong lens.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 8 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Yeah. I kind of hesitated to post it for exactly that reason. It is not really exactly the take that I would have taken to any of what it is talking about. I do think some of the underlying facts are important and so I posted it anyway, but I do pretty much agree.

Specifically I think a lot more of what is happening is that "powerful" jobs are going away, and "underclass" jobs are becoming more common, and he's interpreting that as "male" and "female" jobs respectively.

Remember in Tommyknockers, when the reanimated appliances are all in the woods attacking the people, and the woods are on fire from the fighting, and one of the appliances is a smoke detector and some remnant of its former duty and function is still intact and it starts doing its smoke-alarm beeping in the middle of the forest fire / appliance war? This is that beeping.

"You are 100% accurate but (a) we know (b) that's not even the biggest of our big problems right now."

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 5 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Skipping backwards to the segments where Kieran Andrieu is doing updates talking to the camera is helpful to make sense of the context.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 17 points 5 days ago (1 children)

You're just not prompting it right

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 8 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Tarrare: PATHETIC

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 14 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Well that's not terrifying

 

A new report on the state of the world’s oceans paints a grim picture. The ninth annual Copernicus Ocean State Report finds “No part of the ocean is untouched by the triple planetary crisis, as pollution, biodiversity loss, and climate change are putting pressure on the ocean worldwide.” The EU-funded report draws on decades of historical and current observational data as well as satellite measurements to create a resource for policymakers, scientists and citizens to more fully understand the challenges facing the world’s oceans. “With all this information we can ensure that we are better prepared … to ensure that we can live with these situations which are evolving,” Karina von Schuckmann who worked on the report as senior adviser at Mercator Ocean International, told Mongabay at a press conference. Ocean change Global ocean temperatures are rising at unprecedented rates, and marine heat waves are intensifying worldwide. Sea surface temperatures have been increasing each decade since satellite records began in 1982. The northeastern Atlantic Ocean bordering Europe has been warming nearly twice the global rate at 0.27° Celsius (0.49° Fahrenheit) per decade since 1982. Tropical regions of the North Atlantic, including the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico, experienced record-breaking marine heat waves in 2023; some areas were affected for up to 300 days. Polar regions are also seeing dramatic changes: Arctic sea ice is declining, and the Southern Ocean is warming and freshening, contributing to shifts in global currents. At the same time, plastic is polluting every ocean basin…

 

With a new set of Microsoft 365 features, knowledge workers will be able to generate complex Word documents or Excel spreadsheets using only text prompts to Microsoft's chat bot. Two distinct products were announced, each using different models and accessed from within different tools—though the similar names Microsoft chose make it confusing to parse what's what.

Driven by OpenAI's GPT-5 large language model, Agent Mode is built into Word and Excel, and it allows the creation of complex documents and spreadsheets from user prompts. It's called "agent" mode because it doesn't just work from the prompt in a single step; rather, it plans multi-step work and runs a validation loop in the hopes of ensuring quality.

It's only available in the web versions of Word and Excel at present, but the plan is to bring it to native desktop applications later.

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Comments

Obama was elected in 2008 and took office in 2009. The biggest overhaul to American health care since FDR went into effect on March 23, 2010, and that was with the US congress involved, which always inevitably turns everything into more of a shit show than it needs to be.

You can do it, you just have to be something other than dysfunctional wreckage to do it.

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