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It supports SSH. Since that's already in place, not much point in telnet, especially since NAO wants a password. And you prettu much have to go out of your way to install a telnet client these days.

That's a bit like connecting to IRC with netcat. It's easy to do, there's some kind of a retro hacker feel to it, but it's just not very practical.


Please stop jumping to conclusions about what diagnoses you think other people have.

That is not helping.


If a scammer, advertiser, or some other form of spammer can get a payout just 1% of the time, they will be willing to pay much more than the average person posting the average tweet.

If you make everything explicitly transactional, you will be left with only people trying to make a profit.


Penis enlargement spam is worth like $0.00000001 per message. Any number higher than that makes them lose money. The real problem is that nobody will post on a social media network where you have to pay to post.

You have the graph of everything you follow, the graph of what they like, second order graphs ...

There are so many heuristics and models you can use to filter.


If you don't like the conclusion, and you have an M1 or M2, see also https://alx.sh

Asahi's not perfect, but there's no restrictions. You bought the computer, after all.


Losing Thunderbolt is a bit too much, isn't it?

That and losing the ability to connect displays via USB-C is what’s keeping me from switching sadly. I love what the Asahi team is doing and I’m confident they’ll get it figured out. I wish I could do something to help, but this type of programming is far beyond my skill level so there’s not much I can do other than donate here and there.


I thought development for it was not in a good place?

That's not actually true - they're just working on upstreaming all of the code into the Linux kernel. Development is still going strong and M3 will be added soon after upstream work has been done, as it's expected to be trivial. M4 has the added challenge of another security layer, if I understood it correctly, but once that's solved, the rest of the architecture hasn't changed much. Watch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3OAiOfCcYFM&pp=ygULYXNhaGkgb... for details.

Looks pretty much stalled to me and with new versions coming every 1.x year it is unlikely to improve much.

Seems ok enough if you want to use a M1 mini as desktop or server.


Isn't the battery life shit? Maybe I'll try it

Userland DRMs do all sort of nonsense. Kernel anticheats wouldn't use the syscalls, they're already able to call the kernel routines they want directly.

Some guy doesn't show up with 10k residential IPs. This is deliberate and organized.

There are multiple israeli companies who will provide you with millions of residential proxies at a per gb usage rate and a very easy API. You can set this up in minutes with claude code.

These IP providers aren't cheap (cost per GB seems to be $4 but there are bulk discounts). The cost to grab all of LWN isn't prohibitively high for an individual but it's enough that most people probably wouldn't do it on a whim.

I suppose it only needs one person though. So it's probably a pretty plausible explanation.


LLMs just do be paperclipping

>What is this even for? Can't the US just focus on its existing problems

That is exactly what it's for. Starting new problems distracts from the old problems at home.

Always something new, never a moment to catch your breath and focus. Eventually, people will get tired, will stop paying as much attention, and hopefully forget about those older scandals.


On enwiki there is a big problem with bad LLM edits at the moment, so it's probably not the right time for this idea.

If anything, the community is discussing stronger guidelines against inappropriate LLM use.


Right. Try clicking those sources, half the time there is zero relation to the sentence. LLMs just output what they want to say, and then sprinkle in what the web search found on random sentences.

And not just bottom of the barrel LLMs. Ask Claude about Intel PIN tools, it will merrily tell you that it "Has thread-safe APIs but performance issues were noted with multi-threaded tools like ThreadSanitizer" and then cite the Disney Pins blog and the DropoutStore "2025 Pin of the Month Bundle" as an inline source.

Enamel pins. That's the level of trust you should have when LLMs pretend to be citing a source.


Did I say not to check the sources?

Or is that something you made up?


Ah so irrelevant / invalid sources are OK...

Only the first couple of time derivatives matter. The models are better than they were. Are you?

Well, I've reached the end of the book.

I like the systems mindset in the book. I think it's great to introspect and try to debug your own self.

Starting from pages 31-33, I found some interesting things. This book is the product of an internal fight. It's lucid in places, and those are the most interesting. In other chapters... my takeaway is that you can't always come out on top when fighting yourself, but you still have to try.

I was really rooting for the protagonist, there:

>Instead of treating the events like a delusion and having to fight them, I chose to work through them—choosing to believe that somehow I was shown something.

>By treating it as real, working through it as a real problem, I was admittedly taking a gamble. I could totally succumb to my delusions and get stuck in the worlds of the Yoshu and the Mechanicals.

>It would be easy. What I found instead was opportunity

The parts of the book I liked the most are those that break free from Yoshu. The rest breaks my heart.


I'm sorry to hear you were heartbroken.

I assure you I've seen people who are worse than me turn out much better than me and I hold hope that I'm on a good trajectory.


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