potatopotato

joined 1 year ago

DCS flaming cliffs Su-27. This is a screenshot from a flight simulator in case anyone didn't know.

[–] potatopotato@sh.itjust.works 17 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Fuck HDMI. The committee makes doing custom hardware near impossible unless you're a mega corp

[–] potatopotato@sh.itjust.works 21 points 2 weeks ago

The lower layers all already at least moderately well encrypted, what they're doing here is trying to pull the unencrypted device ID necessary to establish a connection. It's not really what you're sending (though traffic frequency analysis may be included) and more about just figuring out where a particular phone is so they can physically track the user.

[–] potatopotato@sh.itjust.works 19 points 1 month ago

The one pictured is a more modern model, but the original L96 is, with 90s era machine tools, the one that's probably easier to make in a garage. All the stampings on the sten are substantially more difficult to create as a one-off, but the action on the L96 just needs a lathe and a broach or EDM, all the rest of it a series of very simple milled components and a composite stock that you could build a mold for out of fiberglass and Bondo.

[–] potatopotato@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 months ago

There might be a few layers to this one. Drones are becoming a central part of strategic production and the US doesn't really have many competitive companies manufacturing small ones at volume.

They need to force the domestic market to build up local expertise and manufacturing capacity in the event that small drones are the direction warfare ends up going more broadly.

The us defense apparatus is still on the fence about this given that their volume of use in Ukraine could be more of an aberration due to the respective industrial bases and static nature of the war. That said the numbers are insane enough that they warrant some action just in case.

[–] potatopotato@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

The unspoken part is that unless Gabe has a very strong plan involving some sort of employee co-op, when he retires or dies the company will likely get sold by the estate to private capital which is 100x worse than being a public company.

[–] potatopotato@sh.itjust.works 25 points 3 months ago

And she's right. Can we listen to her instead of the braindead celebs?

[–] potatopotato@sh.itjust.works 29 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (3 children)

This...isn't how the current paradigm of ai works at all. We've built glorified auto-complete bots, not something that can make a physical robot behave at a human level. Best case, they build something that can carry on a conversation long enough to excite a tech journalist and aimlessly meander like the Boston dynamic bots but without the pre-programmed tasking (assuming they don't cheat and add canned routines).

So that leaves one option: it's a moonshot project to convince the tech illiterate public to take them and their stock price to the moon long enough for a few people to make an obscene amount of money.

[–] potatopotato@sh.itjust.works 7 points 3 months ago (4 children)

Please god I hope so. I don't see a path to anything significantly more powerful than current models in this paradigm. ANNs like these have existed forever and have always behaved the way current LLMs do, they just recently were able to make them run somewhat more efficiently with bigger context windows and training sets which birthed GPT3 which was further minimally tweaked into 3.5 and 4 among others. This feels a whole lot like a local maxima where anything better will have to go back down through another several development cycles before it surpasses the current gen.

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