Two tired mice in a pail of milk,
They swam around as best they could.
But hope began to fade - what should they do?
One wanted to drown itself,
But its friend said, "No, no, no,
For hope only triumphs, maybe,
As long as we keep searching for it.
Keep searching for it.
Fexofenadine is also by far the best I've used for my allergies. I have no side effects from them, no sleepiness and they work in 20 min. I use the 120mg variant.
Actually kind of an interesting graph. Seems like there is a pattern of 10 years of conflict and tension and then a either a hold or another 10 years with a calm period.
Our cat is not much into catching mice. We once lived in an allotment house, which is mostly a shed. We once had a mouse in our bedroom, and we had to wake up the cat. We placed her near the mouse, so she could see it. She just lied down and continued to sleep.
Thanks! And thank you for a civil discussion. I will at some point look it up. If you have some resources you could recommend, that would be nice. I guess there a lot of good but also bad readings on the subject out there.
I've volunteered a lot before I got kids, where I was mentoring children of refugees. But having two kids under the age of 5 is a full time job beside my full time job, so currently there's not many hours left of the day to do volunteering.
But I do still try to do small things here and there to improve the world around me.
I believe not reading news is what got us here. Too many have given up and don't take a stance, which allows the situation to just get worse and worse.
But, I also stopped reading news. I stopped the day Trump won the election. The world is a shit show and I won't allow my mood to get dragged down every day. I have a family and kids and I want them to have a good life and a fun dad to be around.
If things like what happens with the ICE raids are happening, the Epstein files, dictatorship suddenly threatens everything I'm not burying my head in the sand, but I want to dose the amount of news I consume.
I definitely get that! And it is definitely an issue. Personally, I feel like the state of the world is constantly knocking on my door. It's almost claustrophobic. I vote for parties and politicians I believe in, I try to avoid supporting the ones who try to fuck up our world by not using their products or buy them.
But besides that, I not sure what else I can do, and I'm definitely up for suggestions.
My All Feed is basically empty now or consists of posts with zero or very few comments.
I love the filter option, but it has also made it quite clear what is being pushed the most on Lemmy.
Jeg tror mange danskere bliver ramt på varmen. Det er vores største bekymring her hjemme. Vi kører udelukkende luft-til-vand varmepumpe, og uden strøm, så er vi sgu på den. Det ville hurtigt blive meget koldt.
But Rush and Becker have shied away from making sweeping claims about what the results of their study mean for the future of AI. For one, the study’s sample was small and non-generalizable, including only a specialized group of people to whom these AI tools were brand new.
I'm not sure focusing on one aspect to scope a reasonable and doable study automatically makes it “really low effort”.
You are right, but I believe they should at least have chosen another use case, to make it interesting. I wouldn't have needed a study to know that an AI performs worse than a developer in a project the developer most likely built them self. The existing project might have some really weird code smells and work arounds that only the developer on the project knows about and understand. There might be relevant context external to the solution. The AI have to be a mind reader in these cases.
But, if you gave the AI and the developer a blank canvas a clear defined task, I just believe it would be a more interesting study. *
It kind of sounds like they were just handed a tool they knew nothing about and were asked to perform better with it. A mitter saw is way better and faster than a regular saw, if you know how to use it.
*edit
To make my point more clear, I don't mean the developer needed to solve an issue that's not related to his daily work, but a task that's not dependent on years of tech debt or context that is not provided to the AI. And yes, by that, I don't believe code generation from an AI have a big use case in scenarios where the project have too many dependencies and touches on niche solutions, but you can still use it for other purposes than building features.
I get the agenda of the study and I also agree with it, but the study itself, is really low effort.
Obviously, an experienced developer working on a highly specialized project, where the software developer already have all the needed context, and have no experience with using AI, will beat a clueless AI.
How would the results look like, if the software developer had experience with AI, and were to start on a new project, without any existing context? A lot different, i would imagine. AI is also not only for code generation. After a year of working as a software developer, I could no longer gain much experience from my senior colleagues (says much more about them, than me or AI) and I kinda was forced to look for sparring elsewhere. I feel like I have been speed running my experience and career, by using AI. I have never used code generation that much, but instead I've used it to learn about things i don't know i don't know about. That have been an accelerator.
Today, I'm using code generation much more; when starting a new project, or when i need to prototype something, complete mundane tasks on existing projects, make some none-critical python scripts, get useful bash scripts, spin up internal UI projects, etc..
Sometimes, i naturally waste time, as it takes time for an AI to produce code, and then it takes time to review the code, but in general I feel my productivity have gained by using AI.
Fexofenadine is also by far the best I've used for my allergies. I have no side effects from them, no sleepiness and they work in 20 min. I use the 120mg variant.