• @unmagical@lemmy.ml
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      1195 months ago

      So let’s keep making phones thinner and thinner while simultaneously growing the camera bump instead of making a flat profile with, say, 2 days of life!

      • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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        224 months ago

        So on one hand, I agree with you. On the other hand, I think lightness is a thing people care about. I recently needed to get some photos backed up off an old phone of mine, and I didn’t realize how heavy my current one is until I picked up my old one. Thinness is irrelevant, but a 50% weight difference is not. Other than that, I don’t think most people get much utility out of more than a day of battery life, so 1.5 days new degrading down to 1 seems reasonable and in line with what most people want.

          • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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            34 months ago

            I agree for first impressions that heavier is perceived as more premium, but after months of actually using a device I can’t fathom that a reasonable person would actually prefer a heavier phone given an equivalent, lighter phone. Even Apple, king of making devices with mass appeal, decided last year that shedding weight was a priority when moving some iPhones from aluminum to titanium.

          • @rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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            04 months ago

            Well, cheap or not, but in terms of fitting into my pocket a fat rubber-covered dumbphone is better than a modern thin and light one. That plate is just inconvenient. It’s too big. I don’t care how thin it is. A newspaper is thin too.

        • Dave.
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          44 months ago

          I have a Samsung A71. It permanently lives in its protective case which gives it good bumpers around the easily-breakable edge-to-edge screen. It’s now 4 years old and has survived numerous tumbles and drops over the years.

          Occasionally I have to swap the SD card in it and I am always astonished at how thin and light and fragile it is when not in the case.

          I would quite happily have an actual similar size phone to what “I have now” if the battery size was bumped up another 50 percent.

          • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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            -64 months ago

            You’re blaming the wrong thing again. Newer phones have higher capacity batteries than the old bricks by far. The issue is the screen, SoC, and modem power consumption has gone up too.

            • Dave.
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              14 months ago

              In the phone world, the jump in capacity that modern phones have from my 4370mAh battery in my A71 is negligible. They haven’t increased power density much because that way leads to fires and lawsuits when users bend or otherwise damage their ridiculously fragile phones

              My point was, if modern phones had the physical space that my phone + case has, they could have a bigger battery, and that bigger battery would then power all the hungry, hungry electronics.

        • @localme@lemm.ee
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          44 months ago

          Totally agree! I picked up an old iPhone 6s yesterday and I just couldn’t believe how much lighter and thinner it is than the latest models.

        • @MonkderDritte@feddit.de
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          4 months ago

          On the other hand, I think lightness is a thing people care about.

          Yeah, my Galaxy S3 is half as heavy as my current phone. It couldn’t do less but had superior battery life. Smartphones and their OS all have grown bloated.

      • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        114 months ago

        Exactly. I really liked my old phone, the Moto G Power, which:

        • had no camera bump
        • had 2+ days battery life
        • was pretty affordable (I think it was $250 new?)

        I still have it for stuff around the house (gets like 3-4 days w/o the SIM), and I would totally still be using it as my main phone if it still got security updates. The screen is a little larger than I want, but it has been a solid phone for me.

        I got a Pixel 8 mostly because of the longer software support and GrapheneOS support, and I honestly don’t care about the camera, and the big bump is pretty annoying. I really wish I could just have my Moto G Power w/ a small screen and longer software support. In fact, I’d totally use a Pinephone if it had reliable calls and texts, better battery life, and better audio quality. I really don’t need much, I just need a phone that will keep working for years and not need to be recharged throughout the day…

      • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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        -64 months ago

        You’re missing something though: phone cell or battery capacity has been getting bigger, not smaller. The issue isn’t the batteries, it’s the other hardware and software needing more and more energy. Modern phones are much faster, have better screens at higher resolution, brightness, even refresh rate. All of this uses energy, even with modern technology being as awesome as it is. Qualcomm, TSMC, ARM, and Apple put quite a bit of work into making these things as efficient as they can be, but we keep demanding more and more from these devices. For many they replaced laptops after all.

        It’s a bit like complaining that your new ultra high performance sports car is getting bad range, and complaining about the fuel tank or battery instead of the engine. The tank has only gotten bigger or at least stayed the same, but the engine has gotten hungrier and hungrier with each generation.

        • @unmagical@lemmy.ml
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          74 months ago

          That’s a contributing factor to battery life remaining stagnant. Manufacturers use those advances while continuing to slim phones rather than making an actually flat brick that uses those advances to drastically increase battery life. Regardless of the energy needs of the phone manufacturers can use the difference in height between the back of a phone and the camera bump to include more battery capacity and it will increase both the daily and usable life of the phone.

      • @BaroqueInMind@lemmy.one
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        Looks like you had plenty of time to complete it since you took the time to type out the ellipses. If only you had wri

        • @Azzu@lemm.ee
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          44 months ago

          Looks like you had plenty of time to complete it since you’ve managed to hit the “Send reply” button and the request thus sent to the Lemmy server actually completed, allowing us to now view your intentionally unfinished comment. I think this is

          • @dezmd@lemmy.world
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            14 months ago

            It’s strange so many comments keep experiencing it, almost like it’s something else entirely, but it couldnt possibly be Candleja

        • @WindyRebel@lemmy.world
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          44 months ago

          Here you are thinking it was the device when it was actually the robot that malfunctioned over the period and then lost battery.

    • @shalafi@lemmy.world
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      105 months ago

      My phone has a 22000mAh battery. I never consider charging it unless I’m going to the woods overnight, and then only to be sure I have a power bank.

          • Zoot
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            4 months ago

            So this thing looks absolutely amazing, but still sports a 19oz size(560g). For reference, my phone is only 7oz (201g). The steam deck (roughly 22oz), which i regularly hold with two hands, can start to cause pain in the wrists.

            I’m sure the kind of person to buy this phone isn’t holding it for numerous hours, but thats still A) a lot of weight to lug around B) I’d imagine it will begin to strain the wrists quickly. Maybe that’s a pro though…

            Edit: Mind didn’t complete my thought, added words.

            • Zoot
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              24 months ago

              How so? My phone screen is 6.4in and id hardly consider that to be tablet sized. Anything smaller physically hurts me to be honest.

              • @TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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                14 months ago

                People mistakenly use screen size to measure the size of their devices, as opposed to the actual size.

                People think 6.4"??? That’s huge! My old phone was only 5.2"!!, but once you factor in how much bezels have shrunk, the phones we have now are about the same as they were a decade ago.

                I actually compared a 10 year old Samsung Galaxy S5 (2014) against the current model. The current model is 0.6% larger by frontal area. That’s it.

            • @mrvictory1@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              Phablet is the new phone. The term was introduced around iPhone 6 Plus era, now look at the average size of recently released phones and compare it to the 6+. I have a 6.8" phone and I sometimes wish I got a tablet with cellular lol

              • @TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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                34 months ago

                I was curious, so I looked it up.

                iPhone 6 Plus frontal area: 158.1mm x 77.8mm = 12,300mm²

                iPhone 15 frontal area: 147.6mm x 71.6mm = 10,568mm²

                iPhone 15 Plus frontal area: 160.9mm x 77.8mm = 12,518mm²

                So (TL;DR:) the 6 Plus is 16% larger than the current iPhone, and 1.75% smaller than the current Plus model.

                In the past decade, phones haven’t actually got bigger, despite people online saying they have. Screens have, while the bezels have shrunk.

      • @thefartographer@lemm.ee
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        24 months ago

        Sounds like my old Ulefone! I once dropped it while getting out of my car and it put a 1.5" diameter dent in the door frame.

      • @Foxfire@pawb.social
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        14 months ago

        Damn and here I thought my 13200Ah phone I charge once a week was big. I wish more phones went down the route of massive batteries, it’s so much better than being thin and barely lasting a day of normal use.

    • @DudeDudenson
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      44 months ago

      Ah but if our batteries last longer people won’t have to buy phones as often, someone think or the shareholders

      • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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        114 months ago

        Almost half of over 50 hospitals already have these new devices? I highly doubt that. Are you referring to one of the really bad old windows on arm devices, or like an android tablet or something?

          • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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            14 months ago

            Some of them aren’t super age-old, but their processors are in an entirely different class, not competitive with these new devices or any of their x86 contemporaries. I really wanted to get one but could never justify them given the performance was so abysmal.

            • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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              14 months ago

              The 8cx Gen 3 was only released like one or two years ago, and is fast enough for day to day use. Sure the new ones are a fair bit faster, but the old ones were more than fast enough for web browsing, light programming, and running emulators. Heck they are also fast enough for server use if you need a power efficient cheap home server. They did make a couple desktop versions after all.

              • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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                14 months ago

                We have one at work for testing purposes. I agree it’s fine, but it’s competing with low end x86 devices performance-wise. I really wanted them to be better because I wanted to use one for my daily work, but it just wasn’t enough at the time. These new snapdragon elite processors seem like they could make that a reality though, and I wouldn’t hesitate to buy a snapdragon x elite laptop based on my prior bad experiences.

      • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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        Qualcomm is a company that makes a lot of different products. This post is about PCs, but Qualcomm doesn’t make PCs as far as I know, so you might need to be more specific.

    • @morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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      Pretending it’s not locked down like the og surface arm devices, I’d consider getting one and totally drop some flavour of linux on it, 3:2 is a great aspect ratio for laptops.

      Otherwise yeah, I wouldn’t go anywhere near it

      Edit: apparently I don’t need to pretend, this hasn’t been an issue for a while so that’s actually great

      • @Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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        244 months ago

        They’re BIOS locked and only accept Windows keys. On the plus side. Tuxedo is developing Linux notebooks with the same powerful, low-power ARM chips.

        • @morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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          Yeah, I assumed so, really dislike that you can’t do what you want with hardware you own.

          Edit: apparently not locked down, which is great

          • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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            Their source is they made it the fuck up. The most recent devices from previous generations running Windows on ARM weren’t boot locked. Only the surface RT was boot locked.

        • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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          14 months ago

          Where did you get this from? Their predecessors weren’t UEFI locked. Qualcomm themselves are working on mainline Linux support. Unless you have sources I am calling bullshit.

        • @morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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          Wasn’t even thinking about that, I have an old surface rc2 that’s totally useless because MS abandoned it years ago and it’s locked down so you can’t install an alternate os on it. To be fair, I’m not sure how useful it could be but it’s really about the fact I can’t do what I want with hardware I own.

          Edit: apparently this (locked down) hasn’t been an issue for a while so that’s actually great

          • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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            34 months ago

            All of them modern Windows for ARM devices released since Windows 10 have been boot unlocked to my knowledge, just with very poor driver support. Lookup Linaros articles on the subject.

            • @morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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              14 months ago

              Totally out of the loop for sure, definitely basing my assumptions on my experience with the rc2, I’m actually really happy that’s changed

              • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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                14 months ago

                Then why didn’t you say you’re out of the loop when writing the comments? You’ve just potentially misled a bunch of people for no good reason. These products are controversial enough as is without falsehoods being layered on top.

                • @morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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                  I meant it to be implied with my comment tying back to the original surface rc devices, I’ve always really liked the look of the surface line, it’s why I bought one and used it heavily (I was also and windows phone and zune early adopter, other things that were actually really nice but got dropped), I personally disliked that I couldn’t really do much with it after they dropped support as afaik the rc2 no one has cracked and made that crack public.

                  And totally willing to admit being wrong, going back and editing my comments to reflect my mistake

      • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        24 months ago

        If Framework didn’t exist and Linux worked on it, I’d probably get one when my older ThinkPad dies. I’d love something with a ton of battery life, and I don’t need much else (my workflow is basically a browser and a terminal).

    • @bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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      94 months ago

      Is it that different than standard Windows? Either way I’m just hyped that it seems the age of ARM desktops is upon us, I definitely won’t be using any “Copilot+” branded OS though.

      • @GamingChairModel@lemmy.world
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        44 months ago

        the age of ARM desktops is upon us

        I remain unconvinced that this is some big paradigm shift, and that the instruction set itself is mostly irrelevant for battery life and performance per watt.

        Yes, Apple achieved a big jump with its first M1 at delivering some pretty amazing performance per watt, compared to contemporary chips from Intel.

        But a closer look has shown that each successive generation of M-series Apple Silicon has been chasing higher performance at the cost of energy efficiency. Which is fine, but shrinks the gap.

        And then, if you look at AMD’s low power x86_64 CPUs for laptops, you’ll see that they’re also able to deliver significant power savings compared to Intel. Comparing like for like, in terms of TSMC node, you see that AMD performance per watt seems to be in line with Apple’s. It’s just that Apple’s comparative advantage in business/legal strategy (not engineering) has them locking up TSMC capacity earlier.

        Finally, a comparison of Apple’s mobile ARM SoCs to other manufacturers’ mobile ARM SoCs (including Qualcomm and Samsung) shows that Apple has a significant performance/efficiency lead over even other ARM chips.

        So it’s probably not the instruction set. It’s just the engineering of the chips themselves, boosted by Apple’s business/logistics strategies getting their products to market first.

      • @ShittyBeatlesFCPres@lemmy.world
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        34 months ago

        I’m not following this story closely but my understanding is that Copilot+ ones have a magical special chip (and keyboard button) and they take screenshots every few seconds so you can search your history. But, at least in the beta releases, they didn’t bother to mask passwords or really anything. You could have a private key in a screenshot.

        I would hope by the final release, they add the bare minimum of security and encrypt it all but that’s not really good enough. It’s a misguided attempt to shoehorn Copilot into everything when A.I. can’t even wipe its own ass yet. Maybe someday. Probably not, though.

        It’s clearly a gimmick and not an improvement. Press the “copilot button” and get help! But the copilot button isn’t a new button. It’s actually left-Shift + Windows key + F23. Modern computers don’t have F23 key but you can simulate it. I sure hope no hackers learn how to do that and search your entire history!

        • @Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          What you are thinking of is Recall, which is a selling point of Copilot+ PCs. As a correction, recall is opt-in, password protected and encrypted in the latest versions. Hitting the Copilot key will launch Copilot, which is a GPT4 AI assistant with image capabilities. Copilot+ itself just means the pc has

          at least 16GB of RAM, 256GB of storage and an NPU (Neural Processing Unit) capable of at least 40 TOPS (trillion operations per second) onboard.

          Tom’s Guide

          As well as the copilot key on laptops.

          • @floofloof@lemmy.caOP
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            Opt-in is an improvement, but Microsoft does have a history of making nominally opt-in features practically very difficult to avoid.

      • @MonkderDritte@feddit.de
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        24 months ago

        that it seems the age of ARM desktops is upon us

        But what for? It’s just as proprietary as x86 and drivers are more of an issue.

    • Neshura
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      264 months ago

      Not really no, it also likely isn’t a surprise to the engineers and project managers working on these products. Which is likely exactly why they have standout battery life: the project managers knew AI wouldn’t sell so they made the laptops appealing via conventional means anyway.

      • @themurphy@lemmy.ml
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        64 months ago

        The project manager wouldn’t have a say in battery life, as it’s really just because of the ARM chip.

        And I don’t think anyone thinks Copilot is good in its current form, AI hype or not. It feels like a web app with no real control over the machine.

        • @pycorax@lemmy.world
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          114 months ago

          It’s a common misconception but ARM isn’t inherently better at battery life than x86 though. It’s more that Qualcomm’s designs are as compared to the companies on the market that produce x86 hardware.

          • Balder
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            64 months ago

            TIL, I did some research because of your comment and indeed, the difference in their use cases is mostly a market thing, not so much a limitation of each one. This answer is particularly good at explaining that.

            • @pycorax@lemmy.world
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              34 months ago

              This article also does a really good in depth explanation about the topic although it does get a lot more technical but if you’re interested, it’s a really good read.

        • @MonkderDritte@feddit.de
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          44 months ago

          Ah no, more battery life isn’t because of the ARM chip. Not with general usage, outside of minimal instruction set use.

        • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          They absolutely would. They choose the chips included with the product, which screen to use, etc, and they can balance battery size with other considerations like weight. Battery life absolutely is a project manager choice.

  • @MyOpinion@lemm.ee
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    554 months ago

    I turn everything that mentions Copilot off. I don’t need this crap and I never asked for it to be made.

    • @Ashe@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      64 months ago

      My company hired an AI person and I was sure to tell him I stripped the registry values from my computer. I’m an admin sooo

    • @woelkchen@lemmy.world
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      214 months ago

      Linux support also appears to be coming along nicely (though not ready yet).

      Linux, as in kernel: Yes. Qualcomm doesn’t develop FOSS GPU drivers, though. freedreno only supports older Adreno GPUs.

      • @reddithalation@sopuli.xyz
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        14 months ago

        open source drivers were developed for apple’s gpus, so if there is demand seems like someone would do it for qualcomm

        • @woelkchen@lemmy.world
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          74 months ago

          It’s better to support open hardware that doesn’t rely on unsupported reverse engineering by community contributors.

    • @thequickben@lemm.ee
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      -144 months ago

      It is ready. I only used to dual boot Linux, but I switched completely over 6 months ago with zero issues.

      • @Nanabaz2@lemmy.world
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        364 months ago

        I think he mean on these new, modern ARM laptop. None has actually work well so far. This newer Qualcomm chips are those that they themselves put the effort in. Rest were few far and between - garbage from Qualcomm and rest is from community.

  • @Tronn4@lemmy.world
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    364 months ago

    I spent a good 20 minutes trying to remove copilot from my windows 10 machine last night. It embedded itself into the taskbar, the edge explorer, and I finally had to go into system components to disable it. No doubt there will be another ms update that will revert all these settings again

    • knightly the Sneptaur
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      194 months ago

      At some point you have to ask yourself if it would be less hassle to switch now or to try and tough it out until Windows becomes unbearable.

    • @woelkchen@lemmy.world
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      44 months ago

      I spent a good 20 minutes trying to remove copilot from my windows 10 machine last night.

      On Windows 11 you can just uninstall it. I did. Win10 is old and about to be unsupported.

      • @Tronn4@lemmy.world
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        24 months ago

        My pc is old unfortunately. I’d hate to upgrade it to support win11 jsut to disable all the ai crap. But I hate that my old pc keeps getting updates with copilot without me asking for copilot.

        • @woelkchen@lemmy.world
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          14 months ago

          My pc is old unfortunately. I’d hate to upgrade it to support win11 jsut to disable all the ai crap.

          Alternatives to soon-to-be unsupported Windows releases exist.

          But I hate that my old pc keeps getting updates with copilot without me asking for copilot.

          MS replaced Cortana with Copilot, so it’s kida just an update to an existing feature.

    • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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      24 months ago

      On Windows 11 at least, the taskbar button toggle is in the taskbar settings, the second place you’d expect to find it (the first being the right-click menu on the button itself, though there isn’t one). I’m not aware of anything called Edge Explorer, but it looks easy enough to disable in Edge, and I’ve never seen it in Explorer.

  • @EnderWiggin@lemmy.world
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    254 months ago

    I feel like narrow AI tools duped me for a while, but the more I started to really use Chat GPT professionally, the more I’ve likened it to professional mimicking software. It essentially works to pyt out responses that sound the most convincing but have nothing to do with putting out responses that are actually at all accurate. These are terrible tools outside of asking basic questions, idea generation, and generally summarizing existing information you feed into it. I use it to help me make lists and better phrase emails and company messages at this point and nothing that actually requires any actual fact finding.

    • @GamingChairModel@lemmy.world
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      104 months ago

      Professional bullshit artists, in the sense of the technical definition given by Harry Frankfurt in his influential book:

      Frankfurt determines that bullshit is speech intended to persuade without regard for truth. The liar cares about the truth and attempts to hide it; the bullshitter doesn’t care whether what they say is true or false.

    • @gh0stcassette@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      74 months ago

      It’s a good troubleshooting tool. Pasting in weird error messages that don’t turn up any useful search results is pretty useful, even if the response it gives is partially inaccurate, it usually at least gives a bit more information than a search engine, which gives me more context to narrow my search terms and find a solution to the error.

      It’s especially useful for learning Nix, since the online documentation is a bit shit and ChatGPT seems to have enough grasp on the Nix language and how to configure things in NixOS to tell me what I’m doing wrong.

  • atocci
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    I got the Surface Pro X a few years ago purely for battery life, performance be damned. Great decision, and it fit my use-case perfectly. Maybe a little too perfectly for Qualcomm, because I have no reason to upgrade to something more performant when all I cared about was the battery life.

    Edit: This recent push towards Windows on ARM is also benefiting these old WOA devices. Programs that would barely run before (because they were compiled for x86 and had to be emulated on a chip that could hardly handle all that extra overhead) are now getting native ARM version releases that run way better. In my experience, my Pro X’s performance has effectively been improving as time goes on, so I have even less of a reason to get anything new.

  • @skooma_king@lemm.ee
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    144 months ago

    I have actually come to prefer using AI instead of a search engine at work for most things sysadmin related (using DuckDuckGo’s AI chat feature), but I 100% have found that Copilot performs far worse than competing products. Having it that engrained in the computer is a very negative feature, despite the battery improvements.

    • @TechNerdWizard42@lemmy.world
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      94 months ago

      Copilot sucks. Gemeni is a sassy teenager. Chatgpt 4o is actually halfway decent. When they announced Gemeni had a million context tokens, that was awesome. But it can’t give coherent output to save its life. Useless.

      • @11111one11111@lemmy.world
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        34 months ago

        “Chatgpt 4o is actually halfway decent.”

        I think I need to redo my parameters cuz you aren’t the first person I’ve seen say this. I wasconvinced it got dumber lol

        • @SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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          14 months ago

          It got worse. We adapted parameters to try to compensate. You didn’t do anything wrong. You’ve just not yet implemented continuous improvement.

    • @floofloof@lemmy.caOP
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      4 months ago

      The Copilot in Windows and in Bing is quite bad, but the Github Copilot seems better. If you know of a clearly better one for programming I’m interested in trying things out.

  • bitwolf
    link
    fedilink
    English
    84 months ago

    That tracks, AI is somehow twice as annoying as nfts and I’ve been dying for a decent ARM / RISC-V Linux laptop.