

I can see why they’ve been persecuted throughout history!
The irony is that you’re parroting Israeli propaganda by conflating Zionism with Judaism.
The state of Israel thanks you for your service and doing the work of Hasbara for them.


I can see why they’ve been persecuted throughout history!
The irony is that you’re parroting Israeli propaganda by conflating Zionism with Judaism.
The state of Israel thanks you for your service and doing the work of Hasbara for them.


This is just self-serving messaging that he’s hoping will impact the AI spend and policy of other CEOs.
Maybe he believes it, maybe he doesn’t, but it’s 100% in his interest to make other decision makers believe that he believes it.


For those confused, they’re basically saying that if America tries to seize any of its Islands, or attack its coast, they won’t just close the strait, they will mine the entire Persian Gulf, which has many ships currently loitering waiting for the straight to open.
They also claim to have mines that they can simply drop from their own coastline, which will then subsequently travel into the the Gulf. Which is entirely plausible.
The environmental damage will be catastrophic from all of the blown up oil tankers still in the Gulf, and those oil tankers are not easily replaceable for the shipping companies, so even more medium term economic damage will be added to the pile as a result.


I think there is some limited truth in this.
I think what really happened is that Iran and the GCC countries had conversations, where Iran confirmed their position, and the GCC countries relayed to Trump that they will default on every single financial obligation they have to him personally, once their countries are made unlivable.
So in a way, there was a negotiation, just not directly.


Can’t wait to see the reporting on how fucked up their air traffic control system is from Trump’s cuts.


But they’ve never been this close to the nuclear football.


You were calling them mad in the context of geopolitical strategic thought i.e. madman theory, and that’s just not true.
If you need evidence that they are thoughtful and measured, then just look at this war and how it’s playing out.
And if you need more evidence, please read all of the reporting regarding the latest rounds of negotiations that Trump sabotaged.
Those are not the actions of mad men.


While I will not defend theocracy, the people running Iran are anything but mad.
Brutal and repressive authoritarians? Sure.
But their strategy going back 40 years has been thoughtful and measured, which are not the qualities of people who are “mad”.
The same cannot be said for Trump, obviously.


I use Fedora, and honestly, I’m not even going to look for alternatives or work arounds unless and until my system actually tries to verify my age.
But that’s good to know, thank you. I imagine that if I do have to dump Fedora, I will probably go to an Arch based system purely for the AUR.


But who’s going to grope children and ransack luggage?
Oh right, ICE.
Nevermind, crisis averted.


As someone who has used Linux for over a decade, I have no idea how I would even go about replacing Systemd on my computer; even if I wanted to.
Ageless Linux, now that’s something I can get behind: a script that I don’t understand, to accomplish something I think I might need, or just think is neat.
Unfortunately, I don’t use a Debian based distro, so I’m SOL on that front as well.


I appreciate you think that you have a point, and that it’s coherent, but you don’t, and it’s not.


You’re literally cheering for what you view as set of political upsides to war, and when I point out the rest of it, you get defensive.
I wonder why.


So the tens of millions that are going to suffer famine across the global south, and the tens of thousands that will die in the third world hospitals without power, are price you’re willing to pay?
Good to know.

Hilarious that India leaves the US behind, in terms of domestic technology.
I’ve lived in multiple red and blue states, and have never had gas cooking appliances.
I know they still exist, but it’s not like I was making decisions where to live based on gas versus electric cooking.
So my random selection of over half a dozen homes in four states, all having electric cooktops, doesn’t really bode well for your argument.


So running a local model is unforgivable, but “scientific research” running on hyperscalers, can be justified?


Since no one is leaving critical comments that might explain all the downvotes, I’m going to assume they’re reflexively anti-AI, which frankly, is a position that I’m sympathetic to.
But one of the benign useful things I already use AI for, is giving it criterias for shows and asking it to generate lists.
So I think your project is pretty neat and well within the scope of actually useful things that AI models, especially local ones, can provide the users.


Whenever it’s relevant, I will always remind people that lithium batteries are essentially little bombs.
They are tightly packed energy cells, and the only thing keeping them from causing serious harm or death, is quality of manufacturing, and quality of care once they’re in the consumer’s hand.
Never cheap out on anything power related.
Buying a cheap motherboard or buy cheap SSD’s might mean your computer may break more easily, but buying a cheap power supply, means you might burn your house down - and the same logic applies to lithium batteries, and products that contain lithium batteries.
That’s putting it mildly.
Imperial Japanese war criminals we’re not just kept in the post-war government, but given control of it.
Third-Way Democrats published an op-ed in the WSJ saying that the Epstein class is an anti-Semitic trope.
But at this point, all they’re doing is trying to maintain their base of support among right-leaning boomers, because that is the last stronghold of Israeli support.