[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 1 points 7 hours ago

You have to make somebody suffer first.

On our side or theirs?

[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 1 points 7 hours ago

Agreed. I'm either the youngest Millennial or Oldest Gen-Z at 29 nearly 30. Gen-Z hasn't reached the previous enlistment age of 35, so it's entirely targeted at millennials. That said, it might be caused by Gen-Z's unwillingness to enlist, so sorry our government reacted that way.

[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 2 points 7 hours ago

I can translate 'merican to English.

[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 1 points 16 hours ago

I wanted to add this video to the conversation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4be7cNX88p4

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[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 1 points 17 hours ago

To be fair, I'm not convinced these people think long term. They might well have just made a place to "store" people while they wait to legally deport them. Not that it actually makes a difference given the horrific conditions they're placing people in, but as always with MAGA it's difficult to distinguish malice and stupidity.

[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 22 points 17 hours ago

Can we ban fascists, theists, and other right wing boot-lickers from the US? We seem to have an infestation.

[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 3 points 1 day ago

You should post this on biophysics too.

[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 3 points 2 days ago

Can you imagine what kinda of tech a future Voyager series craft will run on? I get that space is really really big, but I think it'd be pretty neat to have and Interstellar Voyager just over to Alpha Centauri and back. Like we can barely even confirm there are planets in other systems, and we certainly don't have a clue how common life is or isn't in the universe. Wouldn't it be worth, you know, taking a peek at a few local systems, just to check out the neighborhood? Right now, we could have a stone age civilization in the back yard and not even know it.

[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 3 points 2 days ago

Rich people can be fools, and a fool and his money are soon parted. That's why much of the economy is just everyone trying to scam everyone else.

[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 6 points 2 days ago

There really need to be safeguards implemented to prevent actions like this from just being conducted on the turn of a dime without any awareness of others, discussion, etc. beforehand.

These systems and safeguards exist, but they remain inactive due to political capture and entrenchment. You can make all the laws you like, but they mean nothing when oligarch rule prevents enforcement or encourages inconsistent enforcement.

This is what I'm talking about when I say we're not close enough to qualifying as a democracy for me to approve of our interference in foreign affairs. The people do not rule in the United States. We're not a democratic republic, we're an electoral oligarchy.

Worse, we seem to be choosing this. States choose how their elections work. We could switch to a ranked voting system with a lottery option without the federal government being able to do anything about it. Heck, a lot of individual cities could do it, but people aren't engaged enough to overcome local entrenched powers much less state and federal ones.

[-] tristynalxander@mander.xyz 38 points 3 days ago

You know how Americans were making fun of Russia's invasion of the Ukraine because it revealed that Russia had a super out-dated and under-maintained military? Yeah, about that... Turns out, we're not so different after all. Not that I think we should be investing in the military, frankly we're not close enough to qualifying as a democracy for me to approve of anything beyond non-interventionism.

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We all know there's a lot of hype and skepticism around AI, and over the last year or so I've been hearing a lot about "Agentic" AI. I've struggled to get a real grasp on what that means without working examples; however, I've began to see hints of something. Videos mocking coders who are scrolling their phones while waiting for the AI to complete a task. Peers claiming Claude but not GPT can do complex reasoning and planning. Not much, but enough for me to stop ignoring the term as purely buzz word.

Agentic AI is defined as "an autonomous systems that act independently to achieve complex, multi-step goals without continuous human oversight." This seems fanciful, but my basic understanding is that these Agentic systems are do the large scale reasoning then use other apps to achieve smaller sub-goals. Essentially these systems allow for pipelines to be set up as verbal lists of tasks then they work their way through the tasks with some perhaps limited problem solving. A crucial aspect of this seems to be that if you give the bot more tools it can do more and handle more failures. Sometimes more tools means a text book or document on your work to help it reason and plan. Sometimes more tools means writing a script for it to use in future analyses.

Now, while these sound mildly interesting, they're essentially useless if they're locked behind a pay wall. I'm not paying some company to think poorly for me. Someone else's tools are not an extension of my skills or personal power since I'd be neither able nor willing to build on them. However, the notion of Local Agentic AI changes this. If it's on my computer even if I don't fully understand what it's doing, I can build on it. I can control it and treat it as an extension of myself -- as humans do with all tools.

I'm a modest coder, and even the basic AI has expanded my abilities there just by helping me find algorithms I wouldn't have known how to find before. I have ran Local LLMs, but I've not tried these Agentic LLMs. I worry I was unimpressed too quickly, and gave up on a potentially useful tool. If I can tell the local agent to make a rough version of a function that does XXXX, then I can get more done. If I can tell it to write a simple script that makes this table that I'd normally just do by hand, check the script, then link that scipt to a command for the task I wouldn't normally trust the AI with then the AI can do a larger chunk of my work. The more scripts I make, the more the AI can do. The more scripts I download from open source communities, the more the AI can do. I don't have to trust the AI if all it's doing is moving information around and triggering scripts. I just have to check the scripts. If we start adding in robotics... yeah, I can see the hype.

Of-course, the counter argument is that we've had IFTTT triggers and pipelines for decades. So maybe this isn't fundamentally new, but is it still an impetus to download more tools and build more pipelines? Will I fall behind if I don't figure out how to use this efficiently and effectively (FOMO)? Does anyone here have experience with Agentic LLMs (especially local)? Also, what's the best Lemmy community for learning more about this sort of thing and maybe also hooking it up to basic robots?

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Head cannon: Someone at the PDB saw the biomineralization post get downvoted and wanted round two.

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"Revival" - Zach Bryan (www.youtube.com)
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I seem to be having connection issues with Mander (timed out today), and it seems like it was a smidge slow the last few days. Just wanted to see if it was a me issue and/or if it was anything to worry about?

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Homo-Economicus (thelemmy.club)
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This one is a bit more on the edge of biophysics, but it is still a Clockwork video.

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tristynalxander

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