The_Mixer_Dude

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

I left lemmy a few weeks ago for this reason and I come back today to see what's up and it's exactly as you described. We aren't the only ones either

[–] [email protected] 20 points 1 year ago (2 children)
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I thought it was a goosebumps too and was upset it wasn't so I decided to have a chat bot name one for me

Title: "Goosebumps: The Skeletons of Scream Park"

Chapter 1: Chills Down the Spine It was a dark and stormy night as Sam and Emma approached Scream Park, the creepiest amusement park in town. They had heard rumors about the park being haunted, but they were thrill-seekers, and the promise of the world's scariest rollercoaster had lured them in. Little did they know that their lives were about to take a bone-chilling turn.

Chapter 2: Enter the Skeletons As they boarded the "Bone Rattler" rollercoaster, they felt an icy breeze that sent shivers down their spines. The rollercoaster roared to life, but there was something strange about the riders in the other cars – they were skeletons! Sam and Emma's screams mixed with the rattling bones as they plummeted down the tracks.

Chapter 3: The Haunting Begins After the ride, Sam and Emma tried to escape the park, but it was impossible. Everywhere they turned, they encountered more skeletons, and they couldn't find the exit. The park seemed to have a sinister, bone-chilling secret.

Chapter 4: Uncovering the Truth Desperate to uncover the truth, they discovered an old, dusty book in the park's library. It told a story about an ancient curse that had turned the park's visitors into skeletons who would never leave. Sam and Emma had to break the curse to escape the nightmare.

Chapter 5: The Race Against Time With time running out, they embarked on a treacherous journey through the park, facing terrifying challenges and solving riddles to gather the ingredients needed to break the curse. They realized the rollercoasters were the key, and they had to ride each one to find the cursed amulet that could free the trapped souls.

Chapter 6: Confronting the Curse In a climactic showdown, they found themselves face-to-face with the sinister skeleton that had cursed the park. They had to outsmart the curse and use the amulet's power to restore the lost souls.

Chapter 7: Breaking the Spell With a final burst of courage, Sam and Emma shattered the amulet, releasing the spirits of the trapped visitors and ending the curse. The skeletons slowly transformed into grateful, living people.

Chapter 8: Escape from Scream Park As the first rays of dawn broke, Sam and Emma hurried out of the park. They were relieved to finally leave Scream Park behind, but they couldn't forget the chilling adventure they'd had. The park was now closed for good.

Chapter 9: The Aftermath In the end, Sam and Emma realized that some thrills were better left unexplored. They left Scream Park with a newfound appreciation for the simpler joys in life.

Chapter 10: The Bone-Chilling Memory Though they had escaped the curse, the memory of the skeletons riding the rollercoasters haunted their dreams, reminding them of the spine-tingling adventure they'd faced at Scream Park.

The end... or is it?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

The way ads are displayed effects how effective they are which in turn effects how valuable they are. More people turning to adblockers reduces the effectiveness of the ads and devalues the advertising method as a whole, more adblockers being used, lower effectiveness. YouTube then has to resort to putting in effort to combat adblockers which itself costs even more, ads have to become more intrusive to retain their value so YouTube can maintain it's own servers and pay it's content creators and it becomes an endless cycle of "fuck you I want your service for free and you are trampling my rights for trying to profit off me using your product". In return all YouTube asks of you to obtain an ad-free video watching session for a month is $4 ($22/month split among 6 users)

[–] [email protected] -1 points 1 year ago

What data privacy?

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago

Seems more like an ESTO situation

[–] [email protected] 18 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Privacy theater*

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Future isn't ARM it's Risc-V. Apple just learned this and they are attempting to adapt.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

I tried looking for the Mars Rover that is using a compute module and couldn't find any that were using one which makes sense because it's not radiation hardened and they need to operate well outside of the temperature range that the modules actually tolerate. They seem to all be using a radiation hardened version of an IBM power PC 750 that is manufactured by a company name BAE. Ignoring that fact though the Mars Rover does not meet the same low latency processing requirements that this meme is referencing so we can move along further.

"Most Ukrainian drives use it too" while I can't quantify these numbers it does appear that the Ukrainian military uses orange pi's for their "kamikaze" drones which is good for that application as it's easy to source and doesn't require any heavy demand. As for everything else I was able to locate on the subject, it all appears to be typical DSP processors Analog Devices SHARC's and the TI equivalents such as the TMS320F28335 As for the Iris-T I could not find any information one way or another there. It's indicating high velocity and use of radar so I can't imagine they are using anything other than a DSP processor as you are going to need to shave every single microsecond of response time to maximize your effectiveness.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)

One of the important skills you learn as a science fiction fan is the ability to understand what fiction means.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

!Remindthem 6 years

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

I can't tell, is this an angsty teenager take against YouTube Music.

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