- 99 Posts
- 81 Comments
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•I hacked Microsoft Edge to make my ideal Chromium web browserEnglish
5·4 months agoChromium builds don’t have built-in automatic updates, and they’re missing DRM and some other proprietary components that are important. I’ve seen some community-maintained builds with varying update methods, but they don’t seem as well-supported as relying on Google/Microsoft/Vivaldi/whatever.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•I hacked Microsoft Edge to make my ideal Chromium web browserEnglish
3·4 months agoI used desktop Linux as my daily driver for years, I am aware it exists.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•I hacked Microsoft Edge to make my ideal Chromium web browserEnglish
3·4 months agoYes, I suggested Vivaldi in the article.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•I hacked Microsoft Edge to make my ideal Chromium web browserEnglish
201·4 months agoLibreWolf doesn’t help me with websites that refuse to work properly on Firefox’s engine. I mentioned in the article that Firefox is already my daily web browser, but I’ve been looking for a good backup Chromium browser for that and other reasons.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•We hate AI because it's everything we hateEnglish
1·4 months agoI don’t think he is talking about specifically businesses, though, because he also talks about Gemini replacing Google Assistant, which only matters in consumer products (Assistant was never an enterprise product). It’s more like he’s moving the goalposts mid-statement.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•We hate AI because it's everything we hateEnglish
38·5 months agoIf the models are more efficient, the tasks that still need a server will get the same result at a lower cost. OpenAI can also pivot to building more local models and license them to device makers, if it wants.
The finances of big tech companies isn’t really relevant anyway, except to point out that Ed Zitron’s arguments are not based in reality. Whether or not investors are getting stiffed, the bad outcomes of AI would still be bad, and the good outcomes would still be good.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•We hate AI because it's everything we hateEnglish
36·5 months agoI wrote the article, Ed said that in the linked blog post: “There Is No Real AI Adoption, Nor Is There Any Significant Revenue - As I wrote earlier in the year, there is really no significant adoption of generative AI services or products.”
There is a pretty clear path to profitability, or at least much lower losses. A lot more phones, tablets, computers, etc now have GPUs or other hardware optimized for running small LLMs/SLMs, and both the large and small LLMs/SLMs are becoming more efficient. With both of those those happening, a lot of the current uses for AI will move to on-device processing (this is already a thing with Apple Intelligence and Gemini Nano), and the tasks that still need a cloud server will be more efficient and consume less power.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•We hate AI because it's everything we hateEnglish
210·5 months agoI wouldn’t really trust Ed Zitron’s math analysis when he gets a very simple thing like “there is no real AI adoption” plainly wrong. The financials of OpenAI and other AI-heavy companies are murky, but most tech startups run at a loss for a long time before they either turn a profit or get acquired. It took Uber over a decade to stop losing money every quarter.
OpenAI keeps getting more funding capital because (A) venture capital guys are pretty dumb, and (B) they can easily ramp up advertisements once the free money runs out. Microsoft has already experimented with ads and sponsored products in chatbot messages, ChatGPT will probably do something like that.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•I tried Servo, the undercover web browser engine made with RustEnglish
3·5 months agoNice, I’ll add that to the to-do list.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•I tried Servo, the undercover web browser engine made with RustEnglish
16·5 months agoYeah, some Rust code from Servo was integrated a few years ago as the article explains, mainly the CSS engine.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@beehaw.org•I tried Servo, the undercover web browser engine made with Rust
18·5 months agoChrome is mostly open-source software, Chromium builds are just missing Google data sync, some video DRM, and other proprietary components. I believe Firefox is completely FOSS.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•Why can't we go back to small phones?English
3·10 months agoNot really, even the cheap phones have large screens now. There’s no correlation anymore between price and screen size, the cheap phones just have lower quality panels.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•No, Sony Isn’t Ending Blu-ray Disc ProductionEnglish
14·11 months agoSeemingly only in Japan, though.
corbin@infosec.pubOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•I missed out on 3D movies, but they're back in VREnglish
3·1 year agoYeah it would be nice to get Movies Anywhere or something fully on board. All the movie studios are sitting on 3D movies already, they just need to make the app(s).
The exact same services? Did YouTube exist in the 1980s?
The Mozilla FUD where I said I like Firefox and pointed out how many of the projects continued in some form after Mozilla ended them?
Most of the services Google kills are also because they “fizzled out”. If you scroll through the Killed by Google site, a lot of the stuff listed there were test apps or small-scale experiments that most people never heard about or cared to try, like all the apps under Area 120. There are a few high-profile examples (Reader, Stadia, etc) but they’re definitely not the majority, same as Mozilla.
















I haven’t noticed a website outright blocking Firefox in a while, in part because Firefox devs are staying on top of it with overriding a lot of site blocks. The issue I run into the most is reduced video quality in Google Meet in Firefox, so I switch to Safari or Chromium when I need to do calls there.