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ClaudeBot crawled within minutes of a new site going live

https://lemmy.world/post/42347402

ClaudeBot crawled within minutes of a new site going live - Lemmy.World

Today I set up a little project website on a new subdomain. It’s not a www subdomain or a newly registered domain, which is easy to detect. We’re talking about: Randomchars.mydomain.com [http://Randomchars.mydomain.com] Within 20 minutes, the anthropic ClaudeBot was on it. I could tell because the nginx access log showed a hit to robots.txt and then a handful of pages. First off, how the hell did they find it? Next, is my DNS provider, Amazon Route 53 selling this kind of data now? Or is there some kind of DNS wildcard query?

Sam Altman Says If Jobs Gets Wiped Out, Maybe They Weren’t Even “Real Work” to Start With

https://lemmy.world/post/37867668

Sam Altman Says If Jobs Gets Wiped Out, Maybe They Weren’t Even “Real Work” to Start With - Lemmy.World

I came across this article in another Lemmy community that dislikes AI. I’m reposting instead of cross posting so that we could have a conversation about how “work” might be changing with advancements in technology. The headline is clickbaity because Altman was referring to how farmers who lived decades ago might perceive that the work “you and I do today” (including Altman himself), doesn’t look like work. The fact is that most of us work far abstracted from human survival by many levels. Very few of us are farming, building shelters, protecting our families from wildlife, or doing the back breaking labor jobs that humans were forced to do generations ago. In my first job, which was IT support, the concept was not lost on me that all day long I pushed buttons to make computers beep in more friendly ways. There was no physical result to see, no produce to harvest, no pile of wood being transitioned from a natural to a chopped state, nothing tangible to step back and enjoy at the end of the day. Bankers, fashion designers, artists, video game testers, software developers and countless other professions experience something quite similar. Yet, all of these jobs do in some way add value to the human experience. As humanity’s core needs have been met with technology requiring fewer human inputs, our focus has been able to shift to creating value in less tangible, but perhaps not less meaningful ways. This has created a more dynamic and rich life experience than any of those previous farming generations could have imagined. So while it doesn’t seem like the work those farmers were accustomed to, humanity has been able to shift its attention to other types of work for the benefit of many. I postulate that AI - as we know it now - is merely another technological tool that will allow new layers of abstraction. At one time bookkeepers had to write in books, now software automatically encodes accounting transactions as they’re made. At one time software developers might spend days setting up the framework of a new project, and now an LLM can do the bulk of the work in minutes. These days we have fewer bookkeepers - most companies don’t need armies of clerks anymore. But now we have more data analysts who need to understand the information. In the future we may need fewer software coders, and in turn, they will likely be many more software projects, heck there will likely be a lot more software that’s all seek to solve new problems in new ways. How do I know this? I think history shows us that innovations in technology always bring new problems to be solved. There is an endless reservoir of challenges to be worked on that previous generations didn’t have time to think about. We are going to free minds from tasks that can be automated, and many of those minds will move on to the next level of abstraction. At the end of the day, I suspect we humans are biologically wired with a deep desire to output rewarding and meaningful work, and much of the results of our abstracted work is hard to see and touch. Perhaps this is why I enjoy mowing my lawn so much, no matter how advanced robotic lawn mowing machines become.

TIL that 18650 means 18mm x 65mm

https://lemmy.world/post/27409933

TIL that 18650 means 18mm x 65mm - Lemmy.World

And there are lots of other sizes too, such as the huge 40135 (40mm x 135mm)

That car is gonna be crawling with bugs so deep and hard to find it’s better to toss it off the back of a ship

Putin gifts car to Kim Jong Un in sign of ‘special personal relations,’ North Korean state media reports | CNN

https://lemmy.world/post/12183061

Putin gifts car to Kim Jong Un in sign of ‘special personal relations,’ North Korean state media reports | CNN - Lemmy.World

Coming back to say that I got it to print based on the suggestions in the thread.

I settled on a 3mm retraction length in PrusaSlicer which left a minimal amount of stringing. Printed flawlessly after that change.

Thanks for all the comments and suggestions! I’ve cleaned the whole thing up and I changed the PrusaSlicer retraction length from 6mm to 2mm. Let’s see if this changes the result.

This printer is mostly stock Ender 5 Plus. I upgraded to an all metal extruder (original one broke) and capricorn bowden tube a while back. Usually the defaults have been OK and I print often.

My extruder gear leaves quite a track mark on the side of this filament and I wonder if this is contributing. I’m in a very hot and humid region and this spool is about a year old. I did have it in my filament dryer for about half a day right before this print, so it was more malleable than usual.

Oh, and this print is a print-in-place retractable cosplay katana, so there is a ton of intricate details which seems to result in a lot more retractions and tiny movements than usual.

Have you ever seen this type of print failure?

https://lemmy.world/post/8827916

Have you ever seen this type of print failure? - Lemmy.World

Pretty sure I’m having heat creep up the Bowden tube, as it’s getting jammed a few cm back from the hot end and then can’t push the filament any more. When I get it out there’s a little molten bulb at the filament. In this fail, I think it jammed as usual and the extruder found a way to keep going. I tried turning down the hot end from 215 to 200 and it’s still failing. My cooling fan is running at 100%. This is the third time I’ve had this print fail at about this layer, around 1 hour into what will be a 26 hour print. Any ideas?

Mind blowing experience with ChatGPT - Upload my narrative and then ask me questions

https://lemmy.world/post/8240307

Mind blowing experience with ChatGPT - Upload my narrative and then ask me questions - Lemmy.World

I’m in the process of hiring for a position and I have two candidates. It’s a tough call because both are very proficient but each has some unique attributes. I thought I might ask ChatGPT’s assistance with thinking it through. I recorded myself talking through my thoughts on each one as I read through their resume and the Q&As that I’ve done with each. Then uploaded the audio file to the whisper-1 api for transcription (for this I’m using the OpenAI API). Then I pasted the transcribed text into GPT4 and then prompted it with: “Above is my transcribed notes comparing two candidates for a position together. Help me think through this decision by asking me questions, one at a time.” ChatGPT proceeded to ask me really good questions, one after the other. After a while I felt like it had got me to think about many new factors and ideas. After about 22 questions I’d had enough, so I asked it to wrap up and summarize our next steps, to which it spit out a bullet-point list of what we’d concluded and, what steps we should take next. I don’t know if everyone is using ChatGPT this way, but this is a really useful feedback system.

“It was an honest mistake. And I expect the situation to be resolved shortly,” Wilson said in the statement.

Wilson said in the statement that when the plane landed in Hong Kong, he “immediately went to customs officials and called their attention to the issue.”

I hope he doesn’t assume his status as an American politician will solve the matter. According to the article he volunteered the information. But according to the linked article at RTHK the weapon was found by a customs agent.