DeepPhilosopher | 2 months ago | on: Vanilla: Wii U Gamepad software clone
DeepPhilosopher's comments
DeepPhilosopher | 2 months ago | on: Belated Liquid Glass on iPhone first impressions
DeepPhilosopher | 1 year ago | on: We need to protect the protocol that runs Bluesky
DeepPhilosopher | 1 year ago | on: We need to protect the protocol that runs Bluesky
Compare this to Mastodon (which unlike Bluesky) is just one service in a sea of many others using ActivityPub (Pixelfed, PeerTube, etc) which overall makes for a much more vibrant and promising platform.
And unlike Bluesky, Mastodon has put federation into action; as an anecdote, even for posts with lots of replies, I've rarely seen more than two people from the same server comment on a given post. The diversity is astounding. Mastodon is already everything everyone wants from Bluesky in this regard.
To me, it just looks like everyone is getting set up again to shoot themselves in the foot much like what happened with Twitter, and I don't understand why? Is it because choosing a server is to hard or stressful?
DeepPhilosopher | 1 year ago | on: Evolution journal editors resign en masse to protest Elsevier changes
DeepPhilosopher | 1 year ago | on: What Arm's CEO makes of the Intel debacle
DeepPhilosopher | 1 year ago | on: Ozempic will disrupt big tobacco, candy companies, and alcohol brands
Way for Goldman Sachs to say the quiet part out loud. Not curing people so you can sell them something that merely deals with the problem's effects. This shouldn't even be up for discussion.
Seems like one company is selling the cure to a problem another company (companies) caused. Not to be all "capitalism bad" but I thought promise of the Invisible Hand of the Market was that it was supposed to make life better by directly solving everyone's problems. Instead, it seems to be creating more and (as Goldman Sachs admitted) not even trying solving those.
DeepPhilosopher | 1 year ago | on: Microsoft is giving Copilot users access to GPT-4-Turbo for free
Like you said, they're trying to get people hooked.
But if AI isn't any useful to people in the first place, this goes nowhere and they're still stuck with a low/decreasing amount of users.
DeepPhilosopher | 2 years ago | on: r/ProgrammerHumor will be shutting down to protest Reddit's API changes