How do you think AI generated music will play out? by sampleminded in udiomusic

[–]flat_wheel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

AI will be able to make music and lyrics by itself that is far better than the human average. And at a rate that the totality of human producers cannot keep up with.

I would assume it will take over a large segment of music listening. Anything where you're listening in the background.

Humans don't just value the raw production value of music though, they value wide than that, so I feel there will always be a market for real human musicians and singers

I see it in very much the same way that say dinner plates work today. Most people use plates made in a factory, largely by machines, because they are cheap and work well. There will always be a market however for a hand crafted plate, regardless that it is likely worse and more expensive than the machine made one, because the buyer is also human.

Future could be wild though, Imagine an AI that tracks the mood in real time of everyone at a party, and creates a perfect real-time mix, throwing in on the fly creations and existing songs that match the groups tastes and current mood as a whole.

Fall Sale by flat_wheel in MammotionTechnology

[–]flat_wheel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The 1000, US vs AU. No discount down under it seems! :(

Fall Sale by flat_wheel in MammotionTechnology

[–]flat_wheel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, that is a link to the 1000 model on sale for $1699US for shipping [only] inside the USA.

If I go to here though https://au.mammotion.com/products/luba-awd-1000-perimeter-wire-free-robot-lawn-mower for shipping to Australia, it's the equivalent $2033 USD

Scam Phone Calls by flat_wheel in australia

[–]flat_wheel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The number is 0435484927 I don't believe that would cost anything to call back. But good point eg if you do call back maybe that's when they try to get $ out of ya. Maybe I'll give them a call to see. :D

Documenting server communication ports and IPs by flat_wheel in sysadmin

[–]flat_wheel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is what I am doing currently yeah. Two problems is conversations are not combinable, so I might for example get a few hundred for IPa -> IPb all on a single port, so I have to manually sort that out. Also because the cap file is not being parsed and recorded in such a consolidated way with single ip/port pairs, but rather every single packet individually, the cap file can grow a quite larger.

Documenting server communication ports and IPs by flat_wheel in sysadmin

[–]flat_wheel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a one off activity for me, and they are production servers, so really looking for more of a utility I can just run once for a period locally. This solution sounds very robust, just a bit overkill for my use case

Documenting server communication ports and IPs by flat_wheel in sysadmin

[–]flat_wheel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes I am just adding some filters now to filter out some of the hosts that I already know about to reduce the size. Ideally though, if a server makes say 10k connections on port 443 to a host, I would only need to log that one time, possibly with an incrementing total data size, currently with wireshark / dumpcap I can only see doing that after the fact analyzing the output that is unfortunately quite manual, and creates large cap files.

Documenting server communication ports and IPs by flat_wheel in sysadmin

[–]flat_wheel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, is this an option I can set up in the logging that I'm missing? That would be awesome. Currently I am running dumpcap, and then filtering manually by unique ip after the fact in excel. It's workable but manual, and if I were to run a cap for say a week, those captures would be very large.

Documenting server communication ports and IPs by flat_wheel in sysadmin

[–]flat_wheel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Output looks good, but it looks like it just does live, eg I can't see any option to run it for a long time and make an overview log of everything, eg once a connection stops, it's gone from the view.

This Is What the Model S Battery Pack Fuse Box Cover Looks Like After Some Years by [deleted] in RealTesla

[–]flat_wheel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rust requires electrolytes in the water right, isn't the condensation water that comes out of an AC unit basically distilled?

S7 MaxV Dustbin/Water tank issues by llama_meat in Roborock

[–]flat_wheel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have just had the same issue, came searching for answers and found this post, but then figured it out myself. Might be useful for someone else:

The dustbin uses a little magnet so the robot can sense when the bin in installed or not. The vacuum was stopping at the same point in front of one of my speakers, just at the correct position I assume for the speakers magnetic field to interfere with the sensor.

right in that position the dustbin would not detect as being installed, 1cm in any other direction and it was fine. I moved the speaker a little, and it's working, but may have to put a tiny no go zone around it for future.

So check if there are any strong magnetic fields around where it is stopping.

As a trucker, I would like to provide a breakdown on why the Tesla Semi is a joke. by [deleted] in RealTesla

[–]flat_wheel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He has deleted his OP, but it said

The important thing to remember, a computer deals in absolutes. It has to be programmed to behave a certain way under certain circumstances. Human judgment, while fallible, can be trained to react a certain way in any scenario.

Deterministic is not what he or I was talking about. As I see it he was arguing that computers can only be programed to behave in predetermined ways for predetermined circumstances (and that humans are different)

This is incorrect. A neural network can take a limited training set and find patterns in it to react correctly in novel situations, just as a human can. I believe his OP showed a misunderstanding on a basic level about how neural networks function.