@smaxor Same experience used 4.7 for 2 days noticed it took longer and i was getting frustrated. Went back to using 4.6z. It just works for what Iโm doing and getting what I want done more quickly.
@imPenny2x Thereโs a chance for that (itโs not a given) also getting to that future will be a very bumpy road. For those at the end of the tunnel thereโs ur vision, possibly.
@claudeai Claude 4.7 is still incredibly frustrating to use for normies when trying to iterate a design. Still lacks understanding of what you want or how to fix with too many required iterations on too many things.
I've seen an ad on Amazon that has some "resemblance" of me and I'm wondering if they're now "making ads" more personal this way. Anyone else experience this? Giving me Black Mirror vibes.
@Polymarket Artemis II reviewers on https://t.co/1SLfJBdPFD gave their stay a 3/10 noting the views are beautiful but the bathroom smell is disgusting.
What if rising AI & robotics-driven unemployment sparks widespread unrest?
A dark but plausible theory: governments facing mass job loss and growing protests might use multiple levers to maintain control โ including military recruitment, diversionary conflicts, and robotic policing. Pure speculation, but rooted in historical patterns of power preservation.
Step 1: Broaden military enlistment. Raising the max age to 42 (as the U.S. Army just did) pulls in more able-bodied adults โ especially those in their late 30s/early 40s hit by AI displacement. In a crisis, this could quietly reduce the pool of potential protesters at home while framing it as "national service."
Step 2: Escalate external conflicts or reinstate elements of a draft. If protests turn destructive, a diversionary war (or heightened military posture) could redirect anger outward and "export" younger, frustrated workers overseas. History shows desperate regimes have tried similar tactics to buy time and create a "rally around the flag" effect โ even when past attempts backfired.
Step 3: Deploy AI & robotic systems for domestic order. As human police are stretched thin (or sent abroad), robots and autonomous systems could handle crowd control, asset protection, and surveillance. Current tech is mostly remote-operated and non-lethal, but in a severe breakdown, escalation rules would apply.
The grim trade-off: If protesters begin destroying critical infrastructure, AI data centers, government systems, or threatening officials, security forces โ human or robotic โ face a binary choice: Protect lives, property, and assetsโฆ or stand down.
Rules of engagement almost always authorize lethal force when there's imminent threat.
Fewer able-bodied people on the streets (due to war/draft) could mean fewer direct confrontations with robotic units โ potentially reducing the number of lethal incidents and the resulting public blowback. A cold calculus: minimize visible chaos at home while preserving core power structures.
This remains a hypothetical worst-case scenario. Governments do plan for multiple futures โ including ugly ones involving tech-driven unemployment and civil disorder. Whether theyโd ever chain these tools together this way is unknown.
History shows power rarely surrenders gracefully. Human nature + advanced tech could create dangerous new combinations.
I get the point but he's oversimplifying what the AI systems have done with Chess and what they will do with coding/software. First, chess hasn't been "solved". Just all the ai systems are way above a human's ability. There's ongoing improved chess ai systems. Stockfish 18 which is better than each of it's prior generations and Google's Alphazero etc. When you watch a game you don't even understand the reasons for some of the moves even studying while it's happening. Only in hindsight is there a better understanding (sometimes). Solving means there's a definite answer. Yet these systems beat each other in games many times. Also Chess is confined to the rules. Perhaps coding in some languages could be "solved." But AI can create new languages and codebases and doesn't have to be confined to the ones we created. This makes it infinitely more vast than what is limited in Chess. Not only will it be way better than what humans can do at the things we understand it will also create things we cannot understand.
@Birdyword NY and CA duking it out for most mismanaged/corrupt State. CA wanted to build housing for the homeless and it was gonna coat $500k per unit (this was in 2018) https://t.co/1v1B699tGt
@newlooklurker@cremieuxrecueil The average person being told their BMI is high doesn't change their habits either. Unfortunately, the average person being told they have Diabetes or Hypertension also do not change their habits. Changing a habit is difficult.