@mcc for the record I do have ollama installed locally on my m3, which I would characterize as one step above “consumer grade”, and it works fine, and it’s possible to use visual studio code plugins or whatever that talk to it directly locally. so it’s not fully inevitable imo, just clearly in capitalism’s interest to take the surveillance route
my husband is a lawyer and his firm only uses software that it’s possible to install in a private server on-prem, often paying quite a lot for such a license, including an llm-based translator. so there is a market developing for private local AI nerve centers
@mcc they are absolutely 100% going to addle the free home edition but the professional edition will absolutely, positively have an “absolutely the fuck not” switch because there are so, so many compliance issues when you consider every industry in every legal district in the world
if it’s any consolation, I expect this to last another year or two before they realize how fucking expensive this is compared to what they’re actually getting back out of it
@0xabad1dea I'm not so sure about that. I'm using the pro version of Windows 10 and my attempts to not use Bing were eventually defeated completely. There is no "absolutely the fuck not" switch for Windows surveilling my local file searches by forwarding them to Bing. I had to turn it off with registry hacks.
I do agree whatever scam they're pulling with juicing the OpenAI numbers cannot possibly be financially sustainable. I don't know how long that can last.
@mcc @0xabad1dea If you have a Pro license, you can install Pro N without a key, it doesn't include auto-installing crap even after you re-enable Media Feature Pack.
There's also Pro Education which is like Pro without autoinstalling crap (but needs a separate license).
LTSC is more like Windows Server.