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holsta commented on Show HN: DenchClaw – Local CRM on Top of OpenClaw   github.com/DenchHQ/DenchC... · Posted by u/kumar_abhirup
lexicality · 3 days ago
I'm always confused by this kind of comment about AI accessing people's chrome history because it seems to imply that the kind of person who uses this tool is both too stupid to know what private browsing is and also is into absolutely heinous stuff.

I feel like the average person is going to be like "oh no it'd be terrible if everyone found out I really like the 'big boobs' category on pornhub"

holsta · 3 days ago
Oh, you have nothing to hide? Kindly paste all your payment and login credentials that your browser stores. Later we'll need to see all your DMs on Facebook, LinkedIn, Slack, Discord, etc.

Finally we'll want to know about disputes you've had with intimate partners, employers and other service providers, especially powerful ones like healthcare, insurance and financial organisations.

holsta commented on How the Lobsters front page works   atharvaraykar.com/lobster... · Posted by u/g0xA52A2A
Aurornis · 2 months ago
This is a good exploration of the algorithm. In my experience, Lobsters has much more active moderator involvement in a more opinionated way than HN. Much of what’s referred to as moderation here is user-driven via flagging and votes, whereas on Lobsters the moderators are injecting more of an opinionated style into the site. For example, requiring the “vibecoding” tag on all stories about AI even though very few of them are about vibecoding.

In theory the Lobsters moderation log is also public, but in practice when someone gets banned if you try to find the post that triggered the banned it will have been edited away by the mods and replaced with their opinion of what was said in a follow up comment. I stopped visiting as much after watching someone get banned for a rather benign comment which the mods edited away and then claimed it said something egregious about a culture war topic, which it did not.

The site also puts up a banner at the top of your page if you receive enough negative votes. The banner invites you to delete your account as the last sentence (or it did in the past). In practice, if you comment something that isn’t the popular and accepted opinion on the site, no matter how diplomatically, you could end up with the banner stuck on your page views for a while. There have been some high profile and valuable contributors to the site who abandoned it after getting stuck with this banner for posting informative content that nevertheless triggered some downvotes.

It’s an interesting site, but in my experience the algorithms are only a small part of it. The experience there is more heavily aligned toward groupthink and the “right” opinions than even HN and differing opinions are much less welcomed.

holsta · 2 months ago
> For example, requiring the “vibecoding” tag on all stories about AI even though very few of them are about vibecoding.

No? You either use AI or vibecoding, like the tag page says:

https://lobste.rs/tags

holsta commented on Show HN: A simulator for engineers transitioning from IC to management   apmcommunication.com/scen... · Posted by u/pingananth
holsta · 2 months ago
> It’s a short, specific puzzle. I’d love to know if you think the "Correct" path I designed matches your real-world experience, or if I’m off base.

As someone about to step into a C-suite role: I picked the "correct" path and as long as people are reasonable, it works well.

holsta commented on Show HN: A Minimal Monthly Task Planner (printable, offline, no signup)   printcalendar.top/... · Posted by u/defcc
mano78 · 3 months ago
This doesn't allow to add events nor it stores anything, it's just to print, right? Thanks all the same!
holsta · 3 months ago
I've used this but you might need to use your browser's translate feature:

https://kalendersiden.dk/

holsta commented on IBM CEO says there is 'no way' spending on AI data centers will pay off   businessinsider.com/ibm-c... · Posted by u/nabla9
holsta · 3 months ago
Many experiments have shown that when you take away people's concerns about money for housing and food, that frees up energy and attention to do other things.

Like the famous experiment in Finland where homeless people were given cash with no strings attached and most were able to rise out of their despair. The healthcare professionals could then focus their energy on the harder cases. It also saved a bunch of money in the process.

holsta commented on RPi 500 arrives with mechanical switches, RGB LED backlit keys   thepihut.com/products/ras... · Posted by u/arkensaw
wkat4242 · 5 months ago
And also, for this price you can get a really nice N100/N150 laptop with a full HD IPS screen. That'll be faster too.

I think the raspberry pi is still a nice niche for when you need the combination of GPIO and fast processing (like a small AI model or something). But it really is a very small niche. If you just need GPIO but don't need to do much with the data, just pump it to WiFi or something? Just get an ESP32 (or pico pi though I prefer the ESP). Need a small light energy server? Just get a N100 nuc style box with 16/256 for 90€. Need to actually work on it? Get a Chuwi laptop for 180€

The pi used to be great to embed into electronics projects. But it's no longer cheap and it's overpowered, microcontrollers have WiFi now and cost a few bucks. And usually a full Linux environment isn't needed.

It also used to be a great little cheap server but Intel now makes cheaper and faster options and on AliExpress you can buy them with more memory and storage and PSU and case included for a price the pi goes for without those things.

It was nice while it lasted. But during the long shortage during the pandemic (and them prioritising OEMs so we were stuck with scalper prices) most of us makers and techies have moved on to better options.

holsta · 5 months ago
> for this price you can get a really nice N100/N150 laptop with a full HD IPS screen

Can you think of a name or model by any chance?

holsta commented on Facial recognition vans to be rolled out across police forces in England   news.sky.com/story/facial... · Posted by u/amarcheschi
beardyw · 7 months ago
10 vans works out at one for every 10,000 square miles. Hardly a "roll out across the UK".
holsta · 7 months ago
> Hardly a "roll out across the UK".

What's your threshold for when it becomes a problem? Should we wait until it becomes a problem, or should we try to stop this level of facial recognition?

You should also assume this is a proof of concept. It'll get improved and scaled down to run on every police vehicle, and on every camera the police already control.

holsta commented on Visa and Mastercard are getting overwhelmed by gamer fury over censorship   polygon.com/news/616835/v... · Posted by u/mrzool
pseudo0 · 7 months ago
Feminist groups also regularly try to get games banned from Steam, typically for sexism or violence against women. Eg.

> Women in Games CEO Dr Marie-Claire Isaaman has called on Valve to “act urgently” and remove the game from Steam, saying the game’s content “is not only vile and dangerous, but also actively promotes the dehumanisation of women and girls.”

https://www.videogameschronicle.com/news/women-in-games-call...

holsta · 7 months ago
When you start digging past their marketing material, you quickly discover that these organisations are just right-wing fronts, against trans-people, against abortion.

Here's a 38 minute video that walks through some of the recent major incidents.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmHHnPLllUk

Feminists would not campaign to take down games (with zero sexual content) about queer lives made by queer people.

holsta commented on Study mode   openai.com/index/chatgpt-... · Posted by u/meetpateltech
gbalduzzi · 7 months ago
Are we really comparing this research to just writing and having a good answer in a couple of seconds?

Like, I agree with you and I believe those things will resist and will always be important, but it doesn't really compare in this case.

Last week I was in the nature and I saw a cute bird that I didn't know. I asked an AI and got the correct answer in 10 seconds. Of course I would find the answer at the library or by looking at proper niche sites, but I would not have done it because I simply didn't care that much. It's a stupid example but I hope it makes the point

holsta · 7 months ago
There's a gigantic difference between outsourcing your brain to generative AI (LLMs, Stable Diffusion, ..) and pattern recognition that recognises songs, birds, plants or health issues.
holsta commented on Study mode   openai.com/index/chatgpt-... · Posted by u/meetpateltech
czhu12 · 7 months ago
I'll personally attest: LLM's have been absolutely incredible to self learn new things post graduation. It used to be that if you got stuck on a concept, you're basically screwed. Unless it was common enough to show up in a well formed question on stack exchange, it was pretty much impossible, and the only thing you can really do is keep paving forward and hope at some point, it'll make sense to you.

Now, everyone basically has a personal TA, ready to go at all hours of the day.

I get the commentary that it makes learning too easy or shallow, but I doubt anyone would think that college students would learn better if we got rid of TA's.

holsta · 7 months ago
> It used to be that if you got stuck on a concept, you're basically screwed.

We were able to learn before LLMs.

Libraries are not a new thing. FidoNet, USENET, IRC, forums, local study/user groups. You have access to all of Wikipedia. Offline, if you want.

u/holsta

KarmaCake day331May 11, 2021
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Information security person in Denmark.
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