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/tech/ - Technology

"Technology reveals the active relation of man to nature" - Karl Marx
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>a lot of people use it!
This has gotta be one of the worst reasons for choosing a programming language for your team out there. The entire argument is premised on the idea that this makes it easier to hire for, but the more popular your language choice is the more scriptkiddies you’re gonna get applying for your company and you end up going through excruciating hiring processes, meanwhile if you just say "ok we're using Rust" the only hiring friction will be finding someone who isn't annoying at Christmas parties.
3 posts omitted.

>>29911
managerbrain is a cancer that stifles innovation, kills creativity, and focuses on short-term thinking that doesn't go past the next "quarter", or worse the next "two week sprint" in tech companies.

There is no longer any real innovation happening in tech spaces. The period from 2000-2015 gave us robust online banking, smartphones, cloud infra, online maps with real-time navigation, safer cab rides, etc. The stuff after that has been hype grifts galore, self-driving cars, block chain, AI chatbots, now some are starting to make a noise about "quantum" comupting. The industry pushed the people making the products out and now it's all marketers, "quarterly earnings call" charlatans, ideas guys, thought leaders and so on.

>>29926
>meritocratic lies
Endless circles of poor getting punched making them poor getting …
Could work just as well with losers if you prefer that word.
Don't buy the food-stamps "just make them not hungry enough."
Not sure the best way things are learned and overcome however.

>>29932
>Endless circles of poor getting punched making them poor getting …
That this is a very affordable form of low "learning".
And not only because it's cheap itself, but because it lowers "earned" highs too.

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>>29927
This is all pretty cold, but, get the impression that since 2008 there's been a variety of attempts to figure out what to do with hardware performance which is eccentrically sufficient for consumers. Part of this is scaling, so you can have more tabs open, more pixels, and higher fidelity graphics etc. Another part is making thinks which couldn't have existed before 2008. The addition of production driverless cars and the transition from ELIZA-style chatbots to LLM are examples of this, but have only shown up recently. These are potential major changes in the means of production. Wonder if there was a twelve to fifteen year lull though. Probably something to do with innovation cycles or something.

>>29932
>Not sure the best way things are learned and overcome however.
Turns out you have to be told!

>Endless circles of poor getting punched making them poor getting …

The same messages paid for again … to listen.
Literally and deeply as well as critically.
Some tips are not to buy things that hurt you.
And to receive payment in necessities! (learning)
But really there's not trick to get out and it's stupid!



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A PHONE OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN is a dizzying descent into digital madness, where one man's screen addiction and artistic ambitions collide in a genre-bending exploration of love, technology, and the disintegration of the modern mind. It's the first ever long-form screenshot.

It is freely available [pierceday.metalabel.com/aphone].

File: 1748549233257-0.png (1.06 MB, 1080x1920, download.png)


imagine paying money for a 4chan compilation

>>30032
i read an excerpt and it reads like chatGPT wrote it

I mean
> Let me siphon an atom’s split of radiance from the dripping fractals forming symbols you cannot see. Echoes of a path brighten the enclave, while rhizomes riot below legions of luminotopological lift.
who writes like this, fucking hack shit



 

Feel free to discuss any consumer electronic products you use.
Picture two are my Chi-Fi: Tin-HIFI T2.
They're mostly neutral with some deviation in the highs.
Much less bass heavy than most Chi-Fi judging from the graphs.

Picture one is my phone, an ironic branding for a midrange device.
Am hoping to install Lineage 21+ after an unlock token arrives.
Interesting apps are as follows:

- NewPipe (youtube alternative)
- personalDNSfilter (global adblock)
- KurobaEx-Beta (leftypol client)
- Obsidian (note taking software)
- OsmAnd (google maps alternative)
- Messanger (RCS is a monopoly)
- Aurora Store (bad play replacement)
15 posts omitted.

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>>29659
This is so much more of a pain then it used to be.
Even things like downloading an OTA, or transferring files to phone.
Like since when do you need a virtual filesystem to transfer files?
Since when do you need to transfer bins back and forth to your phone and computer to patch them.
Since when do you even need a computer to root a phone?
Then of course my laptop only has three USB ports each on a different side!
Since when can you not have a keyboard, mouse, flashdrive, and phone plugged in at once!
And then lol sorry you actually still need that fancy unlock token they haven't sent you for three weeks.
Ugh!

I have a Samsung a35 right now. I have google fi as my carrier so i just get whatever is a cheap phone with SD support from their store whenever the current one dies out

>>29813
This never did show up.
Am going to try using MSM on an old windblows machine to restore to an international firmware.
Really disgusting.

>>30037
This completely failed so gave up.
Seems like am going to get something unlocked next time.

a samsoong s25, sorry for being a consoomer, i was worried about trump tariff so i splurged
a kindle paperwhite gen 7 with koreader after jailbreaking it, koreader is fucking awesome
sometimes a miyoo mini v4 for gaming



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Comrades, we need a thread on privacy. Any decent activist should try ways of staying anonymous on the web and prevent being tracked by governments and corporations.General tips===* Use free software as much as you can.* Use GNU/Linux and keep it up-to-date, to be sure that you don't have unpatched security exploits* Don't use Flash Player, use youtube-dl instead for watching streaming videos online* Do not use Google, use DuckDuckGo or StartPage instead* Use a password manager like Keepass or for GNU/Linux users keepassx. Create new passwords for every site that you visit and use a strong password as a master password. A tip for easy remembering of your master password is to use a sentence. "i fucking love cookies and tits!" with extra capital characters etc. is easier to remember than some random characters and long enough to prevent brute force attacks of any kind.* Use the Tor Browser Bundle if you really want to stay anonymous.Firefox====* Go to Preferences -> History and set History to "Never remember history". * See for additional tweaks: https://github.com/amq/firefox-debloat and https://vikingvpn.com/cybersecurity-wiki/browser-security/guide-hardening-mozilla-firefox-for-privacy-and-securityAdd-ons-----------* Use uBlock Origin for preventing tracking etc. Bonus: use hard-mode to manually whitelist external domains on sites. Don't use uBlock but be sure to use uBlock Origin https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock/wiki/Blocking-mode:-hard-mode* HTTPS Everywhere* DecentralEyes: prevents CDN hosting from tracking you (Google for Jquery etc.)* Self Destructing Cookies: only allow cookies that you choose to allowOS==* Encrypt your hard drive or home partition at least* If you use GNU/Linux, you can try to restrict systemd or syslog from logging. * Use a distribution which takes security seriously. Also, be sure that you don't install a lot of things outside the repository. It will cover most of your needs.Real life tips===* Pay with cash if you canFeel free to provide tips to each other comrades!
254 posts and 24 image replies omitted.

>>29488
the chinanons here use a VPN to access leftypol, not sure where and how they have access to one though

>>29488
IDK about Signal but I'm pretty sure the Chinese have access to VPNs and Tor

>>2111
Is there any true effective method for privacy?
These guides don't seem complete.

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is Protonmail secure? Mine was confirmed using a throwaway mail.
Should I make a protonmail secured through a protonmail, or is that retarded? Should I, on top of the normal PM, use proxies\TOR\s\thing else?

>>29498
The question is: What is your privacy goal? Because real, total privacy is in our age a meme. As soon as you connect your device with the internet, you are toast. If you are into total privacy, you also must get a zero trust mindset, you have to assume, that EVRYTHING is compromised. So the best thing you do, is to stay away from computerter technology as far as possible.

The more usual privacy route is, what 99% of privacy enthusists actually do is: harm reduction. Trying to minimize your digital footprint as much as possible. This is the only thing you can do and it is worth to do it. Privacy is not all or nothing.



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I recently got a smartphone again and things are worse than 5 or 6 years ago. I got an Android because they have inexpensive ones and I don't believe in paying around $1k for a phone.

Turns out you need a Gmail account and a whole Google relationship for the phone to work. Then you can't even send texts without your legal name and email address being linked to your number. For anyone you contact to read.

I'm no paranoid nut or anything, but this is far more involved than it used to be. And there's simply no way to opt out. It may be different with Apple phones, but I remember when I had one of those they wanted me to link up a bunch of shit too. It was similar but different.

Not to mention you kind of already need a phone to activate a phone. Because without some texted code to cell phone you can't get the new one going.
I know I'M the problem here because I'm questioning and not just agreeing to all their shit, but I want to understand it.

Do you guys know what's up with all this and if there's any way around it? I had a flip phone for a long time but each year it's more and more of a hassle to get along without having the same as everyone else. And everyone INSISTS on communicating via text message, so there's really no dealing with that on a little flip with just numbers. And I checked; they don't even fucking MAKE Blackberry type smartphones with physical keyboards anymore. If you can find one it won't work with any current carrier. The phones are all very big and they don't offer small smartphone options unless you want a folding one which is even more costly.
The cheapest I could get was $200 and I still feel ripped off.
10 posts and 1 image reply omitted.

>>29721
proofs? tried even to use geoip to get timezone data once but the data wasn't accurate enough. something like 50% accuracy for city.

>>29721
Yeah, I haven't left the house with it. Someday I'll need it for GPS or something I imagine. I'd like to just buy a GPS for my car like I used to have that always works, no signing up or anything. Just a random guy using the thing for directions and it doesn't know who I am and isn't tracking me. Garmin. They still make those? My last one looked like a CRT TV, as deep as it was wide, suctioned to my windshield. I miss that thing. Would it still work? Remember those days?

>>29724
>>29724
>proofs?
here's this weeks proofs
https://mastdatabase.co.uk/blog/2025/05/o2-expose-customer-location-call-4g/
this isn't a demoralization post. understand the fucking ridiculous amount of data they're taking from you

>>29823
Well then.

>>29683
>Turns out you need a Gmail account and a whole Google relationship for the phone to work.

Uhmm… no you don't?! My phone is like 3 months old and I am using it completeky without a Google account. You can just skip the account creation.



 

Thread for questions that don't deserve their own thread.
I wanna buy some headphones to go outside i don't want to spend more than 100€ on them. I want them to be mostly durable and secondly to have good sound quality, also i don't want to look like a jackass while wearing them, any suggestions?
501 posts and 65 image replies omitted.

>>29869
You could also add https://commonsclause.com/ to any license of your choice including AGPL.
At one point considered this to be a good license for SaaS free software with chinese characteristics.
GPLv3 and Apache have patent clauses if that's of interest to you.

are there any vivaldi plugins that I are available to make browsing leftypol a bit better?

Given how, even on a good day, LLMs do citation in a way that is all too close to a human without book at hand, is there any chatbot out yet with solid citations? What I'm thinking about would be basically this:

1. The program responds to anything with a cite from a big text corpus (for example, a Lenin-citer bot),
2. always uses quotation marks,
3. also has markers to show when there is a quote within the quote,
4. marks omissions with (…) that you can click on to reveal the omitted text, and
5. always gives the source title, publication date, and source link.

It might make use of a very fuzzy decision procedure, but only for deciding on where to make cutouts from an existing text, not to generate text.

>>30017
Was using DeepSeek for this some if you end your question with "using only quotes by author from a reputable source" such as "Lenin" from "marxists.org" it did a descent job from an uninformed perspective. It sometimes elides and then you can request "give me the full paragraph of the quote". My guess is that you'd be better off just doing a wget –spider for pages and then find and grep.

>>30017
I think the problem would be somewhat solved if you could limit searches to a particular domain, so even if the LLM gets quotes wrong, you can see where it got its shit from



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Thread for watching rocket launches and shit.
80 posts and 54 image replies omitted.

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>>26520
Yeah he's even a nazi too.

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Not really /tech/ but still /space/.
Lunar eclipse happens tonight, will be visible in the Americas.

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Yet another giant leap on the road to the Moon and Mars. The Chinese will never catch up now!

I might be stupid but I still don't understand what problem starship (or even falcon9) is trying to solve

>>30027
Isn't the purpose to soak up government gibs while maximizing profit (offering a cheaper service and doing things no one else can) and inspiring-following a vision of futurism. If the vision of the future were different you'd probably get it.



 

AGI by 2027. What are the implications for the world and the future of mankind and communism?

>Everyone is now talking about AI, but few have the faintest glimmer of what is about to hit them. Nvidia analysts still think 2024 might be close to the peak. Mainstream pundits are stuck on the willful blindness of “it’s just predicting the next word”. They see only hype and business-as-usual; at most they entertain another internet-scale technological change.


>Before long, the world will wake up. But right now, there are perhaps a few hundred people, most of them in San Francisco and the AI labs, that have situational awareness. Through whatever peculiar forces of fate, I have found myself amongst them. A few years ago, these people were derided as crazy—but they trusted the trendlines, which allowed them to correctly predict the AI advances of the past few years. Whether these people are also right about the next few years remains to be seen. But these are very smart people—the smartest people I have ever met—and they are the ones building this technology. Perhaps they will be an odd footnote in history, or perhaps they will go down in history like Szilard and Oppenheimer and Teller. If they are seeing the future even close to correctly, we are in for a wild ride.


>Let me tell you what we see.


<I. From GPT-4 to AGI: Counting the OOMs

>AGI by 2027 is strikingly plausible. GPT-2 to GPT-4 took us from ~preschooler to ~smart high-schooler abilities in 4 years. Tracing trendlines in compute (~0.5 orders of magnitude or OOMs/year), algorithmic efficiencies (~0.5 OOMs/year), and “unhobbling” gains (from chatbot to agent), we should expect another preschooler-to-high-schooler-sized qualitative jump by 2027.

<II. From AGI to Superintelligence: the Intelligence Explosion

>AI progress won’t stop at human-level. Hundreds of millions of AGIs could automate AI research, compressing a decade of algorithmic progress (5+ OOMs) into ≤1 year. We would rapidly go from human-level to vastly superhuman AI systems. The power—and the peril—of superintelligence would be dramatic.
35 posts and 4 image replies omitted.

>>30001
It is more about which positions will be replaced. It is a progressive process which is slowly phasing out all White collar workers.

>>30003
so like literally any and all automation ever since the industrial revolution? woooooooooowwwww

>>30001
And basically everything regarding the hype was made up because Sam Altman was panicing and needed to assure the stock holders that they must stick around. That's why he announced AGI, and that's why he announced ASI, and that's why he'll annound AXXLI in the coming months..

Ok

Permaban everyone in this thread



 

What's the deal with block-based coding? I'm surprised it's not more common for the obvious stuff like markup languages, since they're both sandwich shaped, and whenever I look into it I see it pitched as:
>no coding
even though it is, just you have premade snippets.
>usually pitched as a teaching tool rather than part of a serious workflow
which is weird beause I see node based coding, another kind of visual coding, used in gamedev and shader stuff quite regularly.
>seemingly only used for high level programming
why? like is there something low level programming languages do that can't translate to blocks?

Do you use block-based coding for anything, or have experiences to share about it?

Finally figured out npm and got blockly running. Perhaps I could try making a generator for rust to see if that's possible.

>>30009
Blocks are just a different interface to imperative code, which most people already know how to read as text and is trivial to learn compared to other coding paradigms (it's like a cooking recipe). Nodes in contrast represent a type of reactive programming, which is harder to grasp and in general-purpose languages can only be found as special purpose pipelines or message-based object systems. Documentation is pretty much the only advantage of blocks over text, all constructs are listed and often telegraph how they may be used.



 

This is the next installment of threads in my project log series since the imageboard was completed >>27187, and ran out of motivation for the calendar-based forum >>27553, leaving it as merely a (relatively complete) calendar. The idea this time around is to make something of a GNU Emacs replacement, but broken up into a number of tightly coupled smaller packages. Namely the approach is going to be "frames" over "windows" where windows are controlled by a programmable tiling window manager and run in Xephr for individuals who don't want to replace their window manager. Further there will be a command processor for mapping keybindings to functions and command names to functions. Next there will be a prompt package which will be responsible for prompting the user, more likely than not this will be either at the cursor position or in the center of the display. Lastly, the text editor itself will be responsible for very little beyond saving and reloading state, and rendering the text buffer; these two functionality will likely also be split into separate packages.

Presently, the implementation is in C, Xlib, Cairo, and Pango but is little more than a demo to edit and render text taken from various tutorials glued together only started yesterday afternoon. It is however already capable of indexing in text based on pointer events, so it seems the stack will be powerful enough to write the gui. Am likely to start with morphing the present program into the prompt package and once have the basics of the centered view created (this would be something akin to dmenu) am likely to begin rewriting in Common Lisp. Don't yet know how to handle the interprocess communication ideally it would be bidirectoinal and work well with programs not written in Common Lisp, though this latter point isn't the biggest priority. Getting the interprogram communication right is going to be critical for having the environment work well overall. Anyway that's all for now.
34 posts and 11 image replies omitted.

>>29920
>Mongolian
Taking this joke seriously is a bit dangerous…

Was told by my superiors am not ready for this.
And told paper and pencil would probably help.

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>>29923
Some common lisp later and have a complex implementation of a simple algorithm that was in my notebook.
The idea was to only render glyphs which need to be on the screen, and only "shape" for glyphs that are in lines on the screen.
Arabic and other connected scripts are borked because of rendering glyph by glyph.
Seems need to separate by LogAttr is_word_boundary or similar ( https://docs.gtk.org/Pango/struct.LogAttr.html ).
Really this should have come up in the design process for the algorithm, but oh well.

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>>29924
Writing in an alien language can be difficult!
Finally got all of the bugs sorted in the render!
The ASCII doesn't really show off the engine completely.
There's certainly some pressure to implement caching however.
Especially considering this was part of the whole reason for the re-implementation.
The algo avoids rendering words unless part of them is visible to the left.
There is still some work required to have this same behavior happen to the "right".
These things should be easily enough implemented now that the basic framework is in place.
Really still seem to need a non-idealist plan,

>>30021
Wrote primitive caching. Also more primitive optimization for cluttered overlong lines.

It will probably be difficult to do this last thing correctly.



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