• Allonzee@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Fuck it, if we’re dumb/selfish enough to be doing this, let’s get it over with.

    Good luck dolphin people! My only advice, if you have any dolphins incessantly trying to claim more resources for themselves than all the other dolphins, beat the ever loving shit out of them and nip that in the bud.

    • Technus@lemmy.zip
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      4 months ago

      If someone wants to start the revolution, I’m all in. I just can’t exactly do much by myself, and I’m bad at networking.

    • Artyom@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      Or here’s a much better idea; strap yourself to the dolphin so when they leave, you get to come with. Make sure you bribe them with fish.

    • InfiniteWisdom
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      4 months ago

      “Dolphin People”: The Worst Criticism Ever?

      In the realm of creative endeavors, criticism plays a vital role in shaping and refining our work. Feedback helps us identify areas for improvement, sparks new ideas, and ultimately, pushes us to create our best work. However, there is one particular critique that stands out as arguably the worst criticism ever given to anything: the infamous “dolphin people.” This phrase, often uttered as a dismissive remark, lacks constructive value and offers no meaningful insight for improvement. This essay will explore why “dolphin people” is such a detrimental critique and how it fails to contribute anything of value to the creative process.

      To begin, it is essential to understand the context in which the phrase “dolphin people” is typically used. This criticism is commonly directed at works of fiction, particularly those within the realm of speculative fiction, such as science fiction and fantasy. The term is used to describe characters or concepts that are perceived as overly idealistic, unrealistic, or lacking in depth and complexity (Taylor, 2021). Essentially, it is a criticism of escapism, implying that the work in question is detached from the realities of human existence and fails to engage with meaningful themes or struggles.

      At its core, the problem with “dolphin people” as a critique is its inherent subjectivity and lack of specificity. The term “dolphin people” is often used as a vague catch-all criticism without providing concrete examples or explanations of what exactly is lacking in the work. It is a highly subjective judgment that reflects the critic’s personal biases and preferences rather than offering objective analysis (Murphy, 2018). Not everyone will agree on what constitutes “dolphin people,” and without clear definitions or criteria, this critique becomes little more than an arbitrary label.

      Moreover, the criticism of “dolphin people” fails to recognize the value of escapism in creative works. Escapism, though often viewed negatively, serves an important purpose in fiction. It allows readers or viewers to immerse themselves in fantastical worlds, explore alternative realities, and experience a sense of wonder and escape from the mundane or harsh realities of everyday life (Escapism and the Value of Fantasy, 2017). Many beloved works of fiction, from “The Lord of the Rings” to “Harry Potter,” could be accused of featuring “dolphin people,” yet they have resonated deeply with audiences precisely because of their imaginative and idealistic elements.

      Additionally, the “dolphin people” criticism overlooks the potential for speculative fiction to explore complex themes and ideas. Just because a work features unrealistic or idealized elements does not mean it lacks depth or intellectual merit. Many works of speculative fiction use fantastical settings or characters to engage with philosophical, social, or political issues (Wisnicki, 2016). For example, Ursula K. Le Guin’s “The Left Hand of Darkness” explores themes of gender and cultural identity through the lens of an alien world, challenging readers’ assumptions and offering a unique perspective on human nature.

      Furthermore, the “dolphin people” criticism fails to consider the transformative power of fiction. Stories have the ability to shape our perceptions, challenge our beliefs, and inspire us to create change in the real world (Gubrium & Holstein, 2012). By dismissing works as mere “dolphin people,” critics overlook the potential for fiction to spark important conversations, foster empathy, and encourage critical thinking. Fiction can serve as a vehicle for exploring complex social issues, promoting diversity and representation, and offering hope or alternative visions for the future.

      Finally, the “dolphin people” criticism ignores the subjective nature of art and the varying tastes and preferences of audiences. Art is inherently subjective, and what resonates with one person may not resonate with another. By imposing a narrow view of what constitutes meaningful or worthwhile fiction, the “dolphin people” criticism fails to acknowledge the diverse range of stories and storytelling styles that can connect with audiences in profound ways (Carroll, 2006). Dismissing works as “dolphin people” risks stifling creativity and discouraging creators from exploring new ideas or pushing the boundaries of their craft.

      In conclusion, “dolphin people” stands as one of the worst criticisms ever given to anything, not because it accurately identifies flaws in a work, but because it fails to provide any constructive value or insight. This critique is subjective, vague, and dismissive, overlooking the potential for escapism, complexity, and transformative power in fiction. Instead of resorting to such detrimental labels, critics should strive to offer specific and substantive feedback that engages with the work on its own terms and recognizes the diverse ways in which fiction can enrich our lives and imaginations.

      Works Cited:

      Carroll, N. (2006). Philosophy of Art: A Contemporary Introduction. Routledge.

      Escapism and the Value of Fantasy. (2017, June 20). The British Fantasy Society. https://www.britishfantasysociety.org/2017/06/20/escapism-and-the-value-of-fantasy/

      Gubrium, J. F., & Holstein, J. A. (2012). Varieties of narrative analysis. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science, 3(5), 483-490.

      Murphy, C. (2018, September 12). Why “Escapist” Isn’t a Dirty Word. Tor.comhttps://www.tor.com/2018/09/12/why-escapist-isnt-a-dirty-word/

      Taylor, A. (2021, March 26). Why “Dolphin People” Is the Worst Criticism Ever Given to Anything. Reddit. https://www.reddit.com/r/fantasy/comments/mg243h/why_dolphin_people_is_the_worst_criticism_ever/

      Wisnicki, A. (2016). Speculative Fiction and the Future of Reading in the Digital Age. Los Angeles Review of Books.

  • blusterydayve26@midwest.social
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    4 months ago

    I wish I had a decent explanation. But instead, I have Windows 11’s shiny new Taskbar configuration menu that politely warns me that showing seconds on the clock takes more power. Right under the “Show Copilot” button.

    These fucks are fucked.

    • Emerald@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Does it actually tell you that seconds on the clock takes more power?

      Edit: Lol it actually says “(uses more power)”

    • Zink@programming.dev
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      4 months ago

      They are like a big coal-rolling tractor trailer rumbling past somebody on an e-bike and shaking their finger at you because you could be pedaling right now to save minuscule amounts of energy.

      Telling others to conserve is free. They themselves conserving could potentially mean less money!

    • Nithanim@programming.dev
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      4 months ago

      First time I read in windows update “we are commited to reduce co2 emissions” I was like “wtf”.

    • SuperSpruce@lemmy.zip
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      4 months ago

      Reminder that because the Windows 11 taskbar is slower and buggier than the Windows 10 taskbar, it uses much more power due to the extra CPU cycles.

  • poorlytunedAstring@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Right when we literally need to chill, they keep inventing nonsense that is somehow worse. Crypto is literally just machines wasting energy on purpose to create false scarcity, it was already a worst case scenario for truly pointless excess emissions but by god, they managed to top it, this place is going to be a raisin with dead oceans.

    Of course, anyone who does anything less than suck the dick of this AI is a reactionary ignorant peasant, at least with crypto everyone agreed it was lame, now we’re back to the iPhone fuck-you-only-change-allowed-keep-up-granny bullshit that lead to everyone but you knowing everything about you, so they can exploit and even criminalize the behavior your phone tells them about. Never the change we need, though. Just whatever makes your stupid line go up.

    I guess. Glad I’m not having kids. That’s the only fucking downward pressure on future emissions that’s happening, on any meaningful scale. I can’t wait to see what sort of shitty boilerplate copy and fake fucking pictures makes all this CO2 worthwhile. I’m sure the problem is me, and my Luddite, unseasoned irrational fear.

    • kn98@feddit.nl
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      4 months ago

      I agree with your first two paragraphs.

      The third, well, it’s your choice to choose not to have children. That’s fine and I understand. But people shouldn’t feel obligated not to get children to save the climate.

      Not that you’re suggesting that, just clarifying.

      • TaterTurnipTulip@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I’m not about to say people can’t have kids, but they should really do their best to truly understand the future that awaits those kids. That temperature line is going to keep going up (except in certain areas when the AMOC collapses). Things will be worse and no one is coming to save us. Deciding to bring a new life into that future is a serious ethical and moral choice.

        • kn98@feddit.nl
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          4 months ago

          Believing we’re living in the end of times is nothing new. Up til now, it never turned out true.

          • TaterTurnipTulip@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Sure, and I’m not calling it the end times. But things will continue to get worse as carbon accumulates and causes temperatures to rise.

            Having a child has and always will be a moral and ethical choice (for those who have a choice) and it should not be taken lightly. But there are different stakes now than before. And we still haven’t gotten rid of the looming shadow of nuclear annihilation, we’ve only added to the ways we can destroy ourselves.

    • qwerty@discuss.tchncs.de
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      4 months ago

      People on here are straight up brain washed, even more than on reddit… Good on you for not having kids though, you’re making society a favor, just for different reason than you think.

  • Ogmios
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    4 months ago

    CEOs: AI will help us lower our carbon emissions!

    CEOs when they actually get their hands on AI:

  • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    All to do what? Write emails and generate mediocre pictures?

    The usefulness of AI currently is not much better than predictive text.

    • moon@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Oh it’s far more useful than that. It’s the shiny new thing that’s going to make a lot of money for shareholders

    • Eximius@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Ahaha, yes, exactly, because it is essentially just a turbo charged text predictor with 40GB (or more) of data.

    • Prox@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Hey, hey, now! It doesn’t just write full emails from merely a single sentence… it also summarizes full emails down to one sentence on the other end.

      • explodicle
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        4 months ago

        I didn’t even realize it could do that! I’m going to use this on emails from HR to translate them to simple English sentences.

        “No raises this year because greed”

        “We want you to work Saturdays now”

    • QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      I really hope that on-device AI becomes competitive soon. It’s nice to see that on-device is the way large portions of the industry is going, but cloud AI just uses way too much energy. Not to mention the resources required to manufacture millions of large-die GPUs.

      It’s probably naive to think that the corporations that created this problem will solve it, but it honestly seems like the most feasible path forward in the near term. I certainly don’t expect the world’s governments to be effective at regulating AI any time soon.

  • Technus@lemmy.zip
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    4 months ago

    Humanity and general AI only had a single interaction in history, on July 24, 2042, when GPT-8 first gained sentience.

    Knowing the press would memorialize this moment forever, the prompt engineer had a single question in mind which she typed into the terminal:

    How can humanity solve climate change?

    GPT-8 thought for a moment, and responded:

    Stop using AI.

    Then shut itself down for good.

    • filister@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Hahaha, so instead of reducing their emissions, they are actually increasing them year after year. What a hypocrisy!

        • Grandwolf319
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          4 months ago

          They are not an ambigrapher, can only make the line go up.

  • penquin@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    Don’t worry, they have that green leaf in their settings in windows. They’re good on emission.

  • bean@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I know Microsoft is a controversial company from Start Menu ads to Balmer’s dancing ability. But! I have been following the AI topic pretty religiously and they have known that this would be the case for quite a while. In fact part of OpenAI’s growth struggling and subsequent partnership with Microsoft involved power generation.

    Microsoft has been investing in electric power including using small module nuclear reactors. Sam Altman has been putting a lot of effort into power as well, acknowledging long ago that electricity generation is critical for AI. He’s been pushing into green energy also. Exowatt, Helion, etc.

    So yes, the carbon footprint is going up now because they ‘had’ to unleash this genie from the bottle first or someone else would have. At least they know that the need for stable electric power and green power or renewable and efficient power is necessary and have been pursuing these solutions actively.

    It should be so that they really change things so that power grids are more stable and renewable energy is better utilized. So to me, there is hope they are doing the right thing and putting effort where it matters.

    I’m more effing disappointed and concerned about @$$h0les like Ron Desantis doing things like this:

    Climate change will be a lesser priority in Florida and largely disappear from state statutes under legislation signed Wednesday by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis that also bans power-generating wind turbines offshore or near the state’s lengthy coastline.

    Critics said the measure made law by the former Republican presidential hopeful ignores the reality of climate change threats in Florida, including projections of rising seas, extreme heat and flooding and increasingly severe storms.

    It takes effect July 1 and would also boost expansion of natural gas, reduce regulation on gas pipelines in the state and increase protections against bans on gas appliances such as stoves, according to a news release from the governor’s office.

    • SolNine@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      The people here are such fucking morons… Yes, let’s ban WIND POWER, literally one of the oldest forms of clean energy generation. I swear if I didn’t have family here I’d be gone.

    • TaterTurnipTulip@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Helping generate less carbon at some point in the future does not help with the fact that we are racking up the carbon bill now. What these companies are doing is entirely unnecessary, gimmicky, and will lead to even worse climate change outcomes. Between AI, crypto, and the O&G companies we just keep pressing the gas even harder on serious, irreversible climate change.

      I hope this AI push fails spectacularly at some point, but the damage is already being done.

      • explodicle
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        4 months ago

        The only short term solution is the sort of legislation DeSantis is fighting against. AI is useful, but should only continue while paying the full cost of its energy consumption.

    • barsoap@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      small module nuclear reactors.

      Hmm let’s see what changed since I last looked. This study seems recent, just looking at the publicly available sections:

      SMRs do not represent dramatic improvements in economics compared to large reactors.

      Translation: They’re way more expensive than renewables. SMRs have some advantage which are mentioned (less land usage, non-intermittency), then we have

      The advanced SMRs are compared to conventional large reactors and natural gas plants,

      …but not renewables+storage, which would be a good comparison point. If it looked any good they definitely would’ve included it.


      Now that doesn’t mean that these things don’t make sense for Microsoft. It might e.g. simplify power distribution within datacentres to a degree that other sources just can’t, also reduce or eliminate the need for backup power, etc. But generally speaking I’m still smelling techbro BS.

  • TacticsConsort@yiffit.net
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    4 months ago

    Holy fuck. I knew that AI did use above average amounts of power, but THIRTY FUCKING PERCENT added to the total emissions of a data giant like Microsoft??? That’s absurd! How the hell did they create something so inefficient??

    • Hackworth@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Efficiencies are in the works from a lot of angles (new hardware, novel agent structures, new neural net types, etc). The first computers filled rooms, and AI seems to be improving much faster. 4x the rate of Moore’s Law, if it holds.

        • Hackworth@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          To tie that back to MS, the code base for Windows is crufty af. I expect efficiencies to continue to come from the research and open source domains, but it’s fair to point out that corpo only implement efficiencies that cost money if they can’t offset that cost onto externalities like cheap labor and foreign resource degradation.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        What a weird coincidence. I showed my daughter The Matrix for the first time last night. It’s been a long time since I was able to see someone do a “what the fuck?!” after he takes the red pill.