

Pretty much all of my colleagues wasted time, because Jira stores comments locally that you haven’t yet sent, but does not do that for replies on comments. Those are gone after reopening the site for some reason.


They renamed “project” to “space”, so that it’s harder to find what you are looking for.


Wasting the energy isn’t that good either…


More nuanced (and without using the word “stupid”)
For sure, Elmo can somehow make profit out of it, e.g. by selling the space cloud usage as “can’t be controlled by an government on earth” for a high price. But when we concentrate on the facts: It can’t be more efficient than Azure or AWS on earth, at least not for the next decades.


It has to be dogshit, so you buy the Kindle.


But the shareholder value!!!111


Well, I found some nice blogs and enjoyed reading a few articles today on my weekend and I though “maybe, others enjoy those, too”, so I shared 3 of them. They got around 900 upvotes in total, so I think, that was not a bad decision (for me, it’s not about internet points, but about discourse / seeing what others think / strengthen lemmy).
I also couldn’t find past posts of this article in @[email protected], so it shouldn’t be a duplicate -> https://reddthat.com/search?q=dark+patterns&type=All&listingType=All&communityId=9232&page=1&sort=TopAll&titleOnly=false


I wish them the same success that the metaverse once had.


Maybe, the destruction of earth is part of the calculations. If earth is gone, space might be an option.


A huge title, it’s great, one of the best titles we have ever seen. People come to me telling me: That’s the best title I have ever seen.


Luckily, the word “Certainly” is a huge hint that it was generated by AI. You know that the reporter of the “issue” copy-pasted the question of the developer right into the LLM and copy-pasted the output right into hackone.


I already think that it’s insulting when people accomplish/do/implement/… something and want to inform the others and do that by generating a 1-2 pages long wall of text via LLM that is then copy-pasted into an email…
Like… Can’t you just write down the 5 or 10 most important points? Are we not worth the time to do so? Do we have to find the most relevant information ourselves in that text???


What do you think?
It probably contains some level of “cross-site-scripting-as-a-service” now, I guess.


They released a version recently that fixed over 60 security vulnerabilities. All of them were high or critical.
How many more are there to find? Thousands?
Whoever uses this on a PC with anything useful on it, is absolutely insane.


They will scrape that article, too.
And I’m a few months, they have “learned” how that task works.


Yup.


Didn’t expect this topic to still be that controversial… Maybe I’m too young to know, but how was IBM involved?


I’m not experienced at it either and don’t know the best resources.
But what I can usually recommend in case you don’t want to see the usual “THIS-IS-A-PIECE-OF-THE-PUZZLE—COME-BACK-REGULARLY-FOR-MORE-CONENT” stuff, but more in depth stuff: Enter “filetype:pdf systemd” in your search engine. Google or DuckDuckGo will then only spit out pdf files about that topic… And the people who write PDF files are usually more experienced with the topic than those who write blog posts or “how to’s”.
Let me know if that helped in your case… :)


Great… Fewer humans and even more bots in the comments… That’s a genius idea.
I’m sick of it. I had 4 different problems with it this year at work. And we are paying them money for it…