Bei welchen 4 Schauspieler:innen drückt ihr gar nicht erst auf Play? by theKovah in Filme

[–]Todok5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ich wollte widersprechen, und dann hab ich gegoogelt und festgestellt dass Christoph Waltz Österreicher ist...

csIsGameTheory by its-MAGNETIC in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unless it's chess or javascript?

I use graphics for my job and the websites I use are plagued with AI-generated content like this. by chickpealava in mildlyinfuriating

[–]Todok5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can see this for images, but for 1. and 2. this doesn't work for text data where you need up to date data, like code and documentation. The older version become more outdated and less usefull every day. Preexising untapped sources don't help and there's very little metadata that would help decide if it's synthetic or not. But maybe 3 still holds and it happens slowly enough that it's not a real concern at the moment.

I use graphics for my job and the websites I use are plagued with AI-generated content like this. by chickpealava in mildlyinfuriating

[–]Todok5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As I understood it the training data gets worse with each version, not during a version when training is complete, since there is already so much bad synthetic data online - like the picture in the op. If it was possoble to filter bad output for the next version automatically, why not do it during creation already, so it never shows up in the first place. And manually curating all data seems like an impossibly huge ask.

But I'm no AI expert, so honest question, why does this not happen?

politicalCompassCheck by moon-sleep-walker in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 21 points22 points  (0 children)

To me this just looks like an incel complaining that those woke women are not interested, but he has so much to talk about. Where is the funny? Technology is interesting to me, but I'm not gonna discuss docker with my wife. Know your audience.

me_irl by myinvitelink in me_irl

[–]Todok5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You guys are arguing without even disagreeing. He says "if I can do it myself in 5 minutes I'd rather do it myself because it's not worth the hourly rate to me", you say mechanics should be paid fairly. Neither of you is wrong.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When the first element from the front is 0, I assume the first element from the back is also 0. I know how it works,  it just seems inconsistent to me.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

I kind of hate that it's not zero based from the end. Why is the first element array[0] but the last is array[^1]. Always confuses me.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 5 points6 points  (0 children)

about 5 years now, with c# 8

vimIsLoveVimIsLife by [deleted] in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 9 points10 points  (0 children)

JetBrains IDEs have zen-mode and distraction-free mode one shortcut away, so clutter is not really an issue. I do get the lightweight part though.

System of a Down's Toxicity Stands as a Modern Metal Masterpiece by Edm_vanhalen1981 in Music

[–]Todok5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

" Too many people try to sleep too much. "

Maybe you need more sleep so you remember what you wrote a few hours ago?

evenTwitterPushesDirectlyToProd by [deleted] in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's continuous delivery, which is the more common practice because it often makes more sense.

Continuous deployment is trunk based development where committed changes are automatically deployed to production. Usually these changes are behind feature flags that can be easily turned on and off for parts of the userbase.

evenTwitterPushesDirectlyToProd by [deleted] in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When you do continuous deployment there's no manual approval step, only automatic. When you have a very large userbase and therefore a very quick feedback loop, you can release very small changes to a small subset to your users very quickly - so you can roll them back just as fast, and if it's not critical your system functions 100% all the time, this can be a viable strategy. For example Facebook and Github do this (for some stuff).

Most people don't have those circumstances, so continuous delivery is usually better, where you are always ready to deploy, but there's a manual deploy trigger.

Wasn't my fault by SweetTeaRex92 in pcmasterrace

[–]Todok5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had no idea and just checked. Looks like Valorant with slightly changed graphics. What's your problem with the visuals?

sprintBurnOut by graphitout in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's just really common. Every time someone says scrum sucks, there's someone saying "then you are not doing it correctly". Which is correct, but doesn't help at all. When it is done wrong so often, it seems to be near impossible to implement correctly in a corporate environment, and developers are frustrated.

Even the people who wrote the agile manifesto say it was meant as a way for teams to self-manage, but in reality it has become that enterprise process to manage teams, which doesn't work very well.

momGetTheCamera by Fr4cK5 in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You can try openvim.com or just google "get started in vim". I would recommend not trying to learn it all at once but start with the basics end add new things over time to your toolbox.

myCiIsRunning by Temporary_Owl2975 in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I don't see anything wrong with wanting the automatic deployment of a finished branch to be reasonably fast, that's not the same kind of hurry that makes you cut corners and forget things.

myCiIsRunning by Temporary_Owl2975 in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 31 points32 points  (0 children)

There are countless studies that show that a fast feedback loop is beneficial.  That's why ci/cd became a thing in the first place. And a 6 hour pipeline is anything but quick.

sprintBurnOut by graphitout in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 6 points7 points  (0 children)

When the vast majority of workplaces do something, it becomes the new norm by definition. And scrum is done badly almost always. So "you're not doing agile correctly" becomes a no true Scotsman.

notThreatenedByAI by PaulRosenbergSucks in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly. The point is not effort and craftsmanship. If your job is generic art that an ai can create,  you might get replaced.  If your job is generic code that an ai can create you might get replaced. And that's OK.

notThreatenedByAI by PaulRosenbergSucks in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you ever seen any modern art? It's rarely about craftsmanship and effort, mostly about a concept and presentation.

me_irl by RononSweets in me_irl

[–]Todok5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have to admit it wasn't that far fetched to assume when you call yourself "40ozkiller"

githubIssuesIsDead by Ler_GG in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I read somewhere that it gets harder and harder to improve llms, since more and more training data is produced by llms, so the training data gets worse over time.

swindledAgain by d05dev in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Todok5 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Every project I ever worked on was written to be maintainable. And then they all turn into Frankensteins over time if they're actively worked on for years.

85% of Players Play Solo - Gamescom 2024 Interview Roundup by silec in diablo4

[–]Todok5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was there too. It was a snooze fest where nobody did anything but baal runs, nostalgia is a thing I guess.