- 5 Posts
- 69 Comments
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
pics@lemmy.world•This is Jehan Pages, the top developer behind GIMP, a free open source photo editor. Adobe executives hate Jehan. Because of his hard work, Adobe lost millions of dollars
578·12 days agoMan ain’t nobody lost money because of Gimp. Flawed argument aside, at least Blender could be in for a shout
ml is run by the devs of Lemmy so unfortunately that’s not realistic, you could be missing on a ton of information if you want to subscribe to Lemmy development or information related communities
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Speed test pits six generations of Windows against each other — Windows 11 placed dead last across most benchmarks, 8.1 emerges as unexpected winner in this unscientific comparisonEnglish
10·20 days agoThe underlying work on Win 8 was really good… Just not the front end
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Firefox Will Ship with an "AI Kill Switch" to Completely Disable all AI Features - 9to5LinuxEnglish
3·1 month agoOh fuck, yeah, I somehow forgot to put personal data ingestion as one of major negatives lmao. Yeah those LLMs are gonna know literally everything about you.
Edited my previous comment to reflect that
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Firefox Will Ship with an "AI Kill Switch" to Completely Disable all AI Features - 9to5LinuxEnglish
232·1 month agoSerious and long answer because you won’t find people actually providing you one here: in theory (heavy emphasis on theory), an “agentic” world would be fucking awesome.
Agents
You know how you have been programmed that when you search something on Google, you need to be to terse and to the point? The worst you get is “Best Indian restaurants near me” but you don’t normally do more than that.
Well in reality most of the times when people just love rambling on or providing lots of additional info, so the natural language processing capabilities of LLMs are tremendously helpful. Like, what you actually want to do is “Best Indian restaurants near me but make sure it’s not more than 5km away and my chicken tikka plate doesn’t cost more than ₹400 and also I hope it’s near a train station so I can catch a train that will take me home by 11pm latest”. But you don’t put all that on fucking Google do ya?
“Agents” will use a protocol that works in completely in the background called Model Context Protocol (MCP). The idea is that you put all that information into an LLM (ideally speak into it because no one actually wants to type all that) and each service will have it’s own MCP server. Google will have one so it will narrow down your filters to one being near a train station and less than 5km away. Your restaurant will have one, your agent can automatically make a reservation for you. Your train operator will have one, so your agent can automatically book the train ticket for you. You don’t need to pull up each app individually, it will all happen in the background. And at most you will get a “confirm all the above?”. How cool is that?
Uses
So, what companies now want to do is leverage agents for everything, making use of NLP capabilities.
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Let’s say you maintain a spreadsheet or database of how your vehicle is maintained, what repairs you have done. Why do you want to manually type in each time? Just tell your agentic OS “hey add that I spent ₹5000 in replacing this car part at this location in my vehicle maintenance spreadsheet. Oh and also I filled in petrol on the way.” and boom your OS does it for you.
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You are want to add a new user to a Linux server. You just say “create a new user alice, add them to these local groups, and provide them sudo access as well. But also make sure they are forced to change their password every year”.
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You have accounts across 3 banks and you want to create a visualisation of your spendings? Maybe you want to also flag some anamolous spends? You tell your browser to fetch all that information and it will do that for you.
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You can tell your browser to track an item’s price and instantly buy it if it goes below a certain amount.
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Flying somewhere? Tell your browser to compare airline policies, maybe checkout their history of delays and cancellations
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And because it’s natural language, LLMs can easily ask to clarify something
Obvious downsides
So all this sounds awesome, but let’s get to why this will only work in theory unless there is a huge shift:
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(Edit thanks to /u/korazail@lemmy.myserv.one, can’t believe I forgot this) LLMs have the capacity to know literally EVERYTHING about you!!! It’s a big privacy nightmare waiting to happen if companies aren’t careful, and not to mention Governments and other organisations trying to get data for surveillance!!!
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LLMs still suck in terms of accuracy. Yes they are decent but still not at the level where it’s needed and still make stupid errors. Also currently they are not making as generational upgrades as before
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LLMs are not easy to self host. They are one of the genuine use cases of making use of cloud compute.
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This means they are going to be expensiveeeeee and also energy hogs
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Commercial companies actually want you to land on their servers. Yes its good that your OS will do it for you and they get a page hit but as of now that is absolutely not what companies want. How are they going to serve you ads and steal all your data from your cookies?
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People will lose their technical touch if bots are doing all the work for them
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People do NOT want to trust a bot with a credit card. Amazon already tried that with Alexa/Echo devices and people just don’t like saying “buy me a roll of toilet paper” because most people want to see what the fuck is actually being bought. And even if they are okay, because LLMs are still imperfect, they are going to make mistakes now and then.
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There are going to be clashes of what the OS will do agentically vs what a browser will do. Agentic browser makers like Perplexity want you in their ecosystem but if Windows ships with that functionality out of the box then how much reason is there really to get Perplexity? I expect to see anti-competitive lawsuits around this in the future.
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This also means there is going to be a huge lock-in to Big Tech companies.
My personal view is that you will see some of these features 5-10 years down the line but it’s not going to materialise in the way some of these AI companies are dreaming it will.
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baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•RAM is so expensive that stores are selling it at market pricesEnglish
401·2 months agoFfs I keep delaying a rebuild of my PC because of crap like this every year thinking the bubble will burst, but something new comes up. I don’t use it for gaming nowadays, just regular browsing since I have a console but even Sony is bringing their stuff to PC so I was looking to upgrade. Now it’s been pushed even more.
Hang in there my 8 GB ram PC with GTX 960…
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Rybbit - Open source Google Analytics replacementEnglish
5·2 months agoThis looks… Great? Nice work
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft's role in world’s first AI-driven genocide, in Gaza, exposedEnglish
3·3 months agoDoes anyone have a link to the original report mentioned in the article?
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Apple is reportedly getting ready to introduce ads to its Maps appEnglish
94·3 months agoIt’s amazing how Americans love poking their nose into everyone else’s affairs yet can be so oblivious. For some people a phone is literally the only device they have, they can’t do anything else.
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Its a solar powered phone webserver! Made from a pixel 6a, solar panel, and hopes/dreams.English
3·3 months agoVery cool, but would suggest replacing the 6A some time – read up on its battery problems
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft wants you to talk to your PC and let AI control itEnglish
2·3 months agoYou aren’t its customer, businesses are.
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Firefox is adding profiles to separate your browsing sessionsEnglish
10·4 months agoThis should have been a feature 10 years ago
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL a french man ate bicycles, shopping carts, televisions, beds, and a Cessna 150 aircraft. It took him roughly 2 years, from 1978 to 1980, to eat the planeEnglish
20·4 months agoLotito holds the record for the “strangest diet” in the Guinness Book of Records. He was awarded a plaque, made of brass, by the publishers to commemorate his abilities. He ate his award.
ठेचा चिकन? Excellent taste my man
Black Ops level set in this was good
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft Issues Free Update Offer To Millions Of Windows Users (ads in windows update menu)English
28·5 months agoLol I remember getting this the first time I tried upgrading to Win 10, pretty much the first day it was released. I just wanted to escape Win 8 hell hole and then… Something happened.
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Linux Reaches 5% Desktop Market Share In USAEnglish
1·6 months agoYou can get the browser version. But as per OP StatCounter says this
Statcounter is a web analytics service. Our tracking code is installed on more than 1.5 million sites globally.
I am assuming these are some extra js files or external scripts that the website will try to load, it won’t be part of the native website itself. Adblocker will completely prevent those file or websites from loading in the first place.
My initial point might not be quite right though, in the sense of Linux might be higher by pure numbers but not by percentage. The sheer number of people using Windows, even if a small portion use adblocker could outnumber the Linux users.
baatliwala@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Linux Reaches 5% Desktop Market Share In USAEnglish
1·6 months agoAlso someone who uses Linux is more likely to use adblock and telemetry blocking features. The actual count is definitely slightly higher.




I’m not an AI hater but make literally one functioning AI product bro before you say that