There’s Mono. I don’t know what portion of .NET compatibility issues that addresses in 2025.
Off-and-on trying out an account over at @[email protected] due to scraping bots bogging down lemmy.today to the point of near-unusability.
There’s Mono. I don’t know what portion of .NET compatibility issues that addresses in 2025.


Thanks for adding it!


Meta’s chief AI scientist and Turing Award winner Yann LeCun plans to leave the company to launch his own startup focused on a different type of AI called “world models,” the Financial Times reported.
World models are hypothetical AI systems that some AI engineers expect to develop an internal “understanding” of the physical world by learning from video and spatial data rather than text alone.
Sounds reasonable.
That being said, I am willing to believe that an LLM could be part of an AGI. It might well be an efficient way to incorporate a lot of knowledge about the world. Wikipedia helps provide me with a lot of knowledge, for example, though I don’t have a direct brain link to it. It’s just that I don’t expect an AGI to be an LLM.
EDIT: Also, IIRC from past reading, Meta has separate groups aimed at near-term commercial products (and I can very much believe that there might be plenty of room for LLMs here) and aimed advanced AI. It’s not clear to me from the article whether he just wants more focus on advanced AI or whether he disagrees with an LLM focus in their afvanced AI group.
I do think that if you’re a company building a lot of parallel compute capacity now, that to make a return on that, you need to take advantage of existing or quite near-future stuff, even if it’s not AGI. Doesn’t make sense to build a lot of compute capacity, then spend fifteen years banging on research before you have something to utilize that capacity.
https://datacentremagazine.com/news/why-is-meta-investing-600bn-in-ai-data-centres
Meta reveals US$600bn plan to build AI data centres, expand energy projects and fund local programmes through 2028
So Meta probably cannot only be doing AGI work.
uncensored
https://lemmyverse.net/communities?nsfw=true
reposts
If you’re browsing “All” instead of “Subscribed” — I recommend building a subscription list of interest — there’s a bot, @[email protected] that mirrors posts to Reddit to communities on lemmit.online. You can either block the bot or block the instance if you don’t want that.


There’s also istheservicedown.com, but it also appears to rely on CloudFlare.
There’s isitdownrightnow.com, which appears not to use CloudFlare.


You can monitor instance downtime at:


I mean, it’s easy to check whether a given instance is using CloudFlare.
$ host lemmy.world|head -n1
lemmy.world has address 104.26.9.209
$ whois 104.26.9.209|grep ^NetName
NetName: CLOUDFLARENET
$
You can browse anonymously on any instance that permits doing so, so if you just want to browse during an outage, you can do that anywhere.
IMHO, having an account on a second Threadiverse instance isn’t necessarily a terrible idea, not just because of CloudFlare outages, but because instances do have outages for various reasons. I have an account on olio.cafe (PieFed, not on CloudFlare) and on lemmy.today (Lemmy, not on CloudFlare) because I wanted to try out PieFed, and I have fallen back to that to post before if lemmy.today has issues.
That being said, I didn’t intentionally try to avoid CloudFlare. I mean, they’re used by a lot of major sites, and I don’t expect them to have a lot of downtime. I mean, every Threadiverse instance has had downtime for some reason or another. I’ve had Internet outages, as well as electricity outages. Not all that common or usually an extended thing, but they happen.
Took down Framework’s website, which I was using.


So, there are a couple of reasons to use CloudFlare, but I suspect that the reason that a lot of people are doing so is to deal with DDoSes, which are hard to deal with otherwise.
Like, my home instance, lemmy.today, doesn’t use CloudFlare, so it isn’t affected by a CloudFlare outage. But…it was also knocked offline for a few days about a month back by a DDoS.
A lot of major sites do depend on CloudFlare, so they probably aren’t going to have a horrendous amount of downtime — like, any issue that comes up is probably gonna have a lot of engineers banging on it pretty quickly.


!actuallyinfuriating
Ah, yeah, thanks, though the community name is incorrect (needs an underscore) and is missing the instance name.


Just keep in mind that the long run trend for storage prices is pretty strongly downwards; that’s a log-scale graph.


Are we okay with the “mildly infuriating” community becoming a “news that really upset me” community?
Note that Reddit’s /r/MildlyInfuriating spawned /r/ActuallyInfuriating for stuff that is more severe.
Searching on lemmyverse.net shows that we do have an /r/ActuallyInfuriating analog at [email protected].
Maybe the community mods might consider putting it in the sidebar? @[email protected], @[email protected], @[email protected]?
The cases of old ones are on eBay, as I mention in another comment.
And it looks like someone has made ATX mounting kits.
https://thelaserhive.com/product/mac-pro-atx-kit-with-psu-mount/
I admit I’m using my 1,1 as an extra seat in the office, but it’s form of use.
And I bought it back in 2006
Looks like non-functional 2006 Mac Pros are on eBay for $60. Cheaper than an office chair!


but Project Prometheus has already hired 100 employees, poaching several from firms like OpenAI, DeepMind and Meta, according to the Times.
I think that one problem with all this spending is that there are only so many people with relevant experience in the area. If wages are high enough, the market will send more over time, but that isn’t instantaneous.
Home-instance-agnostic link:


the Lunar Lake option is a high perf single core CPU
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_Lake
According to this, all Lunar Lake CPUs have 4 performance and 4 economy cores; none have a single core.
I mean, they did make a lot of money, but they also had an extremely high valuation.
https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/NVDA/nvidia/pe-ratio
Something like 20 is typical for a mature company. Tech companies have, in the past, often had higher ratios, but that’s based on their expectation to grow a lot rapidly, and expecting NVidia to dramatically grow from their current — already very high — valuation is asking a lot.
If NVidia were a small tech company that was doing well and clearly had a lot of market to expand into rapidly, that would be one thing.
I think that in general, the market has been pretty good to NVidia. Their share price is up 31.22% since the start of the year. 1,247% over the past five years.