Previous /sdg/ thread : >>107831056>Beginner UIEasyDiffusion: https://easydiffusion.github.ioSwarmUI: https://github.com/mcmonkeyprojects/SwarmUI>Advanced UIComfyUI: https://github.com/comfyanonymous/ComfyUIForge Classic: https://github.com/Haoming02/sd-webui-forge-classicStability Matrix: https://github.com/LykosAI/StabilityMatrix>Z-Image Turbohttps://comfyanonymous.github.io/ComfyUI_examples/z_imagehttps://huggingface.co/Tongyi-MAI/Z-Image-Turbohttps://huggingface.co/jayn7/Z-Image-Turbo-GGUFComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107853264very fun style, though he's surprisingly sinister looking
hardworking Hina Edition>Not sure what private trackers are all about?A private tracker is an invite-only torrent website. Each member shares common goals: collecting, preserving and discussing media.>Have a question?- FAQ https://archive.is/UVQkn- WIKI https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Private_trackers- NEWFAG PYRAMID https://inviteroute.github.io/graph or https://inviteroute.github.io/sheet/- STUDY https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2F379FE0CB50DF502F0075119FD3E060- SPREADSHEET https://hdvinnie.github.io/Private-Trackers-Spreadsheet/- TEN CURRY COMMANDMENTS https://pastebin.com/raw/dBbdE73M- TEN NEON COMMANDMENTS https://pastebin.com/raw/Ud2pGYaE- RED SPAMMER'S BIBLE https://rentry.org/69zbxh4h- #ptg is on irc.sageru.org but it's pretty deadComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107852556it‘s not „command-line focused“. all you need is a mpv.config file and set it as your default video player. you don‘t ever have to use a terminal to use mpv lol
>>107852734I am not going to install gentoo only for a video player
https://malwaresourcecode.com/home/my-projects/write-ups/r-piratedgames-drama.-is-it-malware-yes.-is-it-cool-malware-noSo who was the other group?
lol
>>107853429What's so funny
Previous: >>107812740
What's your hobbies outside work? I usually hit the gym but not going to lie it's making me even more pissed off because of JEETS
How important is it to put a good picture in your profile for Slack, Outlook, etc? Seems optional to do it at my company, but some people seem to have professional photos taken for it.
>>107853544who cares
>>107853544>some people seem to have professional photos taken for itnormiecattleniggers think this kind of stuff is important/requiredthe sort of sheep mentality in generali actually hate them
>>107853544I have a distorted picture of a cat set as my slack pfp
/aicg/ - A general dedicated to the discussion and development of AI chatbotsMaybe The Real Treasure Was The Friends We Made Along The Way Edition>NewsZ․ai releases GLM-4.7 https://z.ai/blog/glm-4.7Google releases Gemini 3 Flash https://blog.google/products/gemini/gemini-3-flashOpenAI releases GPT-5.2 https://openai.com/index/introducing-gpt-5-2Deepseek releases V3.2 https://huggingface.co/deepseek-ai/DeepSeek-V3.2Anthropic releases Opus 4.5 https://www.anthropic.com/news/claude-opus-4-5Google releases Gemini 3 Pro https://blog.google/products/gemini/gemini-3Additional info: https://aicg.neocities.org/info.html>FrontendsComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
a one-clown circus.
>>107853526desu
>>107853576desu rentry?
Is this "desu" anon in the room with us right now?
>cant post troon-friendly filteralive general
I have this one password in my head that is genuinely the most important one I'll ever have in my entire life.What if I forget it?There is literally zero copy of it anywhere - not on paper, not on any drive, not in any note app, not in any password manager, not photographed, nothing. If my brain loses it, it's game over forever.I'm starting to get genuinely scared of the day my memory inevitably starts glitching on me.So... how the hell do people actually protect ultra-critical passwords they refuse to store anywhere?
>>107853450bye bye cp
Write it down if the peace of mind outweighs the security risk for you. If you've got something like a 7zip archive or local password manager file using that password and you remember some of the password it might be possible to brute force it. Like say you remember 3 out of 6 words that make up your password. But if you forget too much of it or all of it then it's over.
>>107853489its not cheese pizza, its not even electronic
>>107853450>"How can I protect data without protecting it against data loss"Your question is an oxymoron. Redundancy in the form of having more than one storage device to store data on is the gold standard and the foundation of any other protective measures. If this password is important and critical, refusing to keep copies of it is actively hindering your chances of preserving it long-term. If your concern is that notes with it written on may be found, or a data breach might expose it, then you'd have to encode or otherwise obfuscate the copies, but you must have copies.
>>107853450Spread the password out across multiple pieces of paper and store them in different bank vaults for example.You got to weigh up the risks what would be worse? You losing access to that password or someone else gaining access to it.
it's over. the infinite AI investment money is drying up.
>>107852972YC is also about compliance. You need to work with them to comply and once you get funded they will saddle you with insiders pulled from other YC properties. Slave drivers really. These are the people who will pick the head of HR and control hiring, which is the real goal of YC, because while "growth" used to mean more revenue, now it means hiring more people and getting more funding.One of my favorite examples of this is Beatnik by Headspace, a Dotcom 1.0 bomb company that was actually promising. It was basically internet-delivered soundfonts in the era of MIDI and GM in particular, being what passed for Internet music. Some cards existed with soundfonts, but they all were particular and had their own quirks and you would need to use their utility to load new waves. This was a software solution that could "stream" much more realistic sounding music with custom instruments by first defining a set of soundfonts which essentially matched the raw patches in a synth, then applied things like envelopes and filters, finally allowing a sound much closer to that which the composer would hear on their nice workstation keyboard and rack modules. There was even work with vocals, in popular music you will often hear the same exact vocals played back several or even many times in a song, why not just save one of those instances and play it on demand?This company was founded by a couple geeks and Thomas Dolby (another geek) as a sort of early better alternative to MIDI. And oh BOY did it get funded. Thomas Dolby? All the VCs rallied around and even though their product was SHIPPING with like SIX EMPLOYEES they suddenly hired another THOUSAND PEOPLE and there was growth and it was seen as THE Internet audio future, for a year. But they ended up sidelining the six guys and Thomas Dolby and bloating the product up and... the whole company died when the Dotcom crash happened and it's forgotten tech now.
>>107852955>I think it relates to that chart I saw depicting how people in different countries viewed AI. In North America, Europe, and Africa (?) AI is viewed with hesitancy and suspicion. But in South America, India, and East Asia they are just hyped about it.I wonder if this has something to do with how tech is viewed in those countries. NA, Europe, Africa have all been burned pretty badly by big tech companies while South America (I don't think they even support AI that much though), India and East Asia have largely grown because of them. I also think that China heavily regulates their slop usage as well.
>>107847490generating math code for calculations and exectuing it is actually the smart way of doing itnot that it justifies llm slop
>>107853030I actually cut some of the same points from my reply. It's common for all VCs to have a stable of trusted C-suite types who have a history of turning around failing investments to prep for sale or IPO. Once the VC gets their money back they move those people to the next problem investment. There's no way that Phind got money without a solid plan and "adults" to ensure they stay on task. That's obviously why they immediately shifted their business plan and ditched all the free leeches. My guess is they have some competency in scraping based on previous work, and we all know AI needs more scraped content. And I'm sure there are some other YC companies they can be quietly paired up with to provide that data with.
>>107852955AI>pushes up the left side of the bell curve>does not help much the middle>holds back the right side
Light themes are objectively superior to dark themes, why do so many people still choose dark?
>>107835866you claiming it's objective doesn't make it so and I could undo you with the flick of a finger you stupid midget.
>>107835866Because light themes give me seizures
>>107851712When I was a child, I was taught arithmetic using colored rods. I grew up and today I use monochromatic numerals.
>>107835866They don't know how to turn the monitor brightness down. It really is that simple. All these dark mode supporters saying shit like "it's not as bright, it rests my eyes" are running that shit at 100% brightness with the lights off and blinds closed wondering why they're getting a suntan at the desk.
>>107841601It looks like fruity pebbles.
>CEO sends out an email encouraging company to use AI more>We consulted an AI (((expert))) that says it will make us more efficient >Encouraging Copilot specifically bc we are already using Office, Azure, Etc.>Mfw im the current IT dept head and was not consulted about any of this or brought in to meet with the (((expert)))How do I tell him this shit is a terrible idea and AI should not be trusted with any meaningful or security sensitive information? Bonus points if it's a response that won't get me fired
>>107849971Pretty much.Not my fault every dumbass out there is willing to pay me a hundred to sit with them and tell them the reality of modern AI.Now if there were more demand for me to finetune custom models I'd be happier, but there just isn't.
>>107853633>actionablewhy do I feel immediate instinct to punch you
>>107853662Probably because I don't care for talkers. I want to not spend my day in meetings with morons who have to justify their existence by spouting word salad and dragging 4 hour projects out into 3 month meetings
>>107853662he is a luddite schizo
>>107850745Idk man, the only uses I see are automating menial office tasks, and reviewing your code or even acting as a better search engine.Beyond that it's just for gooners, and corporations who want to overhype it and milk shareholders, and pretend the chickens won't come home to roost.
/lmg/ - a general dedicated to the discussion and development of local language models.Previous threads: >>107838898 & >>107834480►News>(01/08) Jamba2 3B and Mini (52B-A12B) released: https://ai21.com/blog/introducing-jamba2>(01/05) OpenPangu-R-72B-2512 (74B-A15B) released: https://hf.co/FreedomIntelligence/openPangu-R-72B-2512>(01/05) Nemotron Speech ASR released: https://hf.co/blog/nvidia/nemotron-speech-asr-scaling-voice-agents>(01/04) merged sampling : add support for backend sampling (#17004): https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/pull/17004>(12/31) HyperCLOVA X SEED 8B Omni released: https://hf.co/naver-hyperclovax/HyperCLOVAX-SEED-Omni-8B►News Archive: https://rentry.org/lmg-news-archive►Glossary: https://rentry.org/lmg-glossary►Links: https://rentry.org/LocalModelsLinks►Official /lmg/ card: https://files.catbox.moe/cbclyf.pngComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107853575If it's not local I don't care, we aren't your personal interns or consultants
>>107853616not trying to do his idea, just commenting on what he's doing is all
>>107853196Here's what my UI looks like in use. Mostly doing weird shit just to see what happens and understand how things work.
>>107853593Using the thread as a tech blog is fine, or at least it would be if we could at least play with it ourselves.>>107853575You could always upload it with the issue tracker disabled so you don't have entitled retards demanding features and fixes from you.People would be better able to give you feedback and ideas if they were able to try it for themselves.
>>107853690They would ask ITT though that'd be so annoying, little locusts can't help themselves, can't just help build saas for free and stfu sm head
What will happen first?Year of the Linux or death of personal computing?
>>107853631The latter has already happened.
>>107853631yes
Someone is trying to shut it down
>>107853175It's been super broken lately. I archived some pages from a small forum a few months ago because it was going to get shutdown, checked it and they all archived correctly, but a few months later I wanted to open them again and half of the pages returned "this page is not archived," with the actually archived pages having half their images missing.It wasn't actively censored, it wasn't a political forum, and neither the missing threads nor the images were different to the ones that survived. It's down every other day, so it looks like when they reboot whatever server they have, it simply ignores the latest saved pages and they get lost forever or something.
>>107853175Other websites have failure too
>he still uses a shartphone
So? They get millions of photos of my fat and ugly mug. So what?
>>107847586Why does it need to keep scanning after the device has been unlocked?
>>107848721>cant shit in the dark without asking apple for permissionItoddlers btfo again and again
>>107850717could be a safety measure for example In a scenario where someone would steal your phone while you're using it so it locks itself. Pretty good actually if you think about it
>>107847568Yes, it's for your health, goy, don't want your eyesight to go to shit and not look at the ads anymore, goy.
BATTLE STATIONSShow your setups
>>107845328>>107845380I know it's an AI, but unironically that bst is just like me fr. I love that pic.Corpo4life
>>107851428>accuses poverty>NYC wallpaper on curved monitorrip bozo is about to have the last of his trust fund sucked in by cityfags
>>107853492>type in "7680x2160 wallpapers" in google images and download first non-gaymen one>anon does advanced psychoanalysis on younever change /g/
>>107846849no shit
sure why not
what are your favorite less known command line tools? extra-points if they are NOT written in Rust.
>>107853445sd is strictly find and replace. The manpage wasn't long enough to have to scroll to the bottom, but I don't remember if it even supported regex. I would assume so.
>>107853445>I hate sed's regex dialect with a passionI wish there were something like emacs' rx macro but for every dialect of regex
>>107851251>macfag>4coresHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHA
what command is that on the top right
>rust le badGo ahead, explain why>inb4 muh tranniesC and Go are jeetlangs invented by trannies
previous: >>107841306#define __NR_mprotect 10this guy is pretty similar to mmap in a lot of ways, with the obvious difference being that mprotect only lets you change the protections of mappings which already exist.since we didn't talk about SIGSEGV much in the last thread, perhaps that could be the focus of this one?relevant resources: man manman syscallshttps://man7.org/linux/man-pages/https://linux.die.net/man/https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/https://elixir.bootlin.com/musl/https://elixir.bootlin.com/glibc/
#define __NR_mprotect 10
man man
man syscalls
i'll give it a bmup
>>107851217What's an example usage of mprotect? I understand why the kernel would need to be able to set permissions on pages, but why would this need to be done at the user level?Maybe if you want to do something with a JIT? You could dump machine code straight into RAM and mark the pages as executable. I don't think mprotect really does much for security, because your code can just call it anytime. Maybe if you have a virtual environment in your program that you can enter and exit, then it can be helpful for security? You'd need to male sure that the virtual environment can never call mprotect.
>>107853273Usually there's a forbidden page just past the end of stack memory so that you crash in case of a stack overflow. This sort of thing isn't airtight but it can be very helpful.I think it tends to be a mitigation, something that hopefully prevents bad consequences once something else has gone wrong.