nigel

joined 1 year ago
[–] nigel@piefed.social 5 points 1 week ago

Wouldn't it be wonderful if, on the heals of everyone copying our teen social media laws, Australia we're to introduce a mandatory per token royalty for copyright holder not proved to be excluded from the training data, and everyone in the world were to follow suit.

We've got to assume anything ever written, photographed, spoken, or recorded has been scraped, so the burden of proof needs to be to prove it wasn't used or derived from.

Otherwise all copyright is dead. Why can an AI company steal work, but someone else not?

If Men at Work can be sued for taking a riff from a kids song, then surely

[–] nigel@piefed.social 1 points 2 weeks ago

This is almost the perfect task for them. I think if them as pattern matches. They have patterns for libraries in their training, and you gave it a technical spec, and it pattern matched it across to a library.

On top of that, you can verify it and reuse it. But regenerating it every time wouldn't be a good use both for the cost, and the risk of subtle issues that don't get noticed. Same argument as for any library.

Probably because I've been doing this so long, I often find it easier and more precise to describe things in code or pseudo code than common English, which often aides my use of LLMs.

On another note, I'm curious what you're making. My "when I get time" project is to use an old STM32 drone flight controller to do some basic robotics, which will only be possible because I think the LLM will pattern match me out of trouble getting an embedded C program compiling after 20 years out of that game.

[–] nigel@piefed.social 29 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

If you just throw every task at it, I can completely imagine that it'll cost you more than any gain in efficiency. To some degree I think this is true of some coding tasks (not all, most are pretty efficient pattern matches, and that's what it does well).

But using LLMs to build tools and pipelines that stand alone (no AU built into it) and enable human productivity seems like a far higher leverage use.

The programming version is building the libraries and abstractions that are robust and well tested, so that regular developers can quickly build and refine the features.

Or building the reporting dashboard. Or whatever.

The cost is only going to go up, and the companies that lock in some non-AI process improvements before the hike will likely be smiling

 

The law is on your side, policy professional Kat George writes. It’s worth making spam and privacy complaints

Of course I'm not sure how effective enforcement is.

The place to report it to is ACMA

[–] nigel@piefed.social 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

It's no surprise that those with money who are being impacted are making as much noise as possible. It really irked me when there was all that startup meme rubbish, mainly because of how misleading and disingenuous it was.

But, I think there is room for improvement. I take the view that two of the main problems Australia has are:

  1. lack of personal financial security because people don't live in their own homes, part of which is the cost of living issues, homelessness, and just general fear which leads to a lot of the right wing opportunism.

  2. Poor business environment, caused by high operating costs (see point 1 - it's the same cause) and poor funding environment. This in turn leads to a lack of sovereign capabilities, meaning we buy foreign services riddled with surveillance (see electric cars, online services, government services contracts, etc).

What we need is housing not to be used for speculation, and high investor returns, and have it used for providing security and shelter to people.

We need that money to now be put into Australian businesses. Specifically new and small businesses, but really, any business that actually does things in the world, employs Australians, and adds to our national capability.

Make a carve out for those businesses (not just startups) so the tax sector incentives building Australia's capabilities, not rent seeking, not speculation, not investing in foreign assets.

[–] nigel@piefed.social 4 points 1 month ago

Do you see this being challenged anywhere? I'm only on piefed, and it all seems pretty sane here. And IRL the groups I move in get it. But there are plenty of others who could undo it all.

I almost feel like putting up posters around the neighborhood or something.

[–] nigel@piefed.social 1 points 1 month ago

Australian made 3D filament. I've not tried yet, but I'll be soon.

https://3dfm.au/

 

Join Australian Made Week 18-24 May 2026 with Andy Lee. Shop local products, support Aussie makers, and look for the iconic green and gold kangaroo logo.

Anyone got any Australian made products (with or without the triangle branding) that they want to give a shout out to?

[–] nigel@piefed.social 5 points 2 months ago

Yeah, I think something like this is good, and was a mainstay in the early 2000's personal web pages.

Another approach I like (but also dislike because of a bug preventing my site being indexed) is https://aboutideasnow.com/

[–] nigel@piefed.social 9 points 3 months ago (2 children)

I almost feel the idea of being "emasculated" is a made up mislabeling of a feeling born of something else that's going on in the person's life.

I'm about as a heteronormative male as you'll find, but I can't say (in my adult life) I've ever felt negativity about the role I play in the house, family, etc, and I do a lot of the child raising, house work, etc.

The negative feelings I get are around not being "useful", or appreciated, or given the space to do the things I do to recharge.

To me, the whole point of having kids is to raise them, teach them, hang out with them, help them, enjoy their company, etc. if you just want to go to work to provide for them, I'm not entirely sure having kids was such a good idea. Kids need your love and attention, and they are only here because you brought them here.

Of course, I know some people have no choice, and that is sad. And sometimes you think you want one thing, and it doesn't feel right when you get there. But I'd hope neither of those things should get tied up in gender roles.

Maybe we just need some more openness about these things so we get some good role models, and reassurance we're doing the right thing?

Parenting is the hardest thing I've ever done, and it's very different person to person, family to family, and a far stretch from the fantasy that's shown on TV. Made harder by the way we've structured our societies.

[–] nigel@piefed.social 3 points 3 months ago (2 children)

It definitely is from the perspective of energy, but I think these mobile surveillance devices are their own national security threat. Admittedly, this applies to all modern cars, but EVs probably get away with more -sneaky- smart features that have unverifiable data handling.
There'd need to be some very hard core vetting and attestation to be even remotely trustable.

[–] nigel@piefed.social 4 points 3 months ago

I've had that same silent Snap install issue, except for Docker CE. Anytime my dev containers die I know where to look.

[–] nigel@piefed.social 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Thank you for this. I'm actually trying a Rust-Oleum primer for this, so I'll check out their varnish too. And I'll get setup PPE wise.

Regarding the print, this one is a pirate chest to be used as a money box for my son. Other than the hinge there are no really moving parts, but I expect it'll get banged around a bit, hence thinking I need the clear coat at all.

[–] nigel@piefed.social 1 points 5 months ago

Thanks, I'll give that a go.

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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by nigel@piefed.social to c/3dprinting@lemmy.world
 

I'm about to paint a PLA 3D print for the first time, and while there is some advice on what primer to use (an automotive etching plastic primer seems to be it), I've not see anything but hand wavy "add a layer of clear coat" for sealing.

Does anyone have any advice on a matte finish clear coat product that works well, as much so I know I have the right class/type of product?

Also, is there much difference between the products from hobby shops vs hardware stores? I can imagine the hobby ones are at a consistency for painting fine details, but it may also all be the same thing.

Thanks

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