Czino // πŸ‘«πŸŒ±πŸ‘πŸˆπŸˆβ€β¬›'s avatar
Czino // πŸ‘«πŸŒ±πŸ‘πŸˆπŸˆβ€β¬›
czino@czino.de
npub12hq8...tujz
#Bitcoin and #Permaculture and part time artist. πŸ”‘ EFD9 3079 184E 62E1 6A8F 7773 CE58 316B D36E CF49
Amazing how AI speech synthetisation sounds more and more natural. The demo is impressive. Apart fromΒ a couple weird glitches I felt like having a normal conversation. Coincidentally the movie Her was set in 2025. They say they probably open source their model in a 1-2 weeks
I used AI often when it became powerful enough to write code, but this excitement quickly wore off after lots of time wasted reviewing the code and fixing bugs and removing garbage. Nowadays I may ask AI some random questions if I don't quickly find my answer searching the web or let it solve a small very contained problem. Are you still using AI for coding? Does it really save you time?
Thinking back on my childhood and teenage years. We had a TV in every room. I had one, my brother's had each their own. Those boxes were constantly on, even for background noise. I liked watching TV, especially Simpsons and a documentary show called Galileo. "I'm getting smarter" I told myself. But over the years the quality of Galileo dropped significantly. At some point they carved out a whole section for a fat guy called Jumbo reporting on the biggest junk food he could eat. I got really frustrated with this enshittification. When I saw a Jumbo special announced, I was around 18 years old, and I finally decided to switch off the TV for good. So, I guess thank you Jumbo for pushing me over the edge and never wanting to watch TV again 🫑 image
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