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YellowJersey

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Posts posted by YellowJersey

  1. 1 hour ago, Caroline said:

    Volcanoes, but they're not pieces of art, as far as I know. Could it be natural art?

     

    Classical ballet dance, that's art I know. Uh... not that much into paintings tbh, fight with cudgels by Goya is nice I suppose.

    Ah yes, the classic sisyphian task of trying to define, "art." The problem with trying to define it is that you always will either end up including something you didn't mean to include or exclude something you meant to include. This is a topic my never-shuts-the-fuck-up brain has pondered many times. The closest thing to a definition I can come up with is: anything done by a person. 

     That may seem odd, but hear me out. Some art is created accidentally, so you can't define it as something you put work into. Some art is disgusting and horrifying, so it isn't something that's beautiful. And so on and so forth. Art is in the eye of the beholder; it is utterly subjective. The question is not "is this art?" but rather "is this art to me?" Alternatively, the question is not "is this art" but is this good art to me?" Two people can look at the same thing (and it could be literally anything) and one can call it art and the other won't and both opinions are valid.


    But OP is talking about "beauty," which is not necessarily "art." The main thing I see beauty in is nature. It's a harsh, unforgiving beauty that wants you dead, but beautiful nonetheless... much like my ex-girlfriend.

  2. 7 hours ago, ObsoleteTech said:

    I like Windows 10 just because it is very streamlined and has a "no nonsense" design. 

    I liked Vista because it was the first modern OS.

    I wouldn't say Windows 10 is "no nonsense." I find it full of nonsense, though that could just be because my neurons to are too old and clogged with tumours to keep up.

     

  3. 6 hours ago, OhYou_ said:

    I see nothing wrong with this. 
    it isnt YOUR car anyway, it's property of whatever bank holds the title. 
    Even if you have a paper title in at least the US, you still dont own the car. The government does, and they give you a title that says you can use it. 

     

    Actually, it is your car. If you purchased the car, even with loaned funds, you are still the owner (ie, hold title). The creditor has the car as security, meaning they have the right to seize and sell it if the debtor defaults on the loan. In land law, we call this an, "encumbrance."

    I, for one, hate the future... and the present... and the past wasn't so great either. Maybe people just suck?

  4. 36 minutes ago, Radium_Angel said:

    So today I discovered that the parent manufacturer of "Autobianchi" still exists in the form of "Bianchi" and makes very nice (though high-end, which is standard for an Italian manufacturer) bikes. Their basic model is around 1,000$ and goes up from there. Shame where I live is vehemently bike-hostile. 

    None of the bike shops here have anything under $1500.

     I'm thinking of getting a DaVinci for my next bike as it is (last time I checked) the only independent Canadian bicycle maker left.

  5. 14 hours ago, Arika S said:

    well ignoring the prompt part i train my own models, create hypernetworks and embeddings. all in all i would say i've spent over 100 hours fine tuning my models to get them how i want them to be. is that not sufficient effort?

     

      Reveal hidden contents

    i don't actually super care about copyrighting AI art, i'm mainly playing devil's advocate.

     

    Fair point. There's also the fact that most of the people creating/interpreting these laws (politicians and judges) are so old that they probably don't understand the technology; not exactly an uncommon problem.

    Edit: @Arika S  TBH, the work you describe sounds like it would fall more under patents than copyright. So perhaps the system you create to generate the artwork could be subject to IP protection via patents, but the actual artwork itself would not, at least under current copyright law.

  6. 34 minutes ago, Chiyawa said:

    Senior System Engineer in IT Department of Private company, Malaysia, salary is about USD830 (as of 24th February 2023 exchange rate) per month gross income, no stock, bonus depends (usually 1 month split into 12 months pay).

    How far does $830 USD a month go in Malaysia?

  7. 17 hours ago, porina said:

    The law is what the law is.

    Not necessarily. If that were true, the corpos wouldn't be spending billions every year to lobby politicians to create, change, or scrap laws to their benefit. The law is constantly changing and until there's legislation (preferably with the blessing of the US supreme court) that clearly and unambiguously states whether AI works can be subject to copyright protection there is still a haze of uncertainty surrounding the subject. The current state of the law and the interpretation thereof supports the notion that AI works cannot be subject to copyright protection.

     But the law is what the law is... until it isn't anymore. AI is a disruptive technology and like all disruptive technologies there are going to be those in favour of the status quo and those in favour of expanding the existing law to account for it.

  8. 45 minutes ago, williamcll said:

    What are you gonna do about it?

    Not much I can do, other than tell people what they're doing, not that I expect people to listen. To call people " dangerously stupid beyond all reason and sense" would be an understatement, so the corpos will get away with it; they always do. I feel like I'm cursed to stand by and watch humanity as it seems bound and determined to do the wrong thing. I kinda feel like Charlton Heston at the end of Soylent Green.

  9. 1 minute ago, crazzp said:

    Yes. It was stated back when the team page in linusmediagroup.com used to have a short writeup about each staff. 

    I knew it! I lived out there for a few years and as soon as I heard him pronounce, "hard," I knew he had to be from NS.

  10. Smacks of the 4080 all over again. But, that's what corporations seem to do. Pull some shit, face the backlash, reverse course, then quietly do the same shit again once people have gotten used to the idea. This has been happening with DLC, loot boxes, always online, deluxe editions, etc with gaming for years. You couldn't make the jump from "Here's a complete game for one price" to "here's a fraction of an unfinished game that you'll have to pay extra to get the rest of" in one go. You go slowly. I see it all the time.

     So I imagine nvidia will keep pulling this shit and each time the backlash will be a little bit less until it's been normalised and no one raises a fuss anymore.

    howmanytimes.png

  11. Yeah, I know what you mean. There are a lot of people posting with everything but the answer to the question you actually asked.
     

     As for your question, I think your approach is fairly reasonable, so I'd say go for it.

     One bit of advice I might give is potentially leave yourself some upgrade room so that you could maybe do a drop-in CPU or GPU upgrade that gets you a few more years out of it, since performance that's top-of-the-line now will be fairly midrange after a few generations That's what I did with my current build. My RX 6600XT suits me fine for now, but I'll probably put something more powerful in it in a few years as right now I'm really GPU bottlenecked. So for me, I'm currently looking at 6-8 years with a GPU upgrade around the 3-4 mark. Ideally, something like an RX 6800 would pair nicely with my CPU, but I didn't want to spend the extra money. So I figured I'll go with the RX 6600XT now and then get something with RX 6800-ish performance in 3-4 years without having to pay the higher price the RX 6800 demanded at the time I built my machine, then flip the RX 6600 XT to help absorb  the cost. I dunno, maybe I'm over complicating things, since if I spend $400 CAD on a GPU now and then another $400 CAD on a GPU in 3-4 years I'll have spent roughly the same amount as I would have had I just put up the $800 CAD to get the RX 6800 from the get go. So maybe it makes sense to splurge now and get the higher end stuff and then not worry about it for 7ish years.

     I wouldn't say there's any right or wrong way of doing it so long as your computer does what you want it to do without breaking the bank.

     There are lots of approaches you can take. One thing I grappled with for my last build was "Do I spend $1000 CAD and replace in five years or spend $2000 CAD and replace in 10 years?" Which would give me the better overall experience?

     

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