-Timestamps- [0:00] *Chapters.* [1:15] *Intro.* [1:56] *Topic #1: OpenAI responds to NYT's lawsuit, states it's "meritless."* > 5:04 Linus ironically suggests using ChatGPT for defense, Luke does it. > 5:46 Linus on LMG's CES videos, discusses Intel's Thunderbolt 5, WiFi 7, AI booths. > 10:21 Luke mentions some of ChatGPT's defenses for OpenAI's case. [11:48] *Topic #2: Covering CES 2024.* > 11:57 rabbit r1, a programmable AI assistant & commands device. > 16:06 Why not make this an app? Riley's thoughts on the device. > 17:32 Plaud Note AI, who needs this? Luke on external devices & sensitive information. > 23:42 Urtopia's AI powered e-bike, Luke on hallucinations & AI integration. > 29:51 Alienware AW2725DF, 4K 360Hz OLED, Linus mentions SC video & motion clarity. > 34:55 Nvidia G-SYNC Pulsar, motion clarity, Plouffe's monitor, display size. > 40:25 MSI MEG 321URX, AI-powered QR-OLED monitor, cheating using the mini-map. > 46:07 TARKOV's 11K ban wave, cheats & barrier of entry, Linus's basement LAN. > 50:38 Hisense 110" TV, double the peak brightness & dimming zones. [51:35] *Merch Messages #1 ft. Dan's message.* > 53:37 Which is better for an upgrade, a monitor or a TV? ft. AI powered grill. > 56:21 What's a piece of tech you've seen that was a huge disappointment? [Cont.] *Topic #2: Covering CES 2024.* > 1:03:35 The thinness, resolution, brightness & bezel war, Luke on Linus's TV. > 1:11:28 Samsung The Wall, AI powered grill's price & reasons to get it. > 1:13:49 AMD AM4 X3D & G series, Linus recommends used GPUs over entry cards. > 1:18:37 Nvidia RTX 4070S, RTX 4070 Ti S & 4080S, upselling behavior. [1:23:14] *Topic #3: SAG-AFTRA's agreement for AI digital voice, Steam on AI games.* > 1:25:05 Linus declines covering Nvidia's virtual bar, many companies lay offs. > 1:30:02 Linus on the negative impact of many games releasing at once. [1:32:41] *Sponsor - Wicked Cushions.* > 1:34:27 Dan catches cushions, Luke on cushion support for older Sennheisers. [1:37:42] *Merch Messages #2.* > 1:37:55 Google Workspace destroys data after hard deadline with no support. > 1:40:22 Can you talk a bit more about displays? ABL's necessity? Draw & heat? > 1:45:20 Using RFID name tags in the consumer space? ft. Biochip, the Bible. [1:50:09] *Topic #4: eBay pays $3M over employees cyberstalking & harassment lawsuit.* > 1:57:22 Quebec cops warn posting porch pirate videos “invades their privacy.” [1:58:13] *LTTStore's new lounge pants, sizing guides.* > 2:00:05 Last call to get the LTT CES 2024 T-shirt, hoodies stock deal. [2:03:12] *Topic #5: Wacom & Wizard of the Coast apologizes over AI promotional images.* [2:05:58] *Topic #6: Twitch announces layoffs, 50% of original staff gone.* > 2:06:27 Is Twitch done? Ingesting stream resolutions, Twitch's unprofitability. > 2:08:49 Other companies lay off more, Linus on low money flow & interest rates. > 2:11:15 LayoffsFYI website. [2:13:04] *Topic #7: Valve takes down Portal64 & TF2 Source 2.* [2:14:29] *Topic #8: Video games are no longer the biggest entertainment medium in the UK.* [2:16:59] *Topic #9: Framework discloses data breach due to getting phished.* [2:24:24] *Topic #10: LG's smart washing machine uses 3.6GB of data per day.* [2:26:07] *Merch Messages #3 ft. WAN Show After Dark, WAN mid vacations.* > 2:27:31 What stood up to you from CES booths that didn't have to do with AI? > 2:29:01 Linus's Super Chexx model. > 2:29:19 Linus's racket specs, how do you get high-end rackets in Canada? [2:30:39] *Origin PC's envelopes.* [Cont.] *Merch Messages #3.* > 2:31:15 Linus's Bigscreen headset ft. PPI MicroOLED VR display, LMG Southie comments on the envelopes. > 2:33:23 More live WAN Shows in the future with the LAN center? > 2:34:23 AM4 lacks Winserver support, be the devil's advocate on not buying EPYC? > 2:35:43 If you could make or repeal laws, what would you do? > 2:37:19 Advice to juggle being a father, a husband & working? > 2:38:51 Favorite piece of tech that was ahead of its time & held that feeling? > 2:39:35 Despite LMG's relations, what is MAC Address's value with covering Apple products? > 2:41:42 Tech advice for a new parent, especially towards infants? > 2:42:26 Would Linus host classes or content on guidelines learnt from workflow? > 2:44:45 Is it difficult to deal with people coming to you at events like CES? > 2:49:29 Advice for not enjoying engineering for companies' profits? > 2:53:49 Have companies ever responded to Linus chastising them? > 2:56:12 Luke's thoughts on EoD being removed & his current stance on TARKOV? > 3:00:10 How much has Luke's experience with Pixel 8 reflected on Linus's review? > 3:01:04 Thoughts on the current state of the internet where 5 main sites are accessed? > 3:02:55 Was Linus aware of Halo's mouse aim assist? Is this good for FPS' future? > 3:03:28 Do you think Thunderbolt 5 is the push Intel GPUs needed? > 3:04:23 Was Linus's purchase of the TCL TV the only time he got buyer's remorse? > 3:05:50 Have you enjoyed tech for what it is instead of how to script a video around it? > 3:06:51 Wishes you had for yourself or your loved ones? Long term goals? > 3:09:28 How do you stay organized? > 3:10:32 One non-tech skill you're proud of having or wished you had? > 3:17:04 Does Luke think there's a benefit in ITIL certification? > 3:18:25 Who gave the best tech advice you weren't expecting? [3:20:58] *Outro.* Sorry about the delay, had a blackout due to maintenance that lasted to 3 PM. WAN Show started at 5 AM, so that should give some context as to how long it took (Advantages of having only instant noodles - nothing is ruined!) Side note: donations are on my channel's about page.
Then you clearly don't know how it looks like. The hand is supposed to be extended in the same angle as the arm. The arm is also supposed to be angled upwards and it needs to be the right srm unless you don't have one. Only tank drivers salutet differently because of limited space and the mustache man hinself also used a different gesture. They clearly show a stop gesture.
I love seeing topics on cyber security topics, especially for the fact of spreading information on hacks that happened and data breaches. Not everyone pays attention to company hacks, especially those not into tech, so when channels like LTT talk about it actually helps people out.
Internet companies: What do you mean i am breaking privacy laws? Everyone is denying cookies, analytics and tracking permissions. How else am i going to get the data i need without ignoring their choices.
I love the AI route we are going. A monitor using AI to help the player. A anti cheat system using AI to detect that via a camera. A camera using AI to remove the cheating evidence so the anti cheat cant see it .... 😂
Continue this back and forth of AI cheats and AI cheat prevention and you get endless business for random AI companies, it's like a loop that makes money.
The app you’re talking about is Komoot. But the best part of Komoot is that you can find routes other bikers shared, or plan a route beforehand according to your needs, you can also import GPX files. The autogenerated routes are most of the time better as google, but autogenerated bike routes will always remain problematic.
1:38:00 - I bet this is related to the cancellation of the unlimited storage option of Google Workspaces. At first they prevented people from uploading more data, and lately they have been giving deadlines after which the data, all or above the current Workspaces' data cap are just deleted.
Honestly sorry to hear the channel is struggling a lil right now. I seriously enjoy the content, and mentality of LTT you guys legit rock. I wish the best for the future growth cause y'all work so hard you deserve it
@@harrisonjr98It wasn't. OP is misinterpreting. They discussed that internally they need to push harder because they know the current economic climate is looking rough. Not that they're down or anything. I'm guessing OP is referring to around 2:09:35
@@jfluffydog2110 LTT is stagnating right now it's all in the metrics, they didn't outright say it but I check their metrics time to time. They are well equipped to handle this just wishing them more growth in the future
25:17 in Estonia I can't even see the bike tab in my google maps... But I do when I move about 80 km north to Helsinki Finland. I hate these automatic settings you have no control over that someone else arbitrarily decided for you without a good reason or even a reason at all.... Everything is gradually moving towards less freedom and I hate it... Like boiling a frog.
24:28 E-bike range is kind of a marketing gimmick because you can just turn the motor assist off and get unlimited range. 200 miles or even km with any assist power is pretty impressive though.
2:55:45 There's a couple bugs in the Outlook Android app, #1 where if you get a notification for an email, and tap the notification, many times the email will not load, it will just display an error. #2 recently I've had trouble opening attachments in the app; when you tap an attachment (like a PDF) to open, it will launch chrome, make me login and 2FA authenticate then display the email in chrome where you have to click the attachment again to download it in the browser. WHY?!?!
After hearing the eBay story idk if I'm ever going to use them again, not that I have lots in the past, but knowing that the CEO was willing to engage in practices like that...
To the workspace story: I had a paid workspace account for an email, then moved on to another option. Was paired with my google drive. When I had 2 months left on my sub I cancelled the renewal and they wiped everything immediately rather than giving me the last two months I had to migrate my data out. No backup, no option to undo, no one to talk to.
The best way for openai to act is to scan all the legal documents against it and at the same time all the evidence that is presented, which is all public access in court, which then means all the data can be used, of course depending on the country.
I think Ai npcs will be great in open world games. But the story important characters should be voice acted for real. Also Ai commentary in sport games would be a game changer to get rid of repeated lines that ruin the immersion
Man one thing I never get is why companies make so many products like make just 3 or 4 products but make them good, good enough for their price bracket and make sure no one comes near them, everyone then will come back to you for the upgrade. I mean, what is the reason to make 10 bad products which sells less and is not good in their price bracket.🤬
Because that’s now this works. That’s not how any of this works. Jokes aside, diversifying a company’s product offering is how you safely make money. Investing all that time and effort into so few products, even if they are the best, limits your market share cap (a satisfied customer usually doesn’t come back for more if they’re happy with what they’ve got), and if somebody makes something better, you’re SOL. Plus, often times resources/experience with one product can be often transferred over to other similar products - which means less overhead per product. Now I understand this comment was made in reference to the whole GPU super lineup thing that Nvidia dropped…with respect to that issue, that is a pricing error, rather than a “bad product offering”. Recycling under performing chips/dies to make “lower end” or “in the middle” cards is nothing new. The price is just bad.
Yes, true. I remember back when Motorola had the Moto E, G, X and Z. I think it was great to know all the options. Take a look at their product palette now and you can't even tell how all all the same phones inside a family are related.
Usually there are many products so they can use chips that didn't pass quality control for higher spec products. With that said, there is some companies that do what you're saying. Toyota rings a bell for me.
1:11:16 Since for a long time these TVs are going to be out of reach for normal people do you think a Movie Theater (probably one of those smallish Dinner Theatres) will switch from using a Profector to using a Megascreen like your TCL (but probably even bigger). I think if they're the future they'd need to be more easily serviced like how your one has a dead pixel.
Tbh at that scale you could get a technician to come in and solder a replacement part if it's not a substrate based assembly. Or just have replacement panels where a technician recalibrates the screen to compensate for any variance between the panels.
Why is the app for my LG refrigerator 815.7MB? There is no data logs , photos or videos. It just gives me notifications if a door is left open and lets me remotely adjust the ice settings.
It's a live stream not a multi hour edited video and they do add them a day later but also they've talked about this and the person doing it can stop any time it's not like they are being forced to keep up with the show every week
Time stamps would give away where the ad breaks are and people would only watch the segments they are interested in. Its a choice between making the experience better for us and selling more screwdrivers.
@@Schmuly It shouldn't be too hard for someone on staff to push a button whenever they change topics and add a quick timestamp to notepad or something somewhere (maybe even something Luke or Linus could do themselves, if they're not too busy) they could then pass those notes along to someone else to come in and add timestamps to the description or in a comment. They shouldn't rely on fans in the community to do it, and they could easily afford a dude who comes in once a week whose only job is to push a button and keep track of timestamps...but they don't do it.
For the cheating display, in games like hunt showdown or tarkov, having it analyze for hidden enemies would be a big advantage. Couple that with audio analysis by having it listen to gun sounds, foot steps and such, you could probably have it display a fairly precise map of enemy movements in that type of games. I don't know how to detect something like this. Behavioral analysis may be able to detect if a player is acting on information that should not be available to them to that degree. But since all that comes from information technically available to the player that may be very difficult.
@@PhilipPetkov I think this argument is weak, it takes the skill out of managing your information and making the connections, If a program just tells you "oh those footsteps you aren't sure about? They're coming from behind this wall, here's a circle on the wall where the sound is coming from", you are no longer making the connections through your skill and experience. If not everyone has access to the tool, nobody should have the tool because it creates an uneven playing field.
Until recently there weren't any repercussions. The SEC and equivalent just let companies get away with shit. There's some legit conspiracies (not batshit crazy theories but actual, not so secret, conspiracies) behind a lot of it. As they say, follow the money.
The thing missing from HDR TVs is IR (infrared) and emanating warmth hitting you from the sunset on screen. When are TVs going to be able to cast sunlight across your (real life) living room carpeting when you open the venetian blinds and sliding glass door in a video game?
Nvidia Pulsar and that 360hz oled are basically just giving you the same experience a 120hz crt did back in the day. The crt inherently already has the strobing built in.
48:30 why are they talking about this as if its some grand idea? This is the only proper way to share data between server and client. You should never send data to the client that they shouldn't have...?
I actively applauded when Linus got up and walked away during the Framework discussion. It's just one of those little things that shows he has integrity.
According to everyone during the scandal period Linus is devoid of integrity. It was obvious to me then and I think obvious to most now that it was all clickbait.
5:00 but is ChatGPT a lawyer or an accepted expert and would its defense/opinion taken into account in court? And now ask ChatGPT for a strategy against using the data.
20:00 That is actually totally ass backwards. Building out of the phone only happens because 2 reasons: 1. Apple being Apple and closing stuff up, making their users devices dysfunctional. 2. Processors are so efficient now and chips so small, that we can process and store stuff on devices as thin as phone cases. In reality we don't need that. It's incredible that it can be just an app on a normal Android phone. I have auto call recording with ACR dialer on my Android phone for ages now. Yeah, on some phones access to call audio is blocked if you are not rooted, but access to mic is there, so you can hear at least what you said and promised on the call. They even have a little helper app, published elsewhere from Google play due to recording being against Google Play store policies. It's weird that an assistant plus this basic functionality is a million dollar Kickstarter justification with a snap-on device. It's a single-purpose device fixing a single flaw on another certain device. A mere problem solver so to speak. The problem, however can be simply solved by just getting an Android device instead.
NO! You DON'T want ChatGPT to write your pleadings or arguments. A pair of lawyers tried that in US Federal court. ChatGPT made up cases to use as references, and it nearly (or did) get the lawyers disbarred. Their law firm was fined heavily for the stunt and the lawyers lack of response when called out and given an opportunity to save themselves.
@@drkastenbrotIt didn't cite existing cases in its argument. It made up cases complete with fake citation numbers and everything. Had they read it, they would have seen it as complete bupkiss. They handed the opposition one of those rare moments the opposition gets to spank you with your own words. You never hand the other side a loaded weapon and help them aim it at you. The defense just looked at it, and told the judge that none of the cases cited were real. And the judge was PISSED they even tried it.
@@jackielinde7568yeah you shouldn't use it to literally write the pleading and then submit that unchecked (which is what the lawyer that was sanctioned for doing that did). They're just asking it for broad conceptual arguments which is a completely different thing...
TV-stuff: I just thought of a thing; brightness capacity is probably important, Smell-O-Vision will remain a bit of a joke but! What could be done and really boost immersion is radiant heat. Sun, explosions, exiting a climate controlled car to hot climate. Rather simple IR-emitters could do it. Encoding would be lacking, but AI could probably work it out from frame analysis (maybe with some look-ahead to counter device lag). Room would need AC though...
As a bike guy, I don’t trust any ebike startup company that has additional proprietary tech on it. When the bottom falls out, there’s going to be a lot of e-waste that can’t be repaired. I trust Bosch, Yamaha, then less so shimano steps, then less so Bafang, but there is no margin in these things, so nobody wants to touch them other than marketing direct to consumer brands because there is volume at low margin.
Btw, it's not just the nits of brightness, but the color spectrum. And yeah, I know you know that it's not the full color spectrum, but with the sun especially you're forgetting that people can see varying degrees of ultraviolet light. Cameras definitely aren't capturing that and screen's definitely aren't reproducing it.
Don't normally comment but want to make a point for anyone from LTT: The complaints about the "salute" are ridiculous. I'm a big old lefty and there's no way I would ever consider that gesture a salute and I was actually incredibly confused when I saw people commenting about it. LTT's audience has clearly become so big that there's always a subset of people trying to take them down over something. Ignore the hate, loved the show.
3:07:47 to Linus, as a child who’s parents had this same concern after having to move to a new home 12+ hours away. Your child will find new friends to make connections with. I don’t actually think they’ll even loose their old friends either considering how connected our world is anyways.
22:30 can someone explain who would be at fault if you (someone at an agentcy or otherwise has access to confidentional information. Be it govermental or private Business) talk to someone who uses this transsciber but does not make this clear, and confidential information ends up on OpenIAs server / the next Version of ChatGPT?
1:37:12 Linus, I still think you should go to an ROG Phone. As a person who recently switched from a Note 8 to an ROG 6, so similar to yours, I have found it excellent and easy. The last remaining Phone with a Headphone Jack and no Notch (as far as I know) was the biggest reason I chose it, but after having it, my favourite features are the Battery life and two USB=C ports to charge it.
17:32 OK, I have an android and I have had automatic voice recording for years now, which does the recording into small AAC files and transcripting and all that stuff can easily be done in post. Apple not allowing this, means we get so much more extra produced crap like this? And it's good thing? Like we have problem in stores here where stores have NFC customer loyalty cards...but apple doesn't allow using NFC on iPhone so mobile cards have been android only so far. Until now where stores are installing new readers to read QR-codes from customers phones screens. So much extra stuff just because apple disallows things.
(the comment is NOT in an angry tone. apologies if it seems as such! I just like talking about TF2 and Portal) Valve "cracking down" on fan projects is interesting; TF Source 2 deliberately took assets and gameplay from Team Fortress 2, *without* Valve's permission. GMod may be a clear defense for TF/S2, but you must note that GMod has a legal liscense to use assets from Source Engine. Alongside this, if you would wish to use assets from a game like Counter Strike: Source, you must OWN the game, then mount it to GMod, turning missing texture models into the actual CS:S models. TF/S2 had none of this. Portal 64 had no legal threat from Valve. Valve only advised the creator of Portal 64 that due to using Nintendo's repositories, Nintendo may pursue legal action. And everyone knows nobody can out-copyright Nintendo. That being said, I still think the backlash against Valve is justified. At the same time as the DMCA being notified to the public, the TF2 item servers went down for a bit under 2 days, making ALL TF2 servers (including community servers) force players into being completely stock only. No hats, no taunts, no weapons. Which while that's a really fun twist to the game (Hats, cosmetics, taunts are irrelevant to this--but not actually, since a lot of them are worth a TON) forcing players to play with stock classes, it's ridiculous that this game just hit an all-time-high this last summer and this is how Valve treats the game. Alongside this, the bot crisis is still running rampant. And if an intern just wheeled their chair in the TF2 room, it would be fixed in less than a week. But nooo.
Regarding the AI Lawsuit one could argue, if you don't allow the AI to be trained on those articles and knowledge, how can you allow people to base their knowledge, decisions and actions on the same things?
At the bottom, the problem is the idea that information can be owned. It's up to entrepreneurs to determine how to make money. Other people shouldn't be required to make the incentives for them.
It really isn't, why do you people bother watching a long form type of video if you only want to pick and choose the exact topics they cover for you? I've never understood you guys who need the timestamper to handle your attention spans for you
@@Novashadow115 Because this is a news show and people have certain topics they want to hear about and others who don't? It's really not that hard to understand
The reason I'm not surprised you have no buyers remorse for the tv is you didn't buy it with the intention of keeping it. You bought it for the video and it being amazing was a bonus.
02:53:40 if the company isn't chasing profits, it's most likely not going to pay as well. Unfortunately, it almost always means "heavily underpaid". Environmental lawyers have a harder job and get 1/10th the pay of corporate lawyers. If a company is "for-profit with good margins and a soul", or just a successful non-profit, you'll find that people there are well paid, but getting in so 1000x harder because they have a million people apply each year
The argument actually sounds like an appeal to jury nullification. Basically telling the court "you can't find against us because it will kill AI with the precedent it sets"
As an OSHA trained Person, and someone who takes safety fairly frick'n seriously... they all got WAY LESS than a slap on the wrist... They besmirch the name of Safety Personnel everywhere with all that (speaking of the Ebay moment of the show)... they got away with murder so to speak.
I don't know if this is similar to what Luke was talking about, but I struggle with the amount of time it takes my brain to process incoming information. As an adult, I've noticed it takes my brain longer to comprehend what is happening around me compared to most other people. Because of this, I prefer turn based strategy games; faster paced games tend to require a certain level of reflexive speed to succeed, which I can't do very well. In a scenario where someone were to throw a ball at me, my brain would have just processed the fact that a ball is coming towards me by the time that ball has already hit me-- which is a real thing that has happened to me more than once. It affects everything I do, including video games, driving, and delivering a response in a conversation. I would also argue that in order to be precise in a game like air hockey, you need to be able to process information in the moment quickly enough that you can adapt to the situation and deliver a precise shot.
Oh no. I just bought an LG washer and dryer from Costco online. 2:25:17 the topic title says 36GB a day which is a mistake because the article says 3.6GB a day, which is still a lot but not QUITE as much.
I dislike AI, but these lawsuits may make the situation worse, and set precedence on Copyright law and erode Fair Use in a way that could be used against real human artists, opening them up to lawsuits. In fact, a lot of corporations and lobbying groups (the same ones people worry will use AI & are doing the Internet Archive lawsuit) are actually sneakily using the (justified) furror over AI, or even working with some Anti-AI organizations, to push for laws or to set precedence to do exactly that, using it as an opportunity to expand copyright or erode fair use in general, under the guise of standing up for Artist's jobs/rights (And to be clear, AI IS a threat against people's careers and jobs, this is not a pro-AI post). Plus, a lot of people misunderstand how Copyright and Fair Use and how AI works: So here's my clarification on all this: First, context for other viewers who may not understand how Fair Use works (Obligatory disclaimer that IANAL and that my comment here is based on US law, for other countries it might be different): The main things considered in a Infringement case where a Fair use defense is claimed are 4 "pillars": The Purpose of a work (IE if the derivative work is commercial vs noncommercial, educational, etc) the Nature of the original work (if the original work is fictional or not, historically significant, etc), The amount and substantiality of the work used (how much of the original work was used/how important those used parts were) and the Effect on the value of the original work (does the deriative use hurt sales, impact the market, etc). If one or any of the pillars is more important then the others depends on the specifics of each case, and there's not a simple pass-fail for them either. There's also related concepts like if a use is Transformative (IE does the deriative use put a new artistic/creative spin on the original or does it serve a different use), Parody Claims, and a whole bunch of other things. Sometimes Judges make up new standards, too, and you can sort of "violate" all of these and still be Fair Use, or not violate much of them and still NOT be fair use. One last thing before we get into the actual legal issues around AI and issues with precedence against it impacting human art: GETTING Copyright protection and being Fair Use or not are two different things. Currently, AI generated art is not protected by Copyright since the position of the Copyright office is that it's not human made, and human authorship is a requirement for getting Copyright protection (mind you, that could change, originally photos were seen as not human authored either, I won't have space to get into that comparison here), but you DON'T need human authorship to win a Fair Use defense: For example, Authors Guild, Inc. v. Google, Inc found that google doing automated scanning and scraping of books and making them searchable was Fair Use and Transformative because it created a new use/purpose and was unlikely to impact the market value of the originals, among other things (Look up the article "Torching the Modern-Day Library of Alexandria"), and that case actually ties into some AI stuff, as we'll get to later. The AI themselves are made by looking at thousands or even millions of images, and compares them and tags them (which humans actually do help with) to glean stuff like composition, lighting, linework etc principals tied to specific prompt terms. The AI itself does not directly contain any of the actual image it's trained on, only similarities and differences between them, and it's not an image but is code describing those trends and patterns. Imagine a text description of an artist's style: This would obviously not be infringing (and in fact, style itself isn't even covered by US copyright law). If the OUTPUT images are transformative is gonna depend: If you ask it to spit out an image of Spider-Man on a bike, then well, Spiderman is still covered by Copyright. And if you're asking the AI to specifically modify an existing image rather then to generate a new one, and you can tell what the original image is, that's probably infringing too. But if you ask it to generate a "Dinosaur in a swimming pool", then chances are the image it spits out isn't going to significantly resemble any one image the AI was trained on, and in fact, may resemble any given input image LESS then if a human artist drew the same image relative to the references they used, since a human artist is only gonna be using a few references, not thousands which dilute each other. Here's where I get to the "People are advocating for anti-AI measures which could backfire on artists" stuff. Let's assume for a second that a court case happens which establishes that a AI output image which doesn't specifically resemble any one input work, or the AI itself, is found to not be transformative. Or that "Style" is now protected by Copyright. What are the wider impacts of this? As I said, legally, there's not inherently a distinction between AI and human made art from a Transformative-ness perspective. That ruling COULD absolutely create a situation where now even real human artists can get sued for their art happening to use similar composition or lighting or style to another piece of art or from a media corporation: Imagine people being sued by Toei for making "Dragon Ball style art" that doesn't actually feature DB characters or elements. If you think this sounds crazy, look at Music copyright infringement cases. It is FREQUENT for pieces of music to face lawsuits over incidental similarity because there's only so many notes you can use (and this is ironically why Music AI are only trained on royalty free music, unlike art AI), or all the drama that happens with Content ID [[[I need to come back and edit this comment to expand on this whole preceding section more]]] And this is PRECISELY what industry giants like Disney, Getty, the RIAA, MPAA, Adobe, etc want. People think these corporations are pro AI and they want to fire human artists and use AI instead (and well, they do, to an extent) but they're actually playing both sides: Many are also working alongside Anti AI advocacy groups or are pretending to be pro artis,, so they can push for more copyright protections and fair use limits as a way to "stop AI", but then also have more tools to go after smaller artists and creators online. You know the Concept Art Association's Anti AI fundraiser? It's working with the Copyright Alliance, which is made up of those corporations and also were behind SOPA, PIPA, ACTA, , which directly targeted online artists by forcing UA-cam style content ID filters on the whole internet. The Human Artistry Campaign? Also working with a bunch of industry lobbying groups like the RIAA and Author's Guild (which is also a pro-author union, but it, the Artist's Rights Alliance, and other some orgs which are ostensibly pro-worker tend to also support industry lobbying efforts) The latter of which is also one of the groups suing the Internet Archive for lending digital books, with the IA suit being supported by the other organizations as well. I don't wanna diss people, but some major anti AI/Pro artist Social media accounts are also celebrating the Internet Archive suit, framing it as somehow being a "victory against AI", or even cases where HUMAN photographers and artists get sued and lose their Fair use defenses (I will name some names: neilturkewitz is straight up a former RIAA representive). There was also a Washpost opinion piece claiming to be "pro artist" by a musician which are likewise by industry mouthpieces who repeats the same decades old claims about the internet hurting sales and, again, advocating for even human artists like Andy Worhol to lose Fair Use cases. Adobe outright suggested making it illegal for people to imitate each other's art style during a Senate testimoney hearing as a way to "fight AI" To be clear, it IS possible for lawsuits vs AI to be narrow enough that it mostly only impacta AI companies, if it heavily leans on the Purpose of a Work and the Effect on the Value of the original work portions of Fair Use determination to highlight that it's mostly seeking to replace the artists it pulled from. But given the amount of lobbying and literal astrotrufing media corporations are already doing and their involvement with lawsuits, and how historically the courts and lawmakers have listened to them and not small artists and creators, I think it's more likely we'd all get screwed then a surgical, AI targeted ruling/law. If people really want to fight against AI in a way that's actually pro-artist and won't risk empowering massive media corporations with expanded copyright laws that will enable them to DMCA people even more then they already do, then people should be working with the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Fight For the Future instead: Both of those organizations fight for for online artists and creators against corporate BS all the time. All of that said, here's my personal take: The real problem is the imbalance between corporations and workers/smaller players. Nobody cares if you get an AI to make art of Goku eating a hotdog, just like how nobody cares about DBZ fanart even if it's without permission. And even if no AI was involved, people would be mad if Disney aped the style of a smaller creator. The power imbalance is what matters, and I think people are losing sight of that. Given that that power imbalance and automation is going to hit other industries where Copyright isn't applicable at all, I don't think gutting fair use to try to fix it here is worth it
I'm also a little confused with regard to what the nyt actually did to produce that output... I tried providing the articles it did and as I would expect it just summarizes them... I tried asking it to complete the articles and it does not produce output that is even similar to the rest of the article. Their output seems to be verbatim. So I'd really love to see how they actually prompted it to get that output... I'm somewhat suspicious that they may have done something nutty like fed it the whole article earlier in the conversation or something. The exhibit implies that the only prompt they gave was a portion of the article, but that's just never how I've seen ChatGPT behave, either in 3.5 or 4.0. Giving any significant amount of text pretty much always results in a summary. This also scares me for stuff like search engines which more or less store an entire copy of all sites they crawl. Google will even happily show you the cached version of the page it has for that site. Unless I'm missing something that would also seem to be infringement under the logic of this suit. Many seem to be arguing that the prompt the nyt used doesn't matter, but I absolutely think it does if only because there's the chance they did something like I pose above.
There are countles sources of copyrighted materials OpenAI has used, right? So if they lose this case, a lot more cases will rise against OpenAI, right? So, it will be way too expensive for OpenAI to remain in business?
In this case they were able to get it to reproduce verbatim articles from the NYT. Any other copyright holder that can get it to reproduce their material would also have a strong case like this.
@@PippetWhippet there's no compulsory license here and the damages are going to be per publication and with statutory damages could be significant. Plus copyright fee shifts legal costs... NYT will want more than chump change to make this go away
To whoever said that biochips are the mark of the beast, I too am concerned about biochips, but until governments try to make them mandatory, I wouldn't be worried about them being the mark of the beast. Cheers brother
For the mark of the beast thing, government tracking is essentially what that means if you take away the Hollywood sensationalism. Basically a way that a government can track you, and you aren't allowed to buy or sell anything without it. Eventually the government decides that anyone who refuses to get it is the enemy, to the point that it carries a death sentence. If that sounds far fetched just look back a couple years to what people said should be done to the unvaccinated, throw in vaccine passports, and it's basically the same thing. The thing about the book of revelation is that it's essentially a guy from the first century having a vision about a time in our future, writing it all down, and having no idea what he's actually seeing. There's a place where a woman and child are rescued from danger by a giant eagle, and you kinda have to ask if he was just seeing an aircraft of some kind and didn't have any other point of reference. Or describes giant scorpions that shoot flame from their mouths and wonder if he's looking at a tank.
around 19:00 topic , call recording was an integral feature to almost every phone cheap or expensive , but with iOS and Android they took that away ....
Linus's casual mention of "The Palace" brought up some old, long-buried memories. I was on CompuServe before that, spending most of my time in the RPG "portal." Think I moved over to the Palace when we went to AOL.
optimal for desk space really depends how big your desk is mate, and 27" really isn't optimal for gaming. It sounds like you have a 27" and want to justify it to yourself.
@@jaydeep-p well it will depend on the main genre of game you play and desk space availability. For me 34" Ultrawide is optimal as it allows me to see more of the in-game world giving me an advantage of seeing enemies far left and right of me without having to have a zoomed out FOV
@@rossharper1983 how does it work in competitive games for you? Most I know with such screens have to do blackbars for competitive because they don't see the edges of the UI.
@@christoferstromberg6605 don't need to see the UI as much as I need to see enemies. Also depends how close you want to sit to it I guess, I can see the whole screen without any head movement and I'm using 34" non curved screen
Wouldnt the reaction of the audience finding out about cool stuff like the hidden options with the service remote make companies know in an even more clear"er" way that thats something that they should be more focused on to improve upon rather than lock it out! Thoughts?
Several reasons makes stuff like this complicated. If a few dedicated people do it, little harm is done. But if people start to buy a cheaper model and "unlocking it" rather than buy the premium model, now they are losing money. And if mainstream people do it, they might ruin or break the product and now they blame the brand, which can hurt them long term. As well as there somewhere within the company there is a person who will get 0 credit/positive outcome if it goes well, but that might lose their job if it doesn't. That person has 100% insentive to lock it down and play it safe.
1:17:47 I use my gt710 for my home server's primary gpu so that I can pass through my decent gpu to a vm. I wouldn't have bought it if AMD had igpu on everything
Everyone else: "thumbail looks like a nazi salute!" Me: "Reminds me of The Matrix when Neo stops all those bullets" 😆 Get your minds out of the gutter, damn
50:00 nah, the real reason it's the worst it's ever been is that community servers have been all but erased in recent games, public servers have always been less policed and not administrated, like, at all
Mean I do get everyones got different eyes and I've always had light sensitivity but is the brightness of a TV important to most ppl? Ive always opened the box and droped my brightness down 20-25% so everytime I here linus bring up the crazy brightness levels just sounds like a headache personally. Minor side note actually what "nits" rating would actually start to be an issue like linus saying hes getting flash banged but like that kinda brightness is it doing some real damage to the eyes?
Midday sun reflecting off a matte piece of paper is around 20 000 nits. Reflected flints off objects can be maybe an order of magnitude more. The Sun is quoted as 1.6 billion. It also depends on whether you're in a dark environment (dilated pupil) or not, in terms of total flux into the eye. Anecdotally, as a stupid kid I once tested watching an old photo flash directly from a few cm away. I saw the U-shaped flash tube as an afterimage for the rest of the day, but it was gone the next day. Quite thorough examinations of the eye as an adult have not discovered any damage (examinations were part of getting corrective laser surgery, and I was already short-sighted when I did the flash stunt).
-Timestamps-
[0:00] *Chapters.*
[1:15] *Intro.*
[1:56] *Topic #1: OpenAI responds to NYT's lawsuit, states it's "meritless."*
> 5:04 Linus ironically suggests using ChatGPT for defense, Luke does it.
> 5:46 Linus on LMG's CES videos, discusses Intel's Thunderbolt 5, WiFi 7, AI booths.
> 10:21 Luke mentions some of ChatGPT's defenses for OpenAI's case.
[11:48] *Topic #2: Covering CES 2024.*
> 11:57 rabbit r1, a programmable AI assistant & commands device.
> 16:06 Why not make this an app? Riley's thoughts on the device.
> 17:32 Plaud Note AI, who needs this? Luke on external devices & sensitive information.
> 23:42 Urtopia's AI powered e-bike, Luke on hallucinations & AI integration.
> 29:51 Alienware AW2725DF, 4K 360Hz OLED, Linus mentions SC video & motion clarity.
> 34:55 Nvidia G-SYNC Pulsar, motion clarity, Plouffe's monitor, display size.
> 40:25 MSI MEG 321URX, AI-powered QR-OLED monitor, cheating using the mini-map.
> 46:07 TARKOV's 11K ban wave, cheats & barrier of entry, Linus's basement LAN.
> 50:38 Hisense 110" TV, double the peak brightness & dimming zones.
[51:35] *Merch Messages #1 ft. Dan's message.*
> 53:37 Which is better for an upgrade, a monitor or a TV? ft. AI powered grill.
> 56:21 What's a piece of tech you've seen that was a huge disappointment?
[Cont.] *Topic #2: Covering CES 2024.*
> 1:03:35 The thinness, resolution, brightness & bezel war, Luke on Linus's TV.
> 1:11:28 Samsung The Wall, AI powered grill's price & reasons to get it.
> 1:13:49 AMD AM4 X3D & G series, Linus recommends used GPUs over entry cards.
> 1:18:37 Nvidia RTX 4070S, RTX 4070 Ti S & 4080S, upselling behavior.
[1:23:14] *Topic #3: SAG-AFTRA's agreement for AI digital voice, Steam on AI games.*
> 1:25:05 Linus declines covering Nvidia's virtual bar, many companies lay offs.
> 1:30:02 Linus on the negative impact of many games releasing at once.
[1:32:41] *Sponsor - Wicked Cushions.*
> 1:34:27 Dan catches cushions, Luke on cushion support for older Sennheisers.
[1:37:42] *Merch Messages #2.*
> 1:37:55 Google Workspace destroys data after hard deadline with no support.
> 1:40:22 Can you talk a bit more about displays? ABL's necessity? Draw & heat?
> 1:45:20 Using RFID name tags in the consumer space? ft. Biochip, the Bible.
[1:50:09] *Topic #4: eBay pays $3M over employees cyberstalking & harassment lawsuit.*
> 1:57:22 Quebec cops warn posting porch pirate videos “invades their privacy.”
[1:58:13] *LTTStore's new lounge pants, sizing guides.*
> 2:00:05 Last call to get the LTT CES 2024 T-shirt, hoodies stock deal.
[2:03:12] *Topic #5: Wacom & Wizard of the Coast apologizes over AI promotional images.*
[2:05:58] *Topic #6: Twitch announces layoffs, 50% of original staff gone.*
> 2:06:27 Is Twitch done? Ingesting stream resolutions, Twitch's unprofitability.
> 2:08:49 Other companies lay off more, Linus on low money flow & interest rates.
> 2:11:15 LayoffsFYI website.
[2:13:04] *Topic #7: Valve takes down Portal64 & TF2 Source 2.*
[2:14:29] *Topic #8: Video games are no longer the biggest entertainment medium in the UK.*
[2:16:59] *Topic #9: Framework discloses data breach due to getting phished.*
[2:24:24] *Topic #10: LG's smart washing machine uses 3.6GB of data per day.*
[2:26:07] *Merch Messages #3 ft. WAN Show After Dark, WAN mid vacations.*
> 2:27:31 What stood up to you from CES booths that didn't have to do with AI?
> 2:29:01 Linus's Super Chexx model.
> 2:29:19 Linus's racket specs, how do you get high-end rackets in Canada?
[2:30:39] *Origin PC's envelopes.*
[Cont.] *Merch Messages #3.*
> 2:31:15 Linus's Bigscreen headset ft. PPI MicroOLED VR display, LMG Southie comments on the envelopes.
> 2:33:23 More live WAN Shows in the future with the LAN center?
> 2:34:23 AM4 lacks Winserver support, be the devil's advocate on not buying EPYC?
> 2:35:43 If you could make or repeal laws, what would you do?
> 2:37:19 Advice to juggle being a father, a husband & working?
> 2:38:51 Favorite piece of tech that was ahead of its time & held that feeling?
> 2:39:35 Despite LMG's relations, what is MAC Address's value with covering Apple products?
> 2:41:42 Tech advice for a new parent, especially towards infants?
> 2:42:26 Would Linus host classes or content on guidelines learnt from workflow?
> 2:44:45 Is it difficult to deal with people coming to you at events like CES?
> 2:49:29 Advice for not enjoying engineering for companies' profits?
> 2:53:49 Have companies ever responded to Linus chastising them?
> 2:56:12 Luke's thoughts on EoD being removed & his current stance on TARKOV?
> 3:00:10 How much has Luke's experience with Pixel 8 reflected on Linus's review?
> 3:01:04 Thoughts on the current state of the internet where 5 main sites are accessed?
> 3:02:55 Was Linus aware of Halo's mouse aim assist? Is this good for FPS' future?
> 3:03:28 Do you think Thunderbolt 5 is the push Intel GPUs needed?
> 3:04:23 Was Linus's purchase of the TCL TV the only time he got buyer's remorse?
> 3:05:50 Have you enjoyed tech for what it is instead of how to script a video around it?
> 3:06:51 Wishes you had for yourself or your loved ones? Long term goals?
> 3:09:28 How do you stay organized?
> 3:10:32 One non-tech skill you're proud of having or wished you had?
> 3:17:04 Does Luke think there's a benefit in ITIL certification?
> 3:18:25 Who gave the best tech advice you weren't expecting?
[3:20:58] *Outro.*
Sorry about the delay, had a blackout due to maintenance that lasted to 3 PM. WAN Show started at 5 AM, so that should give some context as to how long it took (Advantages of having only instant noodles - nothing is ruined!)
Side note: donations are on my channel's about page.
Thanks!
thanks friend!
Thank you so much!
Can’t believe it, was just wondering where the timestamps are, and he posts 10 sec ago. 😂 thanks friend.
BLESS
Hey uhh… idk how to put this but you might want to change the thumbnail
lmao yeah
… for real? 😂
It's not even close that salute, just because you pushed your hand outwards doesn't automatically mean it's a nzi salute.
Probably didn't even realise they did that.
Oh crap didn’t even notice until I saw your comment. 😮
"They should use chat gpt to come up with a better defense" is chefs kiss perfection.
As a german, i dont see a nazi gesture im here. Hold your horses guys.
I see one now but only after reading the comments - kinda can't unsee it now though lol
Lol thats what ppl were talking about 😂 they just saying stop but ppl gonna ppl @Dommifax
Then you clearly don't know how it looks like. The hand is supposed to be extended in the same angle as the arm. The arm is also supposed to be angled upwards and it needs to be the right srm unless you don't have one.
Only tank drivers salutet differently because of limited space and the mustache man hinself also used a different gesture.
They clearly show a stop gesture.
@@Clonk93 jeez bro... dude was making a joke. it looks close enough. thanks for the history lesson though Reich aficionado
@@Clonk93maybe you need to learn to read?
"Don't"
Shoutout to Dan with the responses, I randomly started reading them and sometimes they are real funny and quick. The sequence at 21:05 is one example.
Hahaha, that's a good one!
Dan in general is just such a great person. I also really enjoy his private streams on twitch. just such a nice dude
@@MoritzC123oh really?
Help us Noki-Wan Kenobi, you're our only hope
I love seeing topics on cyber security topics, especially for the fact of spreading information on hacks that happened and data breaches. Not everyone pays attention to company hacks, especially those not into tech, so when channels like LTT talk about it actually helps people out.
2:11:23 That synchronization between Linus and Luke is just perfect
It was creepily in sync!?
Edit: and they just casually kept talking like nothing happened
Actually scared me, thought there was two demons talking into both my ear holes.
I was listening to it like a podcast(no video) and legit thought my headphones are bugging out.
@@Simfukwethey probably didn't hear each
Internet companies: What do you mean i am breaking privacy laws?
Everyone is denying cookies, analytics and tracking permissions.
How else am i going to get the data i need without ignoring their choices.
The EBAY thing is unreal. It's like you are reading a story book.
Timestamp guy, where are you?!
I love the AI route we are going.
A monitor using AI to help the player. A anti cheat system using AI to detect that via a camera. A camera using AI to remove the cheating evidence so the anti cheat cant see it .... 😂
This is NOT the way.
And all of it collectively burning hundreds of watts on that nonsense.
Continue this back and forth of AI cheats and AI cheat prevention and you get endless business for random AI companies, it's like a loop that makes money.
Connect 2 monitors in mirror mode. Have the camera look at the non cheaty monitor
I am willing to invest, only if it runs on blockchain though.
The app you’re talking about is Komoot. But the best part of Komoot is that you can find routes other bikers shared, or plan a route beforehand according to your needs, you can also import GPX files.
The autogenerated routes are most of the time better as google, but autogenerated bike routes will always remain problematic.
TIMESTAMP GUY!!! WE NEED YOU
Do not ask what the comments can do for you. Ask what you can do for the comments!
Pretty darn pathetic LTT can’t do it themselves.
it worked fine on the last vod, they just haven’t done it (yet?) on this one@@DylRicho
@@DylRicho The chapter feature is based on what timestamps they upload to the video description.
@@DylRichothey do and LTT clips channel typically adds them in about 2 weeks
1:38:00 - I bet this is related to the cancellation of the unlimited storage option of Google Workspaces. At first they prevented people from uploading more data, and lately they have been giving deadlines after which the data, all or above the current Workspaces' data cap are just deleted.
Yep quietly limiting the unlimited.
Honestly sorry to hear the channel is struggling a lil right now. I seriously enjoy the content, and mentality of LTT you guys legit rock. I wish the best for the future growth cause y'all work so hard you deserve it
Where in the show was that discussed?
@@harrisonjr98It wasn't. OP is misinterpreting.
They discussed that internally they need to push harder because they know the current economic climate is looking rough. Not that they're down or anything.
I'm guessing OP is referring to around 2:09:35
@@jfluffydog2110 LTT is stagnating right now it's all in the metrics, they didn't outright say it but I check their metrics time to time. They are well equipped to handle this just wishing them more growth in the future
Wherever you are timestamp guy, I’m ready
Timestamp guy retired. Step up to the plate.
Did he actually @@Hebdomad7
Rather than waiting someone to lose hrs of they time isn't better for ltt to do it themselves, I don't watch the live unless there are timestamps,
@@andreimadalin2526the show is late Friday and many are watching the VOD on the weekend so no way they’d have timestamps ready in time
That MSI monitor is immediately going to be Frankensteined into low budget weapons systems.
So you want a great value version of a tracking point scope?
@@bobspldbckwrds thinking more cheap machine vision for flying drones into stuff.
You think MSI is coming up with stuff that DARPA hasn't already surpassed?
25:17 in Estonia I can't even see the bike tab in my google maps... But I do when I move about 80 km north to Helsinki Finland.
I hate these automatic settings you have no control over that someone else arbitrarily decided for you without a good reason or even a reason at all.... Everything is gradually moving towards less freedom and I hate it... Like boiling a frog.
24:28 E-bike range is kind of a marketing gimmick because you can just turn the motor assist off and get unlimited range. 200 miles or even km with any assist power is pretty impressive though.
For all we know that could be like 1% power downhill assist only or something.
I find it hilarious that a random power outage led to a whole new theme for WAN Show. I like it.
2:55:45 There's a couple bugs in the Outlook Android app, #1 where if you get a notification for an email, and tap the notification, many times the email will not load, it will just display an error. #2 recently I've had trouble opening attachments in the app; when you tap an attachment (like a PDF) to open, it will launch chrome, make me login and 2FA authenticate then display the email in chrome where you have to click the attachment again to download it in the browser. WHY?!?!
After hearing the eBay story idk if I'm ever going to use them again, not that I have lots in the past, but knowing that the CEO was willing to engage in practices like that...
To the workspace story: I had a paid workspace account for an email, then moved on to another option. Was paired with my google drive. When I had 2 months left on my sub I cancelled the renewal and they wiped everything immediately rather than giving me the last two months I had to migrate my data out. No backup, no option to undo, no one to talk to.
The best way for openai to act is to scan all the legal documents against it and at the same time all the evidence that is presented, which is all public access in court, which then means all the data can be used, of course depending on the country.
I think Ai npcs will be great in open world games. But the story important characters should be voice acted for real. Also Ai commentary in sport games would be a game changer to get rid of repeated lines that ruin the immersion
Watching/listening to this while doing CES clean up so much carpet and tape 😵💫
His segwey really sounded like "Wicked Christians"
Man one thing I never get is why companies make so many products like make just 3 or 4 products but make them good, good enough for their price bracket and make sure no one comes near them, everyone then will come back to you for the upgrade. I mean, what is the reason to make 10 bad products which sells less and is not good in their price bracket.🤬
Because that’s now this works. That’s not how any of this works.
Jokes aside, diversifying a company’s product offering is how you safely make money. Investing all that time and effort into so few products, even if they are the best, limits your market share cap (a satisfied customer usually doesn’t come back for more if they’re happy with what they’ve got), and if somebody makes something better, you’re SOL.
Plus, often times resources/experience with one product can be often transferred over to other similar products - which means less overhead per product.
Now I understand this comment was made in reference to the whole GPU super lineup thing that Nvidia dropped…with respect to that issue, that is a pricing error, rather than a “bad product offering”. Recycling under performing chips/dies to make “lower end” or “in the middle” cards is nothing new. The price is just bad.
There are companies like that. For example, ASML is the only company making EUV lithography machines in the world.
Yes, true. I remember back when Motorola had the Moto E, G, X and Z. I think it was great to know all the options. Take a look at their product palette now and you can't even tell how all all the same phones inside a family are related.
Usually there are many products so they can use chips that didn't pass quality control for higher spec products. With that said, there is some companies that do what you're saying. Toyota rings a bell for me.
LTT Krew kan you please build a streaming and rekording rig for #krissdrummer
1:11:16 Since for a long time these TVs are going to be out of reach for normal people do you think a Movie Theater (probably one of those smallish Dinner Theatres) will switch from using a Profector to using a Megascreen like your TCL (but probably even bigger). I think if they're the future they'd need to be more easily serviced like how your one has a dead pixel.
Tbh at that scale you could get a technician to come in and solder a replacement part if it's not a substrate based assembly. Or just have replacement panels where a technician recalibrates the screen to compensate for any variance between the panels.
Why is the app for my LG refrigerator 815.7MB? There is no data logs , photos or videos. It just gives me notifications if a door is left open and lets me remotely adjust the ice settings.
Please add timestamps, LTT. It's basically a required part of the content on multi-hour videos and shouldn't be expected to come from the community.
It's a live stream not a multi hour edited video and they do add them a day later but also they've talked about this and the person doing it can stop any time it's not like they are being forced to keep up with the show every week
Time stamps would give away where the ad breaks are and people would only watch the segments they are interested in. Its a choice between making the experience better for us and selling more screwdrivers.
It's a Friday night stream. I think a few years ago they used to add timestamps a few days later.
@@Schmuly It shouldn't be too hard for someone on staff to push a button whenever they change topics and add a quick timestamp to notepad or something somewhere (maybe even something Luke or Linus could do themselves, if they're not too busy) they could then pass those notes along to someone else to come in and add timestamps to the description or in a comment. They shouldn't rely on fans in the community to do it, and they could easily afford a dude who comes in once a week whose only job is to push a button and keep track of timestamps...but they don't do it.
This is a three man show. You're asking them to increase their costs by 30% for no benefit.
Hey so I love your guys show. I was just curious when do you upload to Spotify?
For the cheating display, in games like hunt showdown or tarkov, having it analyze for hidden enemies would be a big advantage. Couple that with audio analysis by having it listen to gun sounds, foot steps and such, you could probably have it display a fairly precise map of enemy movements in that type of games. I don't know how to detect something like this. Behavioral analysis may be able to detect if a player is acting on information that should not be available to them to that degree. But since all that comes from information technically available to the player that may be very difficult.
@@PhilipPetkov I think this argument is weak, it takes the skill out of managing your information and making the connections, If a program just tells you "oh those footsteps you aren't sure about? They're coming from behind this wall, here's a circle on the wall where the sound is coming from", you are no longer making the connections through your skill and experience. If not everyone has access to the tool, nobody should have the tool because it creates an uneven playing field.
@dan what did you do to make the. WAN Show work better remotely for the Streak?
It's like people and corporations are trying to see just how much they can get away with rather than being afraid of the repurcussions
Until recently there weren't any repercussions. The SEC and equivalent just let companies get away with shit. There's some legit conspiracies (not batshit crazy theories but actual, not so secret, conspiracies) behind a lot of it. As they say, follow the money.
The thing missing from HDR TVs is IR (infrared) and emanating warmth hitting you from the sunset on screen. When are TVs going to be able to cast sunlight across your (real life) living room carpeting when you open the venetian blinds and sliding glass door in a video game?
😂😂😂
I want that nuclear sunburn when playing Fallout
With the (7000/)8000G CPUs and an ITX board with TB4 and 10G Lan you could build an awesome quiet, serviceable mini PC 🤩
Or 12 years old GPU power, quite decent CPU power - low power consuming gaming PC.
Curious if 2:12:00 is fiscal year which starts in October. Currently driving hopefully remember to check when I can
Nvidia Pulsar and that 360hz oled are basically just giving you the same experience a 120hz crt did back in the day. The crt inherently already has the strobing built in.
48:30 why are they talking about this as if its some grand idea? This is the only proper way to share data between server and client. You should never send data to the client that they shouldn't have...?
I actively applauded when Linus got up and walked away during the Framework discussion. It's just one of those little things that shows he has integrity.
According to everyone during the scandal period Linus is devoid of integrity. It was obvious to me then and I think obvious to most now that it was all clickbait.
@@mikej1097I think most just roll their eyes at both of you. I'm sure he's a decent guy that makes plenty mistakes.
Agreed
5:00 but is ChatGPT a lawyer or an accepted expert and would its defense/opinion taken into account in court?
And now ask ChatGPT for a strategy against using the data.
The cycling app they were probably talking about for EU cyclists is probably komoot if people were wondering
20:00 That is actually totally ass backwards. Building out of the phone only happens because 2 reasons: 1. Apple being Apple and closing stuff up, making their users devices dysfunctional. 2. Processors are so efficient now and chips so small, that we can process and store stuff on devices as thin as phone cases.
In reality we don't need that. It's incredible that it can be just an app on a normal Android phone. I have auto call recording with ACR dialer on my Android phone for ages now. Yeah, on some phones access to call audio is blocked if you are not rooted, but access to mic is there, so you can hear at least what you said and promised on the call. They even have a little helper app, published elsewhere from Google play due to recording being against Google Play store policies. It's weird that an assistant plus this basic functionality is a million dollar Kickstarter justification with a snap-on device. It's a single-purpose device fixing a single flaw on another certain device. A mere problem solver so to speak. The problem, however can be simply solved by just getting an Android device instead.
NO! You DON'T want ChatGPT to write your pleadings or arguments. A pair of lawyers tried that in US Federal court. ChatGPT made up cases to use as references, and it nearly (or did) get the lawyers disbarred. Their law firm was fined heavily for the stunt and the lawyers lack of response when called out and given an opportunity to save themselves.
Sounds like someone's jealous 🥱 /t
nothing wrong with involving chatgpt as long as you take nothing for granted
@@drkastenbrotIt didn't cite existing cases in its argument. It made up cases complete with fake citation numbers and everything. Had they read it, they would have seen it as complete bupkiss. They handed the opposition one of those rare moments the opposition gets to spank you with your own words. You never hand the other side a loaded weapon and help them aim it at you. The defense just looked at it, and told the judge that none of the cases cited were real. And the judge was PISSED they even tried it.
@@jackielinde7568yeah you shouldn't use it to literally write the pleading and then submit that unchecked (which is what the lawyer that was sanctioned for doing that did). They're just asking it for broad conceptual arguments which is a completely different thing...
your honor my client pleads "nuh-uh"
Oh my god Freelancer! That brings back memories...
1:04:38 the "thinness war" of tv's.
Remember when Apple sold the Air by saying how thin it was measured on the front edge of the wedge-shaped chassi?
TV-stuff: I just thought of a thing; brightness capacity is probably important, Smell-O-Vision will remain a bit of a joke but! What could be done and really boost immersion is radiant heat. Sun, explosions, exiting a climate controlled car to hot climate. Rather simple IR-emitters could do it. Encoding would be lacking, but AI could probably work it out from frame analysis (maybe with some look-ahead to counter device lag). Room would need AC though...
As a bike guy, I don’t trust any ebike startup company that has additional proprietary tech on it. When the bottom falls out, there’s going to be a lot of e-waste that can’t be repaired. I trust Bosch, Yamaha, then less so shimano steps, then less so Bafang, but there is no margin in these things, so nobody wants to touch them other than marketing direct to consumer brands because there is volume at low margin.
Btw, it's not just the nits of brightness, but the color spectrum. And yeah, I know you know that it's not the full color spectrum, but with the sun especially you're forgetting that people can see varying degrees of ultraviolet light. Cameras definitely aren't capturing that and screen's definitely aren't reproducing it.
Will we ever get WAN show wicked cushions? I think those look so good
Thumbnail: Argonath from LOTR?
Man that could be cool. Like 3 options for simple fast fresh real meals at the gym that aren't microwaved or fried.
Don't normally comment but want to make a point for anyone from LTT: The complaints about the "salute" are ridiculous. I'm a big old lefty and there's no way I would ever consider that gesture a salute and I was actually incredibly confused when I saw people commenting about it. LTT's audience has clearly become so big that there's always a subset of people trying to take them down over something. Ignore the hate, loved the show.
3:07:47 to Linus, as a child who’s parents had this same concern after having to move to a new home 12+ hours away. Your child will find new friends to make connections with. I don’t actually think they’ll even loose their old friends either considering how connected our world is anyways.
I second this, moved 15+ hours away and back a few years later. It sucked but kid friends are volitile anyways
1:49:20 mArK oF tHe MrBeAsT? 😂😂
22:30 can someone explain who would be at fault if you (someone at an agentcy or otherwise has access to confidentional information. Be it govermental or private Business) talk to someone who uses this transsciber but does not make this clear, and confidential information ends up on OpenIAs server / the next Version of ChatGPT?
They would be at fault for recording. Privacy and NDA s will need cover this
pls pls pls if its the last thing on earth review the steak cooker! :D
1:37:12 Linus, I still think you should go to an ROG Phone. As a person who recently switched from a Note 8 to an ROG 6, so similar to yours, I have found it excellent and easy. The last remaining Phone with a Headphone Jack and no Notch (as far as I know) was the biggest reason I chose it, but after having it, my favourite features are the Battery life and two USB=C ports to charge it.
I got a rog phone also and love it. Best phone I ever had by far.
Actually not the last remaining, Sony also ships headphone jacks on their phones
The non-ROG ASUS phones like the Zenfone also have a headphone jack. They do have a camera home but no notch
ill buy wicked cushions when I can get WAN ones!
17:32 OK, I have an android and I have had automatic voice recording for years now, which does the recording into small AAC files and transcripting and all that stuff can easily be done in post.
Apple not allowing this, means we get so much more extra produced crap like this? And it's good thing?
Like we have problem in stores here where stores have NFC customer loyalty cards...but apple doesn't allow using NFC on iPhone so mobile cards have been android only so far. Until now where stores are installing new readers to read QR-codes from customers phones screens. So much extra stuff just because apple disallows things.
(the comment is NOT in an angry tone. apologies if it seems as such! I just like talking about TF2 and Portal)
Valve "cracking down" on fan projects is interesting;
TF Source 2 deliberately took assets and gameplay from Team Fortress 2, *without* Valve's permission. GMod may be a clear defense for TF/S2, but you must note that GMod has a legal liscense to use assets from Source Engine. Alongside this, if you would wish to use assets from a game like Counter Strike: Source, you must OWN the game, then mount it to GMod, turning missing texture models into the actual CS:S models. TF/S2 had none of this.
Portal 64 had no legal threat from Valve. Valve only advised the creator of Portal 64 that due to using Nintendo's repositories, Nintendo may pursue legal action. And everyone knows nobody can out-copyright Nintendo.
That being said, I still think the backlash against Valve is justified. At the same time as the DMCA being notified to the public, the TF2 item servers went down for a bit under 2 days, making ALL TF2 servers (including community servers) force players into being completely stock only. No hats, no taunts, no weapons. Which while that's a really fun twist to the game (Hats, cosmetics, taunts are irrelevant to this--but not actually, since a lot of them are worth a TON) forcing players to play with stock classes, it's ridiculous that this game just hit an all-time-high this last summer and this is how Valve treats the game.
Alongside this, the bot crisis is still running rampant. And if an intern just wheeled their chair in the TF2 room, it would be fixed in less than a week. But nooo.
How many NITS for daylight? Check Corridor Crew out. They tried it
Regarding the AI Lawsuit one could argue, if you don't allow the AI to be trained on those articles and knowledge, how can you allow people to base their knowledge, decisions and actions on the same things?
At the bottom, the problem is the idea that information can be owned.
It's up to entrepreneurs to determine how to make money. Other people shouldn't be required to make the incentives for them.
1:17:00 a used entry level card (~$20) can be good for a backup gpu / test card
This show is impossible to watch without timestamps
It really isn't, why do you people bother watching a long form type of video if you only want to pick and choose the exact topics they cover for you? I've never understood you guys who need the timestamper to handle your attention spans for you
@@Novashadow115 idunno, maybe not every subject they talk about is interesting to me!!
@@Novashadow115 Because this is a news show and people have certain topics they want to hear about and others who don't? It's really not that hard to understand
@Novashadow115 "you people"? No need to be antisemitic 🤨🙄
@@Novashadow115 Who wants to watch merch messages or sponsor spots? Timestamps are necessary to skip this stuff
The reason I'm not surprised you have no buyers remorse for the tv is you didn't buy it with the intention of keeping it. You bought it for the video and it being amazing was a bonus.
I love CutieOLED
02:53:40 if the company isn't chasing profits, it's most likely not going to pay as well. Unfortunately, it almost always means "heavily underpaid". Environmental lawyers have a harder job and get 1/10th the pay of corporate lawyers. If a company is "for-profit with good margins and a soul", or just a successful non-profit, you'll find that people there are well paid, but getting in so 1000x harder because they have a million people apply each year
The argument actually sounds like an appeal to jury nullification. Basically telling the court "you can't find against us because it will kill AI with the precedent it sets"
Soft earpads SIGNIFICANTLY change the sound profile of the ATH-M50x... Be aware of that
As an OSHA trained Person, and someone who takes safety fairly frick'n seriously... they all got WAY LESS than a slap on the wrist... They besmirch the name of Safety Personnel everywhere with all that (speaking of the Ebay moment of the show)... they got away with murder so to speak.
I don't know if this is similar to what Luke was talking about, but I struggle with the amount of time it takes my brain to process incoming information. As an adult, I've noticed it takes my brain longer to comprehend what is happening around me compared to most other people. Because of this, I prefer turn based strategy games; faster paced games tend to require a certain level of reflexive speed to succeed, which I can't do very well. In a scenario where someone were to throw a ball at me, my brain would have just processed the fact that a ball is coming towards me by the time that ball has already hit me-- which is a real thing that has happened to me more than once. It affects everything I do, including video games, driving, and delivering a response in a conversation. I would also argue that in order to be precise in a game like air hockey, you need to be able to process information in the moment quickly enough that you can adapt to the situation and deliver a precise shot.
Watching this less than a week after doing a fetal pig dissection in my anatomy class givs 1:51:00 a whole new meaning
Oh no. I just bought an LG washer and dryer from Costco online.
2:25:17 the topic title says 36GB a day which is a mistake because the article says 3.6GB a day, which is still a lot but not QUITE as much.
I dislike AI, but these lawsuits may make the situation worse, and set precedence on Copyright law and erode Fair Use in a way that could be used against real human artists, opening them up to lawsuits. In fact, a lot of corporations and lobbying groups (the same ones people worry will use AI & are doing the Internet Archive lawsuit) are actually sneakily using the (justified) furror over AI, or even working with some Anti-AI organizations, to push for laws or to set precedence to do exactly that, using it as an opportunity to expand copyright or erode fair use in general, under the guise of standing up for Artist's jobs/rights (And to be clear, AI IS a threat against people's careers and jobs, this is not a pro-AI post). Plus, a lot of people misunderstand how Copyright and Fair Use and how AI works: So here's my clarification on all this:
First, context for other viewers who may not understand how Fair Use works (Obligatory disclaimer that IANAL and that my comment here is based on US law, for other countries it might be different): The main things considered in a Infringement case where a Fair use defense is claimed are 4 "pillars": The Purpose of a work (IE if the derivative work is commercial vs noncommercial, educational, etc) the Nature of the original work (if the original work is fictional or not, historically significant, etc), The amount and substantiality of the work used (how much of the original work was used/how important those used parts were) and the Effect on the value of the original work (does the deriative use hurt sales, impact the market, etc). If one or any of the pillars is more important then the others depends on the specifics of each case, and there's not a simple pass-fail for them either. There's also related concepts like if a use is Transformative (IE does the deriative use put a new artistic/creative spin on the original or does it serve a different use), Parody Claims, and a whole bunch of other things. Sometimes Judges make up new standards, too, and you can sort of "violate" all of these and still be Fair Use, or not violate much of them and still NOT be fair use.
One last thing before we get into the actual legal issues around AI and issues with precedence against it impacting human art: GETTING Copyright protection and being Fair Use or not are two different things. Currently, AI generated art is not protected by Copyright since the position of the Copyright office is that it's not human made, and human authorship is a requirement for getting Copyright protection (mind you, that could change, originally photos were seen as not human authored either, I won't have space to get into that comparison here), but you DON'T need human authorship to win a Fair Use defense: For example, Authors Guild, Inc. v. Google, Inc found that google doing automated scanning and scraping of books and making them searchable was Fair Use and Transformative because it created a new use/purpose and was unlikely to impact the market value of the originals, among other things (Look up the article "Torching the Modern-Day Library of Alexandria"), and that case actually ties into some AI stuff, as we'll get to later.
The AI themselves are made by looking at thousands or even millions of images, and compares them and tags them (which humans actually do help with) to glean stuff like composition, lighting, linework etc principals tied to specific prompt terms. The AI itself does not directly contain any of the actual image it's trained on, only similarities and differences between them, and it's not an image but is code describing those trends and patterns. Imagine a text description of an artist's style: This would obviously not be infringing (and in fact, style itself isn't even covered by US copyright law). If the OUTPUT images are transformative is gonna depend: If you ask it to spit out an image of Spider-Man on a bike, then well, Spiderman is still covered by Copyright. And if you're asking the AI to specifically modify an existing image rather then to generate a new one, and you can tell what the original image is, that's probably infringing too. But if you ask it to generate a "Dinosaur in a swimming pool", then chances are the image it spits out isn't going to significantly resemble any one image the AI was trained on, and in fact, may resemble any given input image LESS then if a human artist drew the same image relative to the references they used, since a human artist is only gonna be using a few references, not thousands which dilute each other.
Here's where I get to the "People are advocating for anti-AI measures which could backfire on artists" stuff. Let's assume for a second that a court case happens which establishes that a AI output image which doesn't specifically resemble any one input work, or the AI itself, is found to not be transformative. Or that "Style" is now protected by Copyright. What are the wider impacts of this? As I said, legally, there's not inherently a distinction between AI and human made art from a Transformative-ness perspective. That ruling COULD absolutely create a situation where now even real human artists can get sued for their art happening to use similar composition or lighting or style to another piece of art or from a media corporation: Imagine people being sued by Toei for making "Dragon Ball style art" that doesn't actually feature DB characters or elements. If you think this sounds crazy, look at Music copyright infringement cases. It is FREQUENT for pieces of music to face lawsuits over incidental similarity because there's only so many notes you can use (and this is ironically why Music AI are only trained on royalty free music, unlike art AI), or all the drama that happens with Content ID [[[I need to come back and edit this comment to expand on this whole preceding section more]]]
And this is PRECISELY what industry giants like Disney, Getty, the RIAA, MPAA, Adobe, etc want. People think these corporations are pro AI and they want to fire human artists and use AI instead (and well, they do, to an extent) but they're actually playing both sides: Many are also working alongside Anti AI advocacy groups or are pretending to be pro artis,, so they can push for more copyright protections and fair use limits as a way to "stop AI", but then also have more tools to go after smaller artists and creators online. You know the Concept Art Association's Anti AI fundraiser? It's working with the Copyright Alliance, which is made up of those corporations and also were behind SOPA, PIPA, ACTA, , which directly targeted online artists by forcing UA-cam style content ID filters on the whole internet. The Human Artistry Campaign? Also working with a bunch of industry lobbying groups like the RIAA and Author's Guild (which is also a pro-author union, but it, the Artist's Rights Alliance, and other some orgs which are ostensibly pro-worker tend to also support industry lobbying efforts) The latter of which is also one of the groups suing the Internet Archive for lending digital books, with the IA suit being supported by the other organizations as well.
I don't wanna diss people, but some major anti AI/Pro artist Social media accounts are also celebrating the Internet Archive suit, framing it as somehow being a "victory against AI", or even cases where HUMAN photographers and artists get sued and lose their Fair use defenses (I will name some names: neilturkewitz is straight up a former RIAA representive). There was also a Washpost opinion piece claiming to be "pro artist" by a musician which are likewise by industry mouthpieces who repeats the same decades old claims about the internet hurting sales and, again, advocating for even human artists like Andy Worhol to lose Fair Use cases. Adobe outright suggested making it illegal for people to imitate each other's art style during a Senate testimoney hearing as a way to "fight AI"
To be clear, it IS possible for lawsuits vs AI to be narrow enough that it mostly only impacta AI companies, if it heavily leans on the Purpose of a Work and the Effect on the Value of the original work portions of Fair Use determination to highlight that it's mostly seeking to replace the artists it pulled from. But given the amount of lobbying and literal astrotrufing media corporations are already doing and their involvement with lawsuits, and how historically the courts and lawmakers have listened to them and not small artists and creators, I think it's more likely we'd all get screwed then a surgical, AI targeted ruling/law.
If people really want to fight against AI in a way that's actually pro-artist and won't risk empowering massive media corporations with expanded copyright laws that will enable them to DMCA people even more then they already do, then people should be working with the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Fight For the Future instead: Both of those organizations fight for for online artists and creators against corporate BS all the time.
All of that said, here's my personal take: The real problem is the imbalance between corporations and workers/smaller players. Nobody cares if you get an AI to make art of Goku eating a hotdog, just like how nobody cares about DBZ fanart even if it's without permission. And even if no AI was involved, people would be mad if Disney aped the style of a smaller creator. The power imbalance is what matters, and I think people are losing sight of that. Given that that power imbalance and automation is going to hit other industries where Copyright isn't applicable at all, I don't think gutting fair use to try to fix it here is worth it
I'm also a little confused with regard to what the nyt actually did to produce that output... I tried providing the articles it did and as I would expect it just summarizes them... I tried asking it to complete the articles and it does not produce output that is even similar to the rest of the article. Their output seems to be verbatim. So I'd really love to see how they actually prompted it to get that output... I'm somewhat suspicious that they may have done something nutty like fed it the whole article earlier in the conversation or something.
The exhibit implies that the only prompt they gave was a portion of the article, but that's just never how I've seen ChatGPT behave, either in 3.5 or 4.0. Giving any significant amount of text pretty much always results in a summary. This also scares me for stuff like search engines which more or less store an entire copy of all sites they crawl. Google will even happily show you the cached version of the page it has for that site. Unless I'm missing something that would also seem to be infringement under the logic of this suit.
Many seem to be arguing that the prompt the nyt used doesn't matter, but I absolutely think it does if only because there's the chance they did something like I pose above.
I kept hearing Linus say Wicked Christians, instead of wicked cushions. I thought that was a weird sponsor.
There are countles sources of copyrighted materials OpenAI has used, right? So if they lose this case, a lot more cases will rise against OpenAI, right? So, it will be way too expensive for OpenAI to remain in business?
I hope it is.
Good. This will also hurt Microsoft as a result, which is a very nice outcome
In this case they were able to get it to reproduce verbatim articles from the NYT. Any other copyright holder that can get it to reproduce their material would also have a strong case like this.
@@PippetWhippet there's no compulsory license here and the damages are going to be per publication and with statutory damages could be significant. Plus copyright fee shifts legal costs... NYT will want more than chump change to make this go away
If you want fast cook times get a small but powerful air fryer. The ones at gas stations here in Europe, that replaced deep fryers, are crazy fast.
Modern, dumb, pressure cookers as well.
To whoever said that biochips are the mark of the beast, I too am concerned about biochips, but until governments try to make them mandatory, I wouldn't be worried about them being the mark of the beast. Cheers brother
For the mark of the beast thing, government tracking is essentially what that means if you take away the Hollywood sensationalism.
Basically a way that a government can track you, and you aren't allowed to buy or sell anything without it.
Eventually the government decides that anyone who refuses to get it is the enemy, to the point that it carries a death sentence.
If that sounds far fetched just look back a couple years to what people said should be done to the unvaccinated, throw in vaccine passports, and it's basically the same thing.
The thing about the book of revelation is that it's essentially a guy from the first century having a vision about a time in our future, writing it all down, and having no idea what he's actually seeing.
There's a place where a woman and child are rescued from danger by a giant eagle, and you kinda have to ask if he was just seeing an aircraft of some kind and didn't have any other point of reference.
Or describes giant scorpions that shoot flame from their mouths and wonder if he's looking at a tank.
Also the mark is explicitly stated to be clearly visible, which implantable chips are by design not.
around 19:00 topic , call recording was an integral feature to almost every phone cheap or expensive , but with iOS and Android they took that away ....
Only three hours and 21 minutes? What the hell
I didn't realize they were back from CES already! Maybe travel-weary and wanted to get sleep.
Jeff, I think this is just their thing each week.
@@JeffGeerling Jeff randomly appearing
@@bafranksbro88 No for the past few months, they seemed to be pushing 4 hours! No way to get through these things until timestampguy makes a visit :(
@@JeffGeerling I was being sarcastic. I'm grateful for any free content. Love your stuff too!
Linus's casual mention of "The Palace" brought up some old, long-buried memories.
I was on CompuServe before that, spending most of my time in the RPG "portal." Think I moved over to the Palace when we went to AOL.
27" is optimal for gaming and desk space(especially dual) while having good distance.
Scenic gaming will likely move to VR in the future.
optimal for desk space really depends how big your desk is mate, and 27" really isn't optimal for gaming. It sounds like you have a 27" and want to justify it to yourself.
@@rossharper1983what do you suggest?
@@jaydeep-p well it will depend on the main genre of game you play and desk space availability. For me 34" Ultrawide is optimal as it allows me to see more of the in-game world giving me an advantage of seeing enemies far left and right of me without having to have a zoomed out FOV
@@rossharper1983 how does it work in competitive games for you? Most I know with such screens have to do blackbars for competitive because they don't see the edges of the UI.
@@christoferstromberg6605 don't need to see the UI as much as I need to see enemies. Also depends how close you want to sit to it I guess, I can see the whole screen without any head movement and I'm using 34" non curved screen
anyone know when the all red ltt screw driver could be back in stock i dont want to get a regualr one then buy the red one
AI integrated into a monitor would be to snitch on you when you're a naughty boy.
I'm going to say it for everyone: Wicked cushions does need to drop the WAN edition cushions ong
Wouldnt the reaction of the audience finding out about cool stuff like the hidden options with the service remote make companies know in an even more clear"er" way that thats something that they should be more focused on to improve upon rather than lock it out! Thoughts?
Several reasons makes stuff like this complicated. If a few dedicated people do it, little harm is done. But if people start to buy a cheaper model and "unlocking it" rather than buy the premium model, now they are losing money. And if mainstream people do it, they might ruin or break the product and now they blame the brand, which can hurt them long term. As well as there somewhere within the company there is a person who will get 0 credit/positive outcome if it goes well, but that might lose their job if it doesn't. That person has 100% insentive to lock it down and play it safe.
@@jace4817Very well explained!
1:57:20 It's the same in Finland. You cannot record video of a crime and publish it.
02:18:15 is the most I've ever laughed from something on this podcast 😂
same omg
1:17:47 I use my gt710 for my home server's primary gpu so that I can pass through my decent gpu to a vm. I wouldn't have bought it if AMD had igpu on everything
Great show as always guys, I salute you
14:38 Linus got me with the Tide Pods joke, I was eating cookies with milk and now I'm dying
P.S. I'm not mad, quite the opposite, keep it up 👍
Everyone else: "thumbail looks like a nazi salute!"
Me: "Reminds me of The Matrix when Neo stops all those bullets" 😆
Get your minds out of the gutter, damn
That was my thought as well, I couldn’t figure where are all morons were seeing the salute and you made it clear.
50:00 nah, the real reason it's the worst it's ever been is that community servers have been all but erased in recent games, public servers have always been less policed and not administrated, like, at all
All I know is ChatGPT seems pretty useless after the January 2022 update.
Mean I do get everyones got different eyes and I've always had light sensitivity but is the brightness of a TV important to most ppl? Ive always opened the box and droped my brightness down 20-25% so everytime I here linus bring up the crazy brightness levels just sounds like a headache personally. Minor side note actually what "nits" rating would actually start to be an issue like linus saying hes getting flash banged but like that kinda brightness is it doing some real damage to the eyes?
Midday sun reflecting off a matte piece of paper is around 20 000 nits. Reflected flints off objects can be maybe an order of magnitude more. The Sun is quoted as 1.6 billion.
It also depends on whether you're in a dark environment (dilated pupil) or not, in terms of total flux into the eye.
Anecdotally, as a stupid kid I once tested watching an old photo flash directly from a few cm away. I saw the U-shaped flash tube as an afterimage for the rest of the day, but it was gone the next day. Quite thorough examinations of the eye as an adult have not discovered any damage (examinations were part of getting corrective laser surgery, and I was already short-sighted when I did the flash stunt).
@Validole hmm guess should be safe then eh just the killer eye strain and man oh man is that big ball oh fire bright eh