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wash bucket posted:We had a wide format printer error out and refuse to print because one of the parts was at the end of it's rated life. It wasn't broken. It just printed exactly 10,000 feet or whatever and then crossed its arms and stopped until we paid for a professional service plan. AI is going to fix this. Your printer will send a digital copy everything you print to a central location, where sophisticated AI will analyze the stress it puts on your printer parts, knowing exactly when to completely disable printing, coinciding with the replacement part that was already charged to your account and sent to your home. Your printer will refuse to print at all at the precise moment the replacement part is delivered.* All this is required, and you cannot opt out of it without fully disabling your printer. *Premium shipping required. doctorfrog fucked around with this message at 04:47 on Apr 3, 2024 |
# ? Apr 3, 2024 04:39 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 08:35 |
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Ronald Reagan's on the dollar coin
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 04:46 |
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doctorfrog posted:Ronald Reagan's on the dollar coin listening to reagan by killer mike whilst reading this post
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 04:52 |
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There's a store you can bring your poo poo to and they print stuff for you and it's like $2 but also the library. Newbs.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 05:07 |
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Vampire Panties posted:I had to print out my tax returns and take them into an IRS Office, because I didn't receive the letter to confirm my identity in the mail (which is its own enshittification, because apparently filing fake tax returns with other peoples SSNs is a thing) It cost me like $10 to fax two pages at Staples recently. Just two pages faxed
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 05:11 |
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doctorfrog posted:Ronald Reagan's on the dollar coin this cover of billy joel sucks
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 05:54 |
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poo poo Fuckasaurus posted:Ikea now requires an email address for you to buy tall, narrow furniture like dressers. They pinkie promise they won't use it for anything other than to send safety information, but if that were the case it'd come in the box like it has for the last twenty years. I've had way, way too much experience with companies gathering my data on false pretenses to use for commercial means to be fooled by this, and while I expect this from an American company, I went out of my way to go to IKEA specifically because this sort of brazen bullshit doesn't happen there. Well, didn't. Does now, though! I think their dressers killed enough kids that the either IKEA’s lawyers or the USCPSC required that they be able to contact buyers of these items for recalls. It isn’t just to send you a wordless PDF depicting the installation of a wall anchor or something, they still desperately print those in the instructions for everyone to ignore.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 06:34 |
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Pennywise the Frown posted:They didn't even win this year! All the more reason to cut everything else's budget because clearly you're not spending enough on the football coach. They'll hire one who in 20 years will be the county's feudal lord Woolie Wool fucked around with this message at 06:45 on Apr 3, 2024 |
# ? Apr 3, 2024 06:41 |
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Lmao I just got a call from a local cell number that told me in stilted, robotic English (not a common language here outside of business) that my ID card has been involved in illegal activity and there's a warrant for my arrest. And that I should press 1 to speak to one of their officers. Never got a scam phone call here, let alone one in English. They must be really counting on the 0.01% that responds to this being the dumbest motherfuckers in the world that will go through the whole scam.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 11:43 |
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mobby_6kl posted:Never got a scam phone call here, let alone one in English. They must be really counting on the 0.01% that responds to this being the dumbest motherfuckers in the world that will go through the whole scam. That's exactly how it works. If they snag someone reasonably skeptical they might bail out on the scam half way through and that's a waste of the scammer's time. Like putting wide gaps in your net so the small fish can swim through.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 11:57 |
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mobby_6kl posted:Lmao I just got a call from a local cell number that told me in stilted, robotic English (not a common language here outside of business) that my ID card has been involved in illegal activity and there's a warrant for my arrest. And that I should press 1 to speak to one of their officers. I occasionally get weird scammer calls in what I believe is Mandarin. Spanish would make a lot more sense I also got one of those scary we-have-kidnapped-your-mother calls, but the acting was so bad I thought it was a skit
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 12:22 |
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wash bucket posted:That's exactly how it works. If they snag someone reasonably skeptical they might bail out on the scam half way through and that's a waste of the scammer's time. Like putting wide gaps in your net so the small fish can swim through. Sometimes, but very often the scammers are just incompetent themselves, or don't feel optimizing the scam would be worthwhile (i.e. screening for people who actually speak the language of the scam would improve the share of potentially exploitable idiots among called numbers, but calling random numbers from the database is faster)
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 12:44 |
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AARD VARKMAN posted:Lol Black Mirror eerily prescient once again. The only real difference between this and the appliance-running cookies in White Christmas is how captive the workers are.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 13:52 |
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I was under the impression the Amazon stores just used RFID. It seems like that would be easier than hordes of workers staring at video but IDK.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 14:40 |
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cat botherer posted:I was under the impression the Amazon stores just used RFID. It seems like that would be easier than hordes of workers staring at video but IDK. Oh my sweet summer child... Much like Elon's aversion to LIDAR, Amazon wanted very much not to use something so tried and true as RFID. Possibly because both are licensed technologies? Who knows?
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 15:22 |
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anonumos posted:Oh my sweet summer child...
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 15:34 |
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The most surprising thing about that is how long it's taken for that detail to finally come out. years and years of this, not one major substantial leak or anonymous post of "oh yeah it's not that, it's actually just:" that gained any traction.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 15:46 |
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What is people on the store … scanned each item … so that a record of the items purchased could be made
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 16:25 |
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Slotducks posted:The most surprising thing about that is how long it's taken for that detail to finally come out. I mean, the one liner twitter reposts of the story are mostly a misrepresentation of what really happened. It's not such a huge story. The shops did really use machine learning to track the purchases and then human labor to review/correct cases where it wasn't sure and to generate new training data. I don't think there were a lot of people who weren't aware of that. If you use machine learning technology like Alexa, Siri, Midjourney, autopilot, ChatGPT, etc. you have to assume real people will look at the data to correct it or to add edge cases to the training data. There was nothing to leak. The big revelation is that they never got the technology to work well enough that it could deal with even a majority of purchases. Most of the receipts still had to be reviewed by humans up until the very end. It's a story about the failure of the technology, not a story about Amazon trying to outsource cashiers to India(cause that's just ridiculous).
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 16:34 |
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I think the outsourcing is the story tho.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 16:36 |
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euphronius posted:I think the outsourcing is the story tho. Lol yeah like, the story is they couldn't get the tech to work so they outsourced and Wizard of Oz'd it
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 16:38 |
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MrQwerty posted:Lol yeah like, the story is they couldn't get the tech to work so they outsourced and Wizard of Oz'd it Pay no attention to the several thousand Indian workers behind the curtain.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 16:42 |
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GABA ghoul posted:I mean, the one liner twitter reposts of the story are mostly a misrepresentation of what really happened. It's not such a huge story. The shops did really use machine learning to track the purchases and then human labor to review/correct cases where it wasn't sure and to generate new training data. I don't think there were a lot of people who weren't aware of that. If you use machine learning technology like Alexa, Siri, Midjourney, autopilot, ChatGPT, etc. you have to assume real people will look at the data to correct it or to add edge cases to the training data. There was nothing to leak. Every tom dick and harry don't know there's humans touching this poo poo. The AI magic fairy dust is real to the overwhelming population.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 17:15 |
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How is that not an April fools thing. It's so stupid. A bunch of people in India squinting at screens as it says "Buffering.." while screaming.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 17:23 |
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Philthy posted:How is that not an April fools thing. It's so stupid. A bunch of people in India squinting at screens as it says "Buffering.." while screaming. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8J3SljxsUh4
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 17:26 |
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Blue Moonlight posted:I think their dressers killed enough kids that the either IKEA’s lawyers or the USCPSC required that they be able to contact buyers of these items for recalls. It isn’t just to send you a wordless PDF depicting the installation of a wall anchor or something, they still desperately print those in the instructions for everyone to ignore. Maybe they shouldn't design furniture that kills kids?
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 21:09 |
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I mean....the dresser tipping poo poo was bad but I feel like 'watch your kids when climbing on furniture because it can tip and crush them' was a universal thing growing up, because we grew up in the era of 90lb tvs precariously balance on 'tv tables'. Way more kids have died under a TV than under an IKEA dresser, but you don't see us calling tube tvs 'kid crushers', though we should. 9 children have died under IKEA dressers since 1989. That's a low enough number for me to side-eye why the gently caress the kids were alone by themselves climbing furniture rather than blaming it on Big Dresser cutting corners. StrangersInTheNight fucked around with this message at 21:20 on Apr 3, 2024 |
# ? Apr 3, 2024 21:18 |
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I climbed a non-IKEA dresser in the 80's and it still fell on me. luckily the small lamp on top of the dresser fell in the right spot and kept the dresser from putting all of its weight on me. I was not being supervised. Those drawers seemed like good steps at the time.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 21:28 |
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I always assumed they were no more or less safe than any other dresser and the death count was just from there being a fuckload of IKEA furniture around.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 21:29 |
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I worked at a grocery store in high school and the Pepsi delivery guy had a son, maybe 7-8, who came into the store with him occasionally. Apparently the kid had a fish tank on his dresser and while pulling a drawer open the tank fell on him and smashed on his face. I saw him after he got out of the hospital and he had probably 300 stitches zigzagging across his entire face. He looked like Chucky the Killer Doll in the later movies. After that I was always really cautious about heavy stuff on dressers. That was 20 years ago, and I think about that kid sometimes. I hope he healed well and is doing good.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 21:39 |
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Yorkshire Pudding posted:I worked at a grocery store in high school and the Pepsi delivery guy had a son, maybe 7-8, who came into the store with him occasionally. Apparently the kid had a fish tank on his dresser and while pulling a drawer open the tank fell on him and smashed on his face. I saw him after he got out of the hospital and he had probably 300 stitches zigzagging across his entire face. He looked like Chucky the Killer Doll in the later movies. After that I was always really cautious about heavy stuff on dressers. Water weighs about 8lb or 3.6kg per GALLON. Your basic 10 gallon beginner fishtank is about 80lb. Not something you want on a stand not designed to support that weight. EDIT: gallon lol Desert Bus fucked around with this message at 21:48 on Apr 3, 2024 |
# ? Apr 3, 2024 21:46 |
Desert Bus posted:Water weighs about 8lb or 3.6kg per pound.
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 21:48 |
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Ok so I both hosed up my wording and I think my numbers are low. 8.34lb/3.785kg
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 21:50 |
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waters mass is 1 kg per liter, actually
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 21:58 |
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Americans, anything but metric even when metric
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 22:04 |
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A college chemistry teacher taught me “a pint’s a pound the world around” To remember water weight He also had a convertible car named Clyde and he often said he would get in Clyde and ride
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 22:08 |
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imagine having to remember a conversion factor other than 1 L = 1 kg lmao
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 22:11 |
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hot cocoa on the couch posted:imagine having to remember a conversion factor other than 1 L = 1 kg lmao When customary measurements were used outside the US usually every single industry and purpose had its own measurements (in the US, really still do, like with troy vs. avoirdupois ounces) and nobody cared about converting anything. Look up tons burthen (a unit of volume) for some true insanity, and once you got those "tons" or whatever off the ship you would probably have to measure them all over again
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 22:15 |
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UFOTacoMan posted:A college chemistry teacher taught me A US pint ≠ British pint, so no. Even in strictly US terms, a pint is 1.041lbs of water, so close, but not exact. Also a US dry pint ≠ US liquid pint. hot cocoa on the couch posted:imagine having to remember a conversion factor other than 1 L = 1 kg lmao
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 22:16 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 08:35 |
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hot cocoa on the couch posted:imagine having to remember a conversion factor other than 1 L = 1 kg lmao I always forget how much 1l is in m3 is though
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# ? Apr 3, 2024 22:22 |