Yaky

joined 1 month ago
[–] [email protected] 23 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Other than with language models, this has already happened: Take a look at apps such as Merlin Bird ID (identifies birds fairly well by sound and somewhat okay visually), WhoBird (identifies birds by sound, ) Seek (visually identifies plants, fungi, insects, and animals). All of them work offline. IMO these are much better uses of ML than spammer-friendly text generation.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Series plug-in hybrids that can run on battery (Chevy Volt, Honda Clarity, Prius 2024) are IMO better than both. They effectively operate like electric vehicles (regenerative braking and all), and one can drive them for months without burning gas. Their batteries are about five times smaller (~30-50mi range vs full EV's ~250mi range), and thus lighter, and the gasoline engine is usually a small, efficient one (~40ish mpg on gas)

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 days ago

Ironically, Toyota already had some sketchy anti-EV reputation:

Toyota was famously one of the few automakers who sided with the Trump Administration in their legal fight against California trying to impose their own stricter emission regulations.

The Japanese didn’t stop there, and more recently, it warned the new US federal government against promoting all-electric vehicles.

From Electrek

Also, IIRC, it was Toyota and Honda that actively lobbied against CARB limits and indirectly led to EV1's demise. (Can't find the sources ATM)

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 week ago

Biktor and Lynxis will be working on OpenIMSd, which aims to bring VoLTE (4G voice calls) to Qualcomm based phones (like the PinePhone)

This is fantastic news, and I wish them all the best. Reliable VoLTE/WoWiFi calls was my main (but obviously major) issue with the PinePhone.

[–] [email protected] 20 points 1 week ago

Another FYI: Ubuntu Touch does not support VoLTE at all, thus it might be more difficult to use it in some networks and countries (for example, USA shut down 3G some years ago)

However, I was pleasantly surprised by the responsive UI, the browser, and Cinny (the Matrix Client)

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

Fossify Messages and QKSMS/QUIK (unmaintained but has worked well for years)

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

You might enjoy N. K. Jemisin's Broken Earth trilogy. The setting at first appears as fantasy, but there is a sci-fi-like depth to everything. The climate and periodic catastrophic Seasons, the tectonics, orogeny (humans' magic-like abilities to manipulate heat and tectonics), and "high-tech" of the world's past history.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I was interested in these "light" phones for a bit, but they seem a bit gimmicky and expensive. I understand not having a browser on purpose, but for communication, none of them (AFAIK) support Matrix or even XMPP (even some old feature phones had a Java Jabber client). Punkt MP02 supports Signal though.

Android phone with custom ROM (Lineage, /e/, Graphene, DivestOS...) is a possibility, and would be usable until hardware is incompatible with the phone/wifi networks.

If you have a patience of a saint, PinePhone and Librem5 are Linux phones, both in fairly early stages.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago

Hype still sells and we still idolize people though. Businessmen such as Steve Jobs or (early) Elon Musk curate an image of themselves as a "genius", which leads to popularity of their products and influences trends and opinions in specific fields.

Really though, no single person did or invented anything alone. Every well-known and highly regarded scientist, inventor, or businessman built their work as a small increment on top of hundreds of predecessors. The Upright Thinkers by Leonard Mlodinow is a good pop-sci book that carries that point throughout.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Here are a few other interesting green automotive startups that didn't make it:

  • Sono Motors' Sion: Compact EV with solar panels, power sharing, intended to be easily repairable and included a detail manual. They had prototypes but never went to production. Now the company does niche solar applications.
  • Workhorse: Series Hybrid (think Chevy Volt) Pickup truck with onboard power for tools etc (was announced around or even before Rivian). Was a very pragmatic idea IMO. Later sort-of resold to Lordstown. Now company does some other things, like drones.
  • Lordstown Motors' Endurance: EV Pickup Truck with hub motors. Made a few hundred, but they have been dragging it out long enough for Ford to make electric pickups. And the idea wasn't too original even when it was announced.
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