Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)T
Posts
2
Comments
586
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • Is America great yet?

  • Can you think of any other possible and more likely explanation for them being filtered, other than "the entire EU is being filtered by Google"?

    If you wanted evidence that the entire EU is not being filtered, what would that evidence look like?

  • So email from one EU domain got filtered for you, and you concluded that every email from the EU is being filtered for everyone, on account of being from the EU? Am I understanding this right?

  • Well it works fine in boost

  • "There's more than one way to skin a cat."

    1. You have a cat.
    2. You wish to remove its skin.
    3. You realize there's more than just one method to accomplish this unusual task.
    4. You state this proudly as a metaphor for problem-solving flexibility.
  • I agree. That response made me lose any trust I had and I actually went to check that I didn't still have Zen browser installed from some earlier test run. He sounds like a script kiddie.

  • Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Yes based on my experience with the world (and really just common sense), the most likely causal link here is that being lonely causes you to both talk with ChatGPT more and to use affective language in your conversation.

  • No title

    Jump
  • What's the story with this guy?

  • That's not what is happening. The bot writes code and then I tell it what to change until it's close enough, then I make the final touches myself. It's like having a junior programmer do the grunt work for you.

  • Then try writing the code yourself and ask ChatGPT's o3-mini-high to critique your code (be sure to explain the context).

    Or ask it to produce unit tests - even if they're not perfect from the get go I promise you will save time by having a starting skeleton.

    Another thing I often use it for is ad hoc transformations. For example I wanted to generate constants for all the SQLSTATE codes in the PostgreSQL documentation. I just pasted the table directly from the documentation and got symbolic constants with the appropriate values and with documentation comments.

  • That seems like just wishful thinking on your part, or maybe you haven't learned how to use these tools properly.

  • As an experienced software dev I'm convinced my software quality has improved by using AI. More time for thinking and less time for execution means I can make more iterations of the design and don't have to skip as many nice-to-haves or unit tests on account of limited time. It's not like I don't go through every code line multiple times anyway, I don't just blindly accept code. As a bonus I can ask the AI to review the code and produce documentation. By the time I'm done there's little left of what was originally generated.

  • I mean Adobe is a piece of shit company and if there's any way you can ditch them, do it. If you can't, I get it. In that case a Mac is probably the easier way out.

  • Yes, there are certainly alternatives and there are several with a better UI than GIMP (see Krita and Pixel). But I've been told there are specific tools and workflows that are missing. Partly it's probably a matter of finding new ways of accomplishing your goal.

  • Ubuntu is the typical go-to replacement for Windows as it's arguably more plug-and-play than other distros.

    alternativeto.net is a great place to find Linux alternatives to the software you use. Many products already work on Linux without switching, but some areas might be more difficult. For example depending on your needs you might not find a great drop-in replacement for Photoshop.

  • Please, you're wasting your time explaining. I know all this. I'm talking about how a libertarian would interpret the question due to its ambiguous phrasing. My only point is that of the original parent comment: the methodology of the researcher is bad.

  • No, 0.05$ is not a substantial amount of money. A 5 percentage points tax increase could be considered substantial. The question is worded so that it can be interpreted in the latter way, and it's also using a subjective word like "substantial". Somebody who is politically against taxes is likely to interpret it the latter way, and hence the poll's results are skewed by its vagueness.

    If we want to measure math skills and understanding of the law, a better question would be by how many dollars the total tax would increase. This would also give us better information on how far off people are.

  • I mean I understand all of these things. But the question is worded in a way that can be interpreted wildly differently depending on the political affiliation of the person responding.