Too many to count, but I learned this lesson. I just struggled with nuance in gramer as a fucking 1st grader.
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BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•There's no chance he signs it but I still hope he doesEnglish85·3 days agoWTF is this dog shit title? It’s not the title of the article and gives literally no value to the content.
I have a vivid memory when I was in first grade and asked my teacher if I can use the bathroom, and I got his bullshit response. I was a first grader, so I sat my ass back down and held it. Fuck this horse shit mentality.
Fine, if you’re an adult, it’s juvenile, but at that point people should understand the difference. Doesn’t mean I won’t lambast a MFer for being a pedantic prick though.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•public services of an entire german state switches from Microsoft to open source (Libreoffice, Linux, Nextcloud, Thunderbird)English2·3 days agoEw. I didn’t think of it that way, but your right. Hopefully the seniors are tech smart and not just MS smart.
Low level programming skills in a low level language, C being the most popular. With memory safe languages like rust gaining more traction, C may eventually be a thing of the past, but imo, learning C will make you a better programmer in all languages because if you know C you know how everything works. Other than that, it could be something that uses a specific language like Arduino. Embedded programming is generally programming that interfaces with hardware directly, so really it’s just knowing how to program, and then doing it in a specific area.
There’s a good book called Code: the hidden language of computer hardware that goes in depth of computer architecture and build up from there.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•public services of an entire german state switches from Microsoft to open source (Libreoffice, Linux, Nextcloud, Thunderbird)English8·4 days agoI hope so. I would have loved the opportunity to be in that position, and if I was still working as a sys admin, I’d still live it.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•public services of an entire german state switches from Microsoft to open source (Libreoffice, Linux, Nextcloud, Thunderbird)English44·4 days agoAssuming the IT staff isn’t comprised of a bunch of junior techs that only know the Microsoft suite and not the actual inner workings of how email and Linux works.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•A fake Facebook event disguised as a math problem has been one of its top posts for 6 monthsEnglish81·6 days agoAs a millennial, I’m starting to relate more and more. The world changes very quickly, and all of the sudden things you knew as fact have different meanings, and there are new words and stuff. It’s not all bad change, but it’s change, and odds are, I’m finding out something changed the hard way.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Google is going ‘all in’ on AI. It’s part of a troubling trend in big techEnglish2·7 days agoI think the biggest problem, is anytime you try and create a universal, low/no-code platform that anyone can use, it results in a poorly optimized, sandboxed, half cocked product. Sure, you can do anything with the platform, but half the time it’s like shoving a square peg in a round hole. I have had to write bad code and processes because that is the only way to get somethings done in the platform.
Also, if I go out and custom create an app, like say I create a fully loaded app for HR, and it’s similar to a product they sell, they will charge you for that product.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Google is going ‘all in’ on AI. It’s part of a troubling trend in big techEnglish2·7 days agoNeed? None. There are certainly areas that “ai” tools excel at but what I saw was a company literally forcing it into every aspect of the system. Every single booth at the conference, regardless of the topic, made a point to talk about agentic AI. It was my first time there and I left feeling like I got screwed, because I missed out on quality content that I could use in lieu of AI that I’ll never use.
If I were I prospective customer, I’d be looking at other solutions for sure.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Google is going ‘all in’ on AI. It’s part of a troubling trend in big techEnglish36·7 days agoI work with ServiceNow for my job and a couple weeks back was the big knowledge 2025 conference in Vegas. The CEO came out for the opening keynote and opened with some like, “ah yea, doesn’t it feel good to be an AI company?” and I didn’t here a single cheer from the crowd, just polite applause. They have gone all in on AI, have made it completely unaffordable, and have just been shoehorning it into everything. I hope every one of these companies that that goes big on AI crashes and fails. They’ve already cut the employees, so the only people affected are the ones making the cash, so fuck em.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Nvidia debuts a native GeForce NOW app for Steam Deck, supporting games in up to 4K at 60 FPS; in testing, the app extended Steam Deck battery life by up to 50%English11·8 days agoI was down in Texas for Dreamhack last week at the LAN. On the drive back, my car passenger was able to take my shitty laptop, connect to his phone hotspot, and he used the GeForce streaming service to play a steam game for a good 4+ hours.
Fuck Nvidia, but the service is okay in a pinch. I will never use it, but I see the appeal for people that don’t have gaming computers.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•xAI to pay Telegram $300M to integrate Grok into the chat app | TechCrunchEnglish7·8 days agoA person may not “have something to hide”, but that doesn’t mean they want a digital profile built about them to target for any of a billion reasons. Perhaps someone says something anti-MAGA, and thanks to AI someone gets a list of all that person’s accounts, hobbies, schedules, etc, and that information is then used to target that person.
Everyone in the world has something to hide, especially when AI can aggregate all of those somethings into a human digestible format.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Developer Builds Tool That Scrapes YouTube Comments, Uses AI to Predict Where Users LiveEnglish35·8 days agoYea. Dude is a fucking red coat. Absolutely PoS human.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•New Cars Don't All Come With Dipsticks Anymore, Here's WhyEnglish16·14 days agoMy wife has a 2015 Jeep Grand Cherokee. The AC condenser got a leak in it and it was going to be over $2k to fix in a shop. I took it on myself to save money. The condenser mounts to the back of the radiator, so I had to get at it by removing the bumper and everything between that and the engine block. Also attached part of the radiator is the transmission cooler. Unhooking everything meant that I was going to lose some fluids, but that was fine, I’d top them off and pay to have refrigerant added.
After I reassembled, I when to check the trans fluid levels, and couldn’t find the dipstick. It turns out, like you said, if you crawl under the vehicle, on the back of the trans pan is a bolt you can remove, and if you have a special dipstick that you buy separately for this sole purpose, you can stick it in there to check levels. There’s not way to add fluid without pumping it in there, but at least you can see how much you have.
Since I only lost less than a quart, I took it into the shop, explained what’s up, and asked for it to be topped off. The shop guy calls back later, and told me that to do the trans fluid, the filter is only sold with a whole new pan, and because Chrysler, the fluid cost like $40 a qt, and I needed like 15 to fill it. It still cost more than $800 to just do that, then more than $500 for the refrigerant. I still saved about $500-1k in parts and labor for what I did, but, the lack of dipstick and fill tube was an extremely inconvenient and expensive thing.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Verizon is charging extra to limit spam calls and texts: Scam calls and texts have surged, yet Verizon continues to charge customers extra for essential protections.English1·17 days agoWhen I got my new Pixel a month+ ago, I kept my old one to test 3rd party OS’s on my not daily driver. I haven’t yet tried, but I do have plans to try and switch, it just has to be able to do all of my things.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Verizon is charging extra to limit spam calls and texts: Scam calls and texts have surged, yet Verizon continues to charge customers extra for essential protections.English1·17 days agoThat’s true, but I think that’s true, even if not publicly known, about every smart phone.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Verizon is charging extra to limit spam calls and texts: Scam calls and texts have surged, yet Verizon continues to charge customers extra for essential protections.English2·17 days agoI hate to shill for Google, but the the pixel phone has call screening, and I rarely get spam to surface. It is one of the few actually great things that Google does.
BassTurd@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Google's AI now listens to your English language phone conversationsEnglish1·20 days agoI had to go into Protection and Safety within the Messages setting, and then Spam Protection was in there.
I think when it comes to the code that controls the navigation, control, detonation, etc, or our munitions, that perhaps that should not be publicly reviewable. Not because of hacking concerns, but it does give info to a potential enemy that could render them less effective.