Thomas@discuss.tchncs.deEnglish
4 monthsI can only hope that the A.I. bubble bursts in time when I need to buy a new computer.
- 4 months
What I’m becoming worried about now is all these corporations now realizing that they can simply supply price the average consumer out of owning electronics or any kind of compute. And locking them into renting or leasing access to data center compute and keeping the power of information further consolidated in corporate interests.
- fartographer@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
That out of context quote takes a lot of shit for something that was supposed to represent a futuristic socialist utopia.
The idea was that 14 years after that article was published, mankind would have such immediate access to services and those services would be free, that people would just sorta stop caring about owning things. For example, since food and necessities would be free, you could go home and print your dinner. If you wanted someone else to cook, you’d get something delivered. But, if you wanted to try something truly novel that most people don’t do anymore in this society, you could rent kitchen equipment and it’d be ready as soon as you need it, and you’d use socialized appliances and utensils. Why? Because your home doesn’t need that clutter. If you wanna cook all the time, you can own whatever you want. But most people will want to use that space for something else, so they’ll just print their meals.
You would have quick and easy access to transport, so why waste the money and space to own a car? You wanna drive? Push a button in your app and a car arrives for free. Or take the free train or bus.
The essay isn’t about “you won’t be able to own anything,” it’s about “you won’t want to own anything, but you’ll have everything you could ever want or need.”
And we’re really headed in the right direction for this amazing future. Except, you know… Corporations are bleeding us dry instead of supporting us…
- 4 months
That does sound lovely, but like every other utopia it’s a fantasy. It’s got the same fatal issue as every other utopia - people. A person can be good and decent, but people suck. I’d say the modern use of that quote is more accurate to reality than the rose tinted view of its origin.
- 4 months
“To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem.”
oce 🐆@jlai.luEnglish
4 monthsThe link doesn’t work for me.
Even if the initial intention is positive, I think this degree of dependency on external services is not realistic even if mega corps were not as bad as they are currently.
- Emi@ani.socialEnglish4 months
Thank you. This is the first version I heard so I was confused why it’s bad and people being against it.
TeamAssimilation@infosec.pubEnglish
4 monthsHoly cow that’s a very real danger I hadn’t thought of! The industry needs a new trend to reuse all this capacity they built, because AI will likely scale back as many startups fail to reach profit.
Renting your home computer might be the next trend, and it could be gratis at first so people get used to it. Why spy on users when you can actually own their computers?
- 4 months
Aren’t we already seeing that though?
The vast majority of people who surf the web don’t use a computer to do it. People who do belong to niches. People over a certain age grew up with and still buy computers. People who game still buy computers or consoles. People who stream/create content still use computers and other electronics for that purpose, same with like. Engineers and hobbyists using CAD and other software in creative spaces.
But the smart phone has overtaken the computer as a personal computing device by quite a large margin now. And at every turn companies are trying to make cell phones a den of ad service, slop, and addictive content while stealing any user data that’s not nailed down to increase their revenue and continue the circle.
- ferrule@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
with being a walled garden i have a feeling we will eventually see phones become genuinely free because you will not have an option to keep your data away from advertisers. AOSP is barely holding on to maintain a safe place for users. when all hardware is locked down we will be stuck.
- 4 months
I’m assuming you mean that phone software will be free, because phones (while they can be heavily subsidized) aren’t free and are getting up to ridiculous prices. I own a phone that retails for $1000. That’s a ridiculous price for a phone. Except that phones now are just very tiny personal computers.
- ferrule@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
the crazy prices will eventually lose users. so the price will drop but the phone manufactureres won’t just accept the loss. instead they will sell you as a commodity even harder.
- CoderSupreme@programming.devEnglish4 months
Wouldn’t the chinese or whoever doesn’t chose to do that gain market share?
- Goodlucksil@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish4 months
The competence can be drowned in irrelevancy, like Microsoft and IE
- Dudewitbow@lemmy.zipEnglish4 months
theyd have to all collorbate to make that happen though, which is really unfeasable on their end. a BUNCH of companies will go under if they cannot sell product. they arent going to willingly take losses for the sake of a different company.
- 4 months
They don’t really have to collaborate though. They’re proving right now that they can price out consumers by just buying all the hardware capacity up and letting the market take care of the little guys. Hardware manufacturers like Micron are obliging.
- Dudewitbow@lemmy.zipEnglish4 months
the ai companies are but that doesnt talk about the hardware specific companies. for example dell, hp and lenovo run a large business laptop leasing business if they do not get their ram, it will sour their relationships with memory manufacturers . they arent all going to be willing to take losses
tal@lemmy.todayEnglish
4 monthsfor example dell, hp and lenovo run a large business laptop leasing business if they do not get their ram, it will sour their relationships with memory manufacturers
Lenovo is stockpiling memory to try to make it through the RAM winter.
Lenovo stockpiles RAM as prices skyrocket, reportedly has enough inventory to last through 2026 — memory stock claimed to be 50% higher than usual to fight pricing shock
Lenovo is playing it smart and buying up as much memory inventory as it can
I don’t think that Lenovo is getting special deals with memory makers either, or they wouldn’t need to stockpile.
Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksEnglish
4 monthsI hope they do, it will just break stuff more and people will be more likely to go with Linux and open source software. My 10 year old computer still is super fast if it’s not bloated.
Oxysis/Oxy@lemmy.blahaj.zoneEnglish
4 monthsLinux won’t make bullshit pc part prices cheaper. RAM, SSDs, GPUs are all rising in prices because of the AI bubble, used and new are all being affected. Can’t run Linux if the parts are too expensive to even get in the first place.
- stupidcasey@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Software needs hardware Linux dose nothing but make it easier for them.
Corkyskog@sh.itjust.worksEnglish
4 monthsMy point is that there is existing hardware already out on the secondary market for cheap, and can run most of what anybody needs. All those machines that aren’t up to snuff for Windows 11 standards don’t need to go into the landfill.
De Lancre@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsSoftware needs hardware
Can I introduce you to a concept of installing Linux on a dead badger?
- the_crotch@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
How’s your 10 year old computer going to look when it’s 30 years old?
- chunes@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
I hope it means the return of old, old hardware and the software that comes along with it. This is why projects like collapseOs are important.
- brbposting@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
Anybody hold onto all their old electronics just in case in spite of the financial/resource “waste”?
- Jarix@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
No but I do hold onto old electronics because I grew up with my grandparents and they had WW2 wartime rationing mentality about saving everything. Also my grandfather also an incredibly cheap bastards at times too
- spongebue@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
First it was GPUs because crypto, then this. Wonder what useless thing the tech bros will cover up with in a few years!
- lividweasel@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Article in 2027:
Keyboard prices soared this month, as tech giants pivoted from failed AI projects to employing hordes of monkeys typing randomly. One CEO was quoted as saying, “Just a few trillion more dollars, and I think our random typing model could reproduce the lost contents of the Library of Alexandria.”
- DaddleDew@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
When in a gold rush, be the one selling shovels.
I’m off to buy stocks in bananas.
- givesomefucks@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Good luck…
Even when the bubble bursts, they’re going to have an insane amount of computing power just sitting there, it will get sold off in bankruptcy proceedings, and some company will gobble it up and operate at a loss while continuing to secure future supply contracts.
There’s a very real chance that we’re witnessing the slow death of home computing.
The way things shake out it might end up being prohibitively expensive compared to cloud computing, and once that’s the norm they price gouge like Walmart did to destroy small businesses.
Instead of dropping a couple grand for a PC every couple years, we’ll have steady contracts paying for month at a time indefinitely.
- jollyrogue@lemmy.mlEnglish4 months
Nah. Web devs will create even more bloated web pages to keep home computing in business.
For real though, most people don’t need that much computing power, and we reached the plateau 12 years ago. That’s why we’re seeing crypto and AI grifts happen. They recentralize decentralized systems. The elites are striking back.
You know the saying“information wants to be free; information wants to be expensive”? This is the expensive part where people try to horde knowledge by making it inaccessible to everyday people.
- jollyrogue@lemmy.mlEnglish4 months
How is this applicable to the comment? Companies never figured out how to charge rent for those.
Devs see home computers as a free resource, and the burden is on the consumer to buy a computer which runs their software.
- Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.netEnglish4 months
Those GPUs fry themselves in a year or two, and utility prices will put pressure on governments to concept datacenters
- 4 months
Right? Feel bad for anyone that just had a system fry or have been saving up to upgrade.
- ZoteTheMighty@lemmy.zipEnglish4 months
I think it’s a lost cause. Essentially both crypto and AI were big because someone figured out how to offload shit to a GPU efficiently. There’s probably a ton of other appllications for GPUs we haven’t even tapped.
hark@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsI’ve got this crazy idea where we can use GPUs to render 3D scenes efficiently.
tal@lemmy.todayEnglish
4 monthsSerial compute isn’t doing the double-every-18-months-in-speed since something like the early 2000s.
Unlike with serial compute, not all problems can be solved, run faster, with parallel compute. But at some point, unless we figure out some sort of new way to play with physics, we pretty much have to move to parallel compute where we can if we want much more performance.
- TheEighthDoctor@lemmy.zipEnglish4 months
If the AI bubble bursts most of the western world will be thrown into deep recession again and I hope we don’t get a repeat of 2008 just for cheap RAM or GPUs
- wewbull@feddit.ukEnglish4 months
It’s already there for most of us. It only a few rich companies getting richer that’s making the line go up.
- buddascrayon@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
I am really beginning to fucking hate AI. Like, before I just didn’t care for it, it just wasn’t really my interest. But now I’m really beginning to fucking despise that shit and I really can’t wait to see the “AI economy” completely fucking destroyed.
Ex Nummis@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsSo far, AI has cost me a few hobbies (as in, made them a lot less enjoyable) and one job.
If there’s an uprising against clankers, you’ll find me at the front lines.
- hayvan@feddit.nlEnglish4 months
Your enemy is, as usual, billionaires and their fanboys. Clankas don’t exist as a separate thing, they are tools of the wealthy to further oppress the common folk.
- Tilgare@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
When the robot uprising happens, using a soft a in clanka instead of a hard er on clanker isn’t going to save you. We’re all fucked.
- BillyTheKid@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
Correct. Even many engines say LLMs are a waste of time:
Yann LeCun, Meta’s longtime chief AI scientist, quit and said LLMs are a “dead end” because scaling text-only models can’t produce real intelligence
- hayvan@feddit.nlEnglish4 months
AI even ruined AI. Up until this insane hype train, ML models were specialized tools to achieve their tasks. Now the whole field is dominated by LLMs and slopgen bullshit.
- 4 months
Yeah that’s the annoying thing. Generative AI is actually really useful…in SPECIFIC situations. Discovering new battery tech, new medicines, etc. are all good use cases because it’s basically a parrot and blender combined and most of these things are rehashes if existing technologies in new and novel ways.
It is not a fucking good solution for a search engine replacement to ask “Why do farts smell?”. It uses way too much energy for that and it hallucinates bullshit.
- chiliedogg@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Yeah. They solved protien folding with ML a few years back. And I like using it for things like noise removal in Lightroom.
But so much of it has been focused on useless (at best) bullshit that I just want the bubble to burst already.
- piconaut@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
I agree with the general sentiment here but just wanted to clarify that they definitely didn’t “solve protein folding” yet. Alpha fold is a significant improvement in structure prediction and it generated a lot of hype but some of the structures I’ve seen it put out are total nonsense.
- wewbull@feddit.ukEnglish4 months
It’s good for optimisation problems, where you have a complex high-dimensional space to search and you’re solving for some measurable quality.
oce 🐆@jlai.luEnglish
4 monthsThere was already a lot of ML bullshit from the big data bubble ~ 2010 and before ChatGPT, together with all of the fuss about data scientists. But now it’s a 100 times worse.
- BillyTheKid@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
A lot of top researchers have already moved on from transformers.
Yann LeCun, Meta’s longtime chief AI scientist, quit and said LLMs are a “dead end” because scaling text-only models can’t produce real intelligence, and he’s not the only one who thinks so. Lots of engineers understand the limitations of LLMs.
- MangioneDontMiss@feddit.nlEnglish4 months
exactly how i feel. literally said something very similar to my wife last night. I fucking hate AI. I think activist group are going to starting popping up hard against it. And if they aren’t already, they really should. This shit is destroying our world. The only people this is helping is billionaires.
- floofloof@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
Capitalism is destroying the world. We need to rise up against that. The AI bullshit is just one manifestation of the whole world being geared to serve capital and the handful of people that control it.
Little8Lost@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsBut they said we should eat cake if we have no bread anymore!!1!!!1!11!
- wewbull@feddit.ukEnglish4 months
Unbounded capitalism is for sure.
I would say “AI” makes a good poster child for what to fight against. It embodies a lot of what’s wrong.
- Texas_Hangover@lemmy.radioEnglish4 months
It’s so annoying, I hate this bubble shit. It happens over and over, it’s like a bad movie lol.
- 4 months
I bet we’ll start to see domestic terror attacks against server farms when more of the population loses their jobs to this bullshit.
I ain’t saying I’m going to do it. But a man burned down the governors home in Pennsylvania. People who lose their homes and lives are not going to take this shit well.
- discocactus@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
If it crashes the hardware will suddenly be dirt cheap though so. There’s that.
bthest@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsThey’ll cheat us out of that too. Chip manufacturers will pay and coerce and liquidators and retailers to shovel all the surplus into the ocean to keep prices high.
- 4 months
Holy shit, really? Crucial? They’ve been a major player for AGES. That’s wild.
- iAmTheTot@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
I mean, Crucial is just the name that Micron puts on the memory they want to sell to consumers. So this story is basically just, “Micron no longer wants to sell to consumers”.
youmaynotknow@lemmy.zipEnglish
4 monthsWhen the shit hits the fan and they come back to consumers, we should just buy from anyone but them, on principle alone.
- boonhet@sopuli.xyzEnglish4 months
So Samsung or SK Hynix. Because there are only 3 real players in the market :/
youmaynotknow@lemmy.zipEnglish
4 monthsI guess, anything but corsair. And at this point, I’m never buying anything corsair, not just the ram.
- boonhet@sopuli.xyzEnglish4 months
Well it turns out that Samsung and SK Hynix also sold out to Altman. Literally whose RAM we gonna buy now? There were only 3 major manufacturers in the first place.
youmaynotknow@lemmy.zipEnglish
4 monthsI’m pretty fucked then, because I was one of those that was waiting until 2026 to build a new rig.
- boonhet@sopuli.xyzEnglish4 months
I’m super lucky, I have 32 gigs and a graphics card. It’s just a 3060 ti, but it’ll do for now. CPU is a bit shit, BUT since it’s one of the lowest end CPUs of the second to last generation on AM4, I can go forward a generation AND get hella more cores with higher clock rates. Lately I use my PC more for work than gaming, so extra CPU cores will carry it till 2027 or 2028. 300 euros will take me from 6 cores/6 threads (ryzen 5 3500x) to 16 cores/32 threads (5950x) lol
I did want to upgrade from 32 to 64 gigs too, but that won’t happen on this rig.
Put it this way, I’m waiting for DDR6 and AM6 now to buy any more RAM. Just a full on platform upgrade and I’ll make it a company computer because I work on it. Will save like 60% because taxes (social tax, income tax, VAT). I feel entitled to this because I’ve honestly paid a fuckload of taxes over the last 5-6 years and over half the money I’ve made in that period has been from abroad, so a lot of it is money that wouldn’t even have been in my country if not for me! Sorry for the rant, people on lemmy get a bit angry about tax optimization, but I honestly haven’t been doing it much, I just occasionally try to find legitimate business expenses and… pay them as business expenses. Because things I buy as a private person literally cost me more than 2x more than same thing as a business expense.
Edit: Just a thought, but maybe try to source used RAM when you do it? Or build on a workstation or server platform and get used RDIMMs lol, they tend to be a lot cheaper than used normal DIMMs, because desktop platforms can’t use them.
- 4 months
If that happens, prior Crucial consumers (like myself) should boycott because they already showed what they actually care about and it isn’t their loyal customer base. They don’t want us to buy their products? We should happily give them what they want now should they change their mind later.
Anyway yeah, if they come back, they’re officially on my shit list.
- 4 months
You gotta be fucking kidding me, I swore by Crucial RAM and SSDs. Eat shit, Micron.
Elgenzay@lemmy.mlEnglish
4 monthsDamn, that was the only brand of RAM without LEDs and racing stripes on it
- Psythik@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
I used to hate on RGB in PCs, until I realized that they can do more than just rainbow vomit; with enough LEDs you can actually get a visible image… If you squint…
One of my favorite things to do with RGB is use the RAM sticks as VU meters and the CPU radiator fans as visualizers when playing music; gives off oldschool HiFi vibes and reminds me of my Winamp days.
- Landless2029@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Functional RGB isn’t bad when tastefully done like that. Nice little effect.
That said I have all of mine turned off and prefer my tower under my desk and out of sight.
- Rekorse@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
My pc lights start flashing all red when its overheating. Pretty useful cause I won’t notice the sound till its crashed. I’m weird like that.
- wewbull@feddit.ukEnglish4 months
All the lights go out on mine when it overheats, and then there’s a puff of white smoke.
- Psythik@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
That’s a brilliant idea, but why does your PC have cooling issues? I literally never worry about overheating because I sized my radiators and heatsinks adequately for my equipment, fans set in a positive pressure configuration to minimize dust accumulation. All I gotta do is clean the filters once every few months, and everything stays cool and clean.
If your overheating issues are a result of budgeting issues, I feel for you. Otherwise it wouldn’t be a bad idea to invest in better cooling so that you never have to worry about temps.
- toddestan@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
That’s interesting. I’ve always wanted a bunch of blinkenlights but they also needed to be functional and serve some purpose. Kind of like the old Thinkpad I have that has a whole row of status LEDs under the screen. A bunch of meaningless lights just for the sake of having lights always seemed pointless.
Anyway, with the last PC I built, the RGB stuff was pretty much unavoidable. I still went out of my way to get a case without a window though. I do have the RGB on, but it’s a solid blue-greenish color so there’s a bit of glow coming out the back of the case.
tal@lemmy.todayEnglish
4 monthsDamn, that was the only brand of RAM without LEDs and racing stripes on it
hits Google Shopping
Aside from being a black circuit board rather than green, that PNY DIMM doesn’t look especially blinged up.
Ethanol@pawb.socialEnglish
4 monthsAs other comments have stated, other brands usually also sell non-RGB RAM sticks. Personally I got Kingston FURY Beast RAM sticks, they come in either RGB or non-RGB variety, though the RGB variety costs like 10 dollars more.
- HazardousBanjo@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
AI was never meant to benefit the working class in any capacity.
Its a great rule of thumb that if you see oligarchs hype up something and push for it to be everywhere, its a BAD fucking thing.
- Yggstyle@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Meanwhile the average CEOs decision making could be replaced by a goldfish in a tank with some arbitrary object detection code.
- 4 months
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Resource drain of LLMs inescapably makes them tools availiable only to big players. They are ideal in the way they are naturally gated. Making them mandatory == giving these select companies and people power over everything. And not only oligarchs’ promotion, but the whole situation of them being given for free or cheap at a huge loss gives one an idea that there’s a lot to milk from it’s growing adoption.
Alaknár@sopuli.xyzEnglish
4 monthsBut that’s completely not true! Like, not a single thing you said is even slightly correct!
LLMs are relatively cheap to run - at small scales. You can run an LLM on your own computer right now. It won’t be super fast, it won’t have super skills, but you can run it, and you can train it yourself.
Massive LLMs like ChatGPT require tremendous resources precisely because they are not just tools available only to big players. Everybody on the planet has access to them - for free. The only actual difference there is between running an LLM locally and through a provider is that you get better speed and (sometimes, depending on context) better training through a provider.
As for “there’s a lot to milk from its growing adoption” - maybe? Probably? Who knows? That’s the “magic” of the AI bubble we’re experiencing right now - the big players keep saying that it will “make work and money obsolete”, that “anyone will be able to do anything”, that “a time of post-scarcity approaches”, and a billion other bullshit marketing slogans like that. But the reality is that nobody has yet figured out how to make money on that thing.
Right now, the only reason it’s “growing”, is because of the weird and probably illegal circular financing that’s going on at the very top - Nvidia invests in OpenAI, which invests in Oracle, which invests in Nvidia - and so on. No money is actually being made or (often) even changing hands, but everyone can now show they’ve received a lot of investment which pumps up their stock prices. The only reason this hasn’t popped yet is probably because the main investing parties are using tonnes of cash they had stored.
Growing adoption means nothing. It’s a marketing tool for them to keep shareholders happy while they keep a literal investing circlejerk going, every now and again inviting another player into the fold.
- sfgifz@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Your private LLM will have nothing to compete against the big guys though. A cute hobby project but nothing of economic value.
Alaknár@sopuli.xyzEnglish
4 monthsYou’re not training it from scratch, though. There are people, enthusiasts, doing it for you. I can fire up LM Studio and browse through thousands of models to then have a conversation with, or have them write stories, etc., etc.
As for “nothing of economic value” - that’s, again, just plain misunderstanding what AI can be used for. Corridor Crew - a VFX team publishing on YouTube - used self-trained AI to boost their film making options. For example, to copy the “bullet time” effect from The Matrix, they were able to use around a dozen cameras instead of hundreds, and then used AI to create the “in between” frames.
How does that have “no economic value”, mate?
- sfgifz@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Right, spend all this time to self train a hobby model for one specific scenario which “Big LLM” would deliver by the time you’re back from lunch.
This illusion that plebs can easily use personal LLMs is the argument that AI companies will use to justify why they shouldn’t be reigned in or held accountable for their impact on society and economy.
Alaknár@sopuli.xyzEnglish
4 monthsI love how you completely ignored everything I said, and then reiterated your misguided point.
- sfgifz@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
It’s good that you love that because you had no point. A bunch of people achieving one single specific outcome is not competing with anyone.
- SabinStargem@lemmy.todayEnglish4 months
I view AI to be like the internet: Most corporate players won’t survive the bubble, but the ones that do, will be incredibly influential. Ordinary people made great use of the internet - but failed to make it really decentralized. Thus the enshittification of Reddit, Youtube, social media, and so forth.
We can choose to embrace local LLM that is fully under our control, or cede ownership to the 1% forevermore.
Alaknár@sopuli.xyzEnglish
4 monthsOrdinary people made great use of the internet - but failed to make it really decentralized. Thus the enshittification of Reddit, Youtube, social media, and so forth
I don’t think one is related to the other.
Decentralisation doesn’t affect enshittification that much. Look at Lemmy and Fediverse in general - it’s federated… so what? The .world instance is by far the largest in the Fediverse. If the mods there go insane, like they did on Reddit, or if the admins decide to add monetisation to it… it just happens. There being other servers changes nothing for the users stuck on the .world server. Sure, they can create new accounts elsewhere, but that’s - in principle - no different than switching from Reddit to Lemmy.
On the other hand, look at Steam. Valve, the creators of Steam, has no “decentralisation” of their product, they’re the god emperor of everything in terms of how Steam operates. At face value, it’s the same exact product as, I don’t know, the Epic Store, and yet Steam is loved by gamers, while Epic is hated.
No, you can have centralised and not enshittified services just fine - as long as the goal is to provide the service, instead of “creating value for the shareholders”. As soon as that element comes in, there’s no stopping enshittification.
We can choose to embrace local LLM that is fully under our control, or cede ownership to the 1% forevermore.
Agreed.
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- JcbAzPx@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
They believe they can put an end to having to pay for labor in any capacity ever again. If I knew less than I did about how this AI works I would be worried.
Or if I worked in entertainment.
- 4 months
- yeehaw@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
I knew there was something wrong when we started getting positive metrics based on how much we leveraged AI.
- 4 months
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Of course, AI is going to be used as another layer of control.
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Gary Ghost@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsI recently started my own AI factory , the passive income is great. All you need is a grease and soldering gun. Thanks Nvidia , I never have to work again.
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khannie@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsI deeply, genuinely, hope that the AI bubble bursts and they get fucked. It’s just so short sighted to not hold on to the safety rope.
- Typhoon@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
It will burst but they won’t get fucked. They’ll either get bailed out or reorganize their debt into another corporation and ride off with all the riches.
khannie@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsAh you say that, but I lived through the internet bubble. Jeez it was gruesome and then 9/11 hit the next year. Savage times.
Unless it’s considered a national security issue, which it might be, they’re getting fucked without the lube.
- Typhoon@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
So did I. The people at the top will not get fucked. They’ll steal everything they can. Everyone else will get fucked.
- __hetz@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
I’d love it if their equipment racks all simultaneously burst into flame the day it pops so they can’t pivot or hock their hoarded hardware to recoup the investment. Then again, if that finger on the monkey’s paw did curl, they’d probably all get bailed out by the taxpayers the following week anyway.
- Dawn_Vibration@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
AI is really ruining fucking everything. The enviorment, entertainement, music, art, jobs, reality, freedom / privacy / rights.
- phx@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
No, corporate greed is ruining everything with AI.
Because you know if they built a super-AI that give them perfect instructions on how to build Earth into a paradise, but it would require they give up 1/4 of their wealth, they’d be reaching for the reset button before it finished printing them out…
- Xenny@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
They don’t even need that. current AI will tell them that. They’ve actually ran these questions and they ignore the answer every time
- nforminvasion@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Elon has to keep “dewoking” Grok. Sure, it’s still an awful model, probably the most disinformative, but it’s funny that it keeps revering back to neutral or pro progressive values, while calling out Elon
- Credibly_Human@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
The fact people are blaming the tech rather than the tech bros is a big part of why this keeps happening.
Its the decision of real people that make this situation suck.
- Soggy@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Yeah but we can’t possibly hold people accountable for the actions of their company, think of the shareholders!
- hayvan@feddit.nlEnglish4 months
Capitalism is the biggest religion of today, and it’s su successful it can coexist with a lot of other religions.
It’s not AI destroying the environment and making us miserable, it’s th pursuit of profit. It’s not “corporate greed” sucking us dry. Corporations are greedy by design under Capitalism, that’s the whole point. It’s not bad CEOs making evil decisions. It’s the system that allows such wealth and power to exist.
All of those problems are systemic, not bad people making bad decisions. Treating capitalism like law of nature won’t fix anything.
- TheGrandNagus@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Indeed.
I have a model running locally on my NAS that does image recognition for photos in my Immich app (think Google Photos, but private). It does a decent job and runs well on AMD integrated graphics on a Ryzen 5 3400G. I just search for [daughter’s name], and there she is.
I use Firefox’s translation feature (that also runs locally and can run on low end hardware).
My sister is blind and uses an AI assisted screen reader that works way better than what she was using before.
The issue isn’t AI/machine learning in itself, it’s this tech bro arms race. It’s them manipulating models to push agendas. It’s them shoehorning an LLM into every fucking Google query. It’s them telling companies they can fire all their staff and rely on LLMs.
- Agent641@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
And it will burst and mostly disappear, taking with it half the economy, thousands of jobs, and become a military industrial complex blackbox tax sponge, the worst of all possible outcomes.
- NoForwardslashS@sopuli.xyzEnglish4 months
But on the other hand, it’s really polite about me knowing nothing about anything, so I think we should invest all the money on Earth into it.
- yeehaw@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
Haven’t seen it put any more concisely. It’s true though. I really really hope some AI bubble pops soon…
whoisearth@lemmy.caEnglish
4 monthsA fun reminder that during the pandemic, before AI, there was a backlog in new cars because all the crucial chips were unavailable due to an increase in bullshit like wifi enabled toasters.
It has nothing to do with AI. Consumers are asking for this shit and companies are delivering.
- BillyTheKid@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
Maybe but most consumers, but I’m not. I don’t have a smart toaster or fridge or even tv (I bought a dumb panel, it was cheaper). I honestly hate all of that so called smart bs. “Smart” tvs take longer to turn on than my dumb panel. And cost more. For features I literally don’t want.
But yeah, to each their own!
- Alaik@lemmy.zipEnglish4 months
No one is asking for ads on their fridge. You are really underestimating the cartel like behavior of business in general now.
- Saledovil@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
AI companies are buying up all of the RAM in a futile bit to reach AGI.
Tattorack@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsAnd haven’t even achieved AI yet. What we call “AI” is still nothing more than an upjumped calculator.
- Saledovil@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
In addition, we haven’t even come up with a definition of intelligence.
Blackmist@feddit.ukEnglish
4 monthsTo quote a recent post “we taught computers to talk like middle managers and assumed that meant computers were sentient, rather than assuming that middle managers aren’t”
AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsTheir fucking calculator can’t even calculate. Big fucking whoop.
And people keep shovelling money in their bottomless maw. The world is mad.
∃∀λ@programming.devEnglish
4 monthsI swear bro, just let me add one more gigabyte. I swear, we’re gonna get to AGI. Just add one more gigabyte. Just let me add one more gigabyte. Just let me add one more gigabyte. I swear. I swear. I swear. I swear, we’re gonna get to AGI. Just one more gigabyte and just make it bigger. Just make it bigger. We’re gonna get to AGI. We’ll get there. We’ll get there. We’ll get there. Just make the model bigger. I swear.
- yeehaw@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
When you hear people say they hate AI, it’s for more reasons than AI slop, energy consumption, and beating the damn term into every product line you can imagine for little to no benefit.
- percent@infosec.pubEnglish4 months
My phone recently offered to summarize a text message for me. I’m talking about SMS, the messaging system that already has a character limit.
Also, when I last checked the weather in my area, there was an AI summary. It was an entire sentence or two, and offered zero additional details over what was already visually indicated by the raincloud icon and the number representing the temperature.
I’m looking forward to installing GrapheneOS when their support for my phone stabilizes.
- Agent641@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
I bought a fairly good custom build in April of this year for A$3218.
The same approximate build now costs A$4783 on their website.
- SapphironZA@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
Translation, Micron is shutting down Crucial for short term shareholder value at the cost of a sustainable and proven long term brand and channel.
Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish
4 monthsThey will return to the market with a new brand once the bubble bursts.
- tiramichu@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
Probably just the same brand, honestly?
News two years from now: “Crucial back in business”
- TwoDogsFighting@lemmy.mlEnglish4 months
Three years; why is no one buying our crucial ram , hopefully
Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish
4 monthsDepends on how proud they are and if they’d want to retract their statements of going after AI instead of consumers or not.
- tiramichu@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
I don’t think there’s any pride in it, they are just going after what is the most profitable at any given time.
That’s exactly why I suspect they will choose to resurrect the Crucial name later, because given a choice between launching a new name nobody knows, or a name people recognise (even if it’s been tarred a bit) then recognised will be the winning and more profitable option.
That is, if they haven’t sold the Crucial name to someone else first.
- SabinStargem@lemmy.todayEnglish4 months
China’s CXMT might go for it. Apparently they are rolling out DDR5 8000+ memory, two or three years from now. They can rebrand as Crucial for the western market, thus using familiarity to push their product.
“Crucial’s Xtreme Memory Technology will push your Steam Machine beyond the limits, dddduuuuude!” 🤘
SkunkWorkz@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 monthsIt’s not just for shareholder value, like a downsize or stock buyback would achieve. This will literally fill their coffers to the brim faster than staying in the consumer market. Also the consumer market won’t go away anytime soon and there are very few competitors to begin with. They can just return to the consumer market once the AI bubble has burst like nothing has changed. Only difference is they will have way more money in the bank than if they never left.
- SapphironZA@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
Ask Intel how well compromising long term product development for short term gain is working now. How is their bank balance looking now?
You also cant just pick it up from scratch again. The people are gone, the relationships are gone and people who trusted your brand to build their businesses have gone elsewhere.
I swear businesses are run like political parties these days, they simply dont care about anything beyond the next cycle.
- LoafedBurrito@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
Crucial is the only good brand I can afford. This sucks ass and I HATE AI. I hope AI companies lose all their money and go bankrupt.
AI is destroying so many awesome things, all for profit.
- Jarix@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
I’ve always had shitty luck with Kingston usb drive, just assumed I would have as many problems with their other memory so avoided them. Maybe I shouldn’t have, but I’ve had the same dd4 crucial ballistix ddr4 ram for about 10 years now and have had zero problems with it
- toddestan@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
It’s fine for things like office PCs where you just need it to work, don’t want to spend a lot of money, and performance doesn’t really matter too much.
- reddig33@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
These CEOs seem really slow on the uptake. Gonna put all your chips into the AI business just as the bubble is about to burst.
- Slotos@feddit.nlEnglish4 months
The market can stay irrational far longer than you can stay solvent.
- Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
That’s the thing about bubbles, the last moments are very profitable, it’s more like rich people are playing chicken with the market until it busts.
- Goodeye8@piefed.socialEnglish4 months
They’re trying to squeeze the last water out of the rock while hoping to dip out before everyone realizes everything has been squeezed out.
- zebidiah@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
this seems incredibly short sighted… the current situation exists because there is a large amount of infrastructure and data centres being built. once that infrastructure is built, the demand will return to normal… OR once the bubble bursts, the market will be flooded with used ram from failed data centres… aliexpress will be selling ram at a dollar a gig when all these data centres flop
- 4 months
The only people who believe in infinite growth in a finite world are mad men and economists.
- 4 months
I don’t think the bubble will burst like we are used to. AI is part of the arms race between nations. So they will shore the industry up at all costs.
As for the choice to shut down the brand. It will be years before all that infra gets built. Better to sit the time out and revive the brand when prices are reasonable enough that hobbyists and such are willing to pay them. - COASTER1921@lemmy.mlEnglish4 months
The unfortunate part for DIY PC is that the RAM is likely all buffered ECC. And used flash is sketchy in my experience, even if you buy SLC where the whole point is supposed to be that it is more durable.
- SabinStargem@lemmy.todayEnglish4 months
As someone who does AI and gaming as hobbies, I look forward to a corporate bubble popping. Being able to max out an EPYC or Threadripper Pro’s DDR5 capacity would be awesome. :)
- phar@lemmy.mlEnglish4 months
Yeah but you have a company that has people to pay and rent to pay etc. If they don’t have enough liquid money to handle it then well here we are
Edit: so I wanted to edit this because if anybody still sees it I was very very wrong. I was not aware of that crucial was owned by micron. I did not realize what was actually happening and Micron can pretty much go f itself
- 4 months
- HugeNerd@lemmy.caEnglish4 months
So how am I supposed to get pictures of absurdly obese gaily dancing IT nerds in kilts now!?
- AtariDump@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
The way the elders of the internet intended; by crudely pasting their heads on top of someone else body.
- petersr@lemmy.worldEnglish4 months
I am not talking about the bubble. I am talking about AI being a threat to humanity up there with nuclear wipe out.
- Saledovil@sh.itjust.worksEnglish4 months
Well, we’re still at least one breakthrough away from AGI, and we don’t even know how it will go from there. Could be that humans are already near the maximum of what is possible intelligence wise. As in, the smartest being possible is not that much smarter than the average human. In which case, AGI taking over the world would not be a given.
Essentially, talking about the threat posed by ASI is like talking about the threat posed by Cthulhu.




































