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sfwarlock posted:This one they found is fancy. Apparently, from what I've overheard, computer-assisted steering (indicate where you want to go and it pathfinds), binocular vision to support a VR headset at the user end, and an arm with a finger suitable for pressing elevator buttons and pointing at things with the builtin laser pointer. Mount a nerf gun to a few of them and set them loose in the cube farms.
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# ? Mar 16, 2024 05:45 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:30 |
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I'd love a telepresence robot that can go under a desk and do cabling work on a cranky PC.
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# ? Mar 16, 2024 06:50 |
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I bet a bomb disposal robot can do that.
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# ? Mar 16, 2024 07:30 |
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sfwarlock posted:Yes, except I expect within a week this one will have a bag put over its head from behind, kicked down a stairwell, and then someone will wander in asking us to help "reset and setup" this "iPad they just bought used off Craigslist." That robot is going to be hosed up worse than hitchbot in Philly.
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# ? Mar 17, 2024 17:52 |
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Edit: wrong thread
AlexDeGruven fucked around with this message at 00:25 on Mar 20, 2024 |
# ? Mar 20, 2024 00:04 |
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mllaneza posted:I'd love a telepresence robot that can go under a desk and do cabling work on a cranky PC. Bite your tongue; I think my ability to do that is all that really keeps them from outsourcing me.
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 01:26 |
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sfwarlock posted:Bite your tongue; I think my ability to do that is all that really keeps them from outsourcing me. Okay, good point.
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 01:36 |
Shamelessly stolen from gossi on mastodonquote:Hot new tabletop scenario: you lay off lots of IT staff to pivot to AI and automation with a goal to cost cut, and then your remaining IT staff, who don’t understand what they are doing due to lack of institutional knowledge, deploy an automation that breaks a critical business process and plunges the business into chaos.
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 14:40 |
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 15:22 |
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Doesn't take AI to screw that sort of thing up, just trusting of information you find on The Web. Reminds me of something a minion did recently. There was a ticket to image a couple of computers of termed employees in a given department that he scooped out of the queue and didn't ask anyone about. Instead, he youtubes up "how to image a computer", finds a guy showing how to clonezilla (what is this, 1998?) your hard drive as a backup, and decides to go take over the computer of someone who's out sick, take theirs as a source, and clone - a raw hard drive image, from a domain joined computer - over two other computers. Chaos, naturally, ensued. I caught up to him and the situation about when he was googling "computer has lost a trust relationship with the domain". I'm starting to come around to the attitude espoused by a former coworker that it is bad and dangerous to use "the Googles" to look up errors, because people who do that just click on the first link and blindly do whatever it says.
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 15:58 |
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Is minion new to IT? Sounds like the sort of thing I would have done when I was just starting out and still conflating hobbyist with corporate IT.
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 16:26 |
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rafikki posted:Shamelessly stolen from gossi on mastodon I’m just thinking about this in the Discworld context, replace AI with wizardry and you’ve got yourself a great foundation for some silliness. Shame Terry Pratchett is no longer with us.
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 17:28 |
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They pretty much did build AI, they had Hex
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 19:00 |
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Hotel Kpro posted:They pretty much did build AI, they had Hex Nothing artificial about Hex.
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 19:07 |
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sfwarlock posted:I'm starting to come around to the attitude espoused by a former coworker that it is bad and dangerous to use "the Googles" to look up errors, because people who do that just click on the first link and blindly do whatever it says. I have told my juniors: "If you were following a doc written by the company in good faith or you were following instructions from a senior engineer in good faith, and you blew something up, then it's a teaching moment, and you're fine. If you run something off the Internet without vetting it with a senior engineer, you are taking your career in your own hands."
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# ? Mar 20, 2024 21:22 |
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klosterdev posted:Is minion new to IT? Sounds like the sort of thing I would have done when I was just starting out and still conflating hobbyist with corporate IT. Basically. I've already given him the feedback (more than once) that he doesn't know what he doesn't know and he needs to check with someone before doing something he hasn't done before. The "problem" is that our documentation is written as if you already know how to do and just need to know what to do. sfwarlock fucked around with this message at 03:05 on Mar 21, 2024 |
# ? Mar 21, 2024 02:21 |
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Raerlynn posted:I have told my juniors: "If you were following a doc written by the company in good faith or you were following instructions from a senior engineer in good faith, and you blew something up, then it's a teaching moment, and you're fine. Counterpoint: one of the prouder moments of my career. Approximately ten years ago, when I was a lowly level one admin, one night the office's Asterisk phone system had gone down and nobody knew why. All the SREs and seniors were asleep, so I did some googling, and freely tried a bunch of poo poo, and somehow I brought the drat thing back to life. I announced success by posting this video in the company chat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VxDgNORm2uU (I have a strong suspicion this this what got me promoted to a slightly-less-lowly level two admin.)
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 04:09 |
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It doesn’t help that Google results for any tech question have gotten unbelievably more lovely in the last few years and are now fully turning into an endless sea of generative AI slop.
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 15:21 |
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Entropic posted:It doesn’t help that Google results for any tech question have gotten unbelievably more lovely in the last few years and are now fully turning into an endless sea of generative AI slop. It really doesn't help that at some point someone at google decided that ignoring part of search queries was fine and good. I want to interact with this person in real life. "And what will you have for your breakfast, sir?" "I dunno, but I know I'm in the mood for sausage. What do you have with sausage?" "Searching for breakfast with sausage. Sausage and eggs; sausage, eggs and toast; bacon, eggs and toast; bacon and black pudding; spam and eggs; spam and toast and eggs; spam, spam- " "Wait, I said sausage!" "Missing:
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 15:34 |
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That boils my piss every time it happens
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 16:44 |
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sfwarlock posted:Basically. I've already given him the feedback (more than once) that he doesn't know what he doesn't know and he needs to check with someone before doing something he hasn't done before. The big problem with starting out in corporate IT is you frequently don't know what you don't know. I made plenty of mistakes like that when starting out, exercise patience with them, they'll get the hang of it with time.
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 17:19 |
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I've been in IT for over 20 years and I barely know what I don't know.
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 17:21 |
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GreenNight posted:I've been in IT for over 20 years and I barely know what I don't know. 35 years. I barely know what I know.
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 17:32 |
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sfwarlock posted:It really doesn't help that at some point someone at google decided that ignoring part of search queries was fine and good. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mBcY3W5WgNU
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 18:23 |
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Darchangel posted:35 years. I barely know what I know. 20 years in, and I know what I know. And it ain't much.
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 19:00 |
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sfwarlock posted:It really doesn't help that at some point someone at google decided that ignoring part of search queries was fine and good. This is extremely stupid, but you can force it to include your search term by putting it in quotes.
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 20:46 |
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Would it be irredeemable of me to put my name in for a lateral move position in another department 3 months after starting here? Turns out I detest project management and want to go back to managing IT
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 21:56 |
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Not at all?
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 22:14 |
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guppy posted:This is extremely stupid, but you can force it to include your search term by putting it in quotes.
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# ? Mar 21, 2024 22:47 |
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A Frosty Witch posted:Would it be irredeemable of me to put my name in for a lateral move position in another department 3 months after starting here? Definitely pursue the path to your happiness. Don't wait.
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 01:31 |
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Bloody Vikings. guppy posted:This is extremely stupid, but you can force it to include your search term by putting it in quotes. Yes it is and yes you can. But I shouldn't have to say Simon Says on every term.
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 01:42 |
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I agree, that's why I said it was stupid, I'm just offering a workaround in case people don't know.
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 02:21 |
sudo show results with sausage
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 02:35 |
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A Frosty Witch posted:Would it be irredeemable of me to put my name in for a lateral move position in another department 3 months after starting here? Do what makes your life better! Check the office politics of your place - some institutional hiring committees value longevity/loyalty more than others, i'm sure you know the deal, and prepare to allude to/address it in the interview if you need to
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 07:27 |
sfwarlock posted:It really doesn't help that at some point someone at google decided that ignoring part of search queries was fine and good. Thankfully, verbatim search (found in Tools > All Results) can still be forced, but it's a per-search thing, so like others I end up using quotation marks, or more recently, another search engine as default.
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 08:01 |
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BlankSystemDaemon posted:It's been a good five years since Google started internally rewriting keywords to match what it thinks you're searching for (I suspect they do this to boost ad hit rates, as it's the thing Alphabet make their money on), and in the last few years, they've decided that what the world really wants is to use natural language searches, similar to how you'd ask one of those digital assistants found in smartphones. I'll add to this. Chrome history has become really lovely because of this. I was reading a webstory, and sometimes fish the last chapter out of history to hit next, instead of going to the main page. As a consequence, searching for 'developer' gets you results, but 'developer e' does not. It just doesn't seem to do partials any more, and/or sometimes its fucky with urls too. Not super happy about it
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 08:09 |
TheParadigm posted:I'll add to this. Chrome history has become really lovely because of this. I was reading a webstory, and sometimes fish the last chapter out of history to hit next, instead of going to the main page. When I'm forced to use a Chromium-based browser, I very quickly get frustrated by ctrl+tab not switching between two tabs like alt+tab does windows, but instead just selecting the next open. Then I install Firefox.
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 08:27 |
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I still use a firefox too, (a fork, but still) and its searches work properly and actually go looking through the database based on what the user actually put in - not what it thinks it means. This means it supports partials and typos. To go off my above example, if i typo 'evelopers' into firefox history to pull out an old post, video, whatever, it shows results for 'developers' because it actually looks for partials. if I make the same search in chrome it shows nothing. Same thing with the omnibar. Even if I have opens tabs with the right name, without the errant D missing, its useful. It doesn't look for partials, actually carry out the search - and i'm sure its based on idiot or typo proofing the software, but still: It would be nice if its internals worked like firefox, and wasn't just takin a poo poo over basic stuff like that.
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 09:02 |
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Oh boy, look what Glassdoor did https://twitter.com/carnage4life/status/1771132649391993063?s=46&t=dQl6Iu6Wmq7antcZ30Prgw
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 14:13 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:30 |
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Well that will kill the platform, congratulations to all involved
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# ? Mar 22, 2024 14:41 |