#IT Technology
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#digital marketing#seo services#social media marketing#content creation#it technology#aprisity technology
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I made Ubuntu look like Windows! Look at me go!
#Linux#Ubuntu#tech#technology#it technology#I know I'm evil for doing this#but like also there's a reason the Windows desktop hasn't really changed in 30+ years#It's actually not a horrible layout#Just sayin'
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Reliable DevOps Consulting Services for Seamless Operations
Our devops consulting company focus on creating efficient, automated workflows that enhance collaboration between development and operations teams. We help organizations streamline processes, reduce errors, and improve deployment speed by implementing proven strategies and tools. With our expertise, you can achieve a stable and scalable infrastructure, ensuring continuous delivery and improved operational efficiency. Partner with us for a smoother, more productive approach to DevOps that supports your business goals.
#artificial intelligence#web development#tech#technology#mobile apps#apps development#usa#it technology#development
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I'm snorting command lines, I've escalated my privileges and now I'm high as fuck.
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Web Development
Working closely with our clients throughout the metamorphosis of quick loading websites, our website designs are unique, compelling, relevant, and has timely content in it which pulls readers again and again to visit the site.
#applications#crptocurrency#software#web development#it technology#mobile app development#mlm software
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Warning: This is a very long, very tech related post, which expands on the post above in a very winding way. If that doesn't interest you, do not proceed.
I am a Gen Z systems administrator (IT guy, techie, etc. for those of you who have not heard the term before). And let's be clear, I didn't end up in this position because I'm some kind of computer genius freak who's been a compsci-doctorate level programmer since I was eight years old (I have been programming since I was ten, but it was pretty much at an age appropriate level). I can:
Use Google.
Withstand enough of Microsoft, and when the occasion calls for it Apple's, bullshit with enough patience to fix most problems.
Make use of available diagnostic methods and tools to isolate problems to specific programs and hardware in computers, which relates back to option one.
Read hard to read technical documents, logs, and discussions to get information that is not immediately clear.
I am very rarely innovating new methods of finding things. I rarely work on issues that no one has encountered or fixed before (although it has happened a few times, it happens to every sysadmin). The skillset I have is, on some level, interchangeable with every mechanic or technician for any machine ever made, including cars, ships, and planes.
And, ultimately, the need for that skillset is what's missing from computers nowadays. It used to be, to use a desktop, even on the most basic rudimentary level, required you to have some technical skill. Without a GUI, you would have to know how to load programs and navigate a filesystem in DOS. You would have to know how to un-park the heads on a disk, and park them when you were done. How to operate a modem.
Doing the basic stuff, up until like, Windows 7 (and the release of the iPhone, the first ever smartphone two years earlier), took some level of technical acumen. Want to mod a game? Have fun downloading janky third party mod packers and managers, and editing files manually inside the game config. Same problem for getting games as a whole. Buy the CD. Put it in your computer. Doesn't work because you have dependencies missing. The dependencies also have missing dependencies, which you then have to find. Packages are missing. So on and so forth. Keeping your stuff running the way you wanted was hard.
Now? Not so much. Windows does a lot in the backend on computer systems. As an example to contrast something I brought up in the previous paragraph is Steam, and other similar stores. One click to install with all dependencies, and one click to install mods. And more importantly, us sysadmins do even more shit on the backend on incredibly powerful commercial systems which are also very heavily integrated and automated. But it's all still there.
These systems, much like many things in our society, are designed to discourage user-level fixes. But you can still do it, even if everything has been designed to cut out that basic level skillset development.
What's really killing us here is that we're giving the very young highly commercialized and consumer oriented devices like iPads to play with, which reinforces this anti-problem solving, "there's always an app for that" style of thinking.
We can and should have those devices, don't get me wrong. There is a place for them where reliability is at a premium, and you just need things to work and be simple for performing low level tasks. I manage multiple construction companies, and a few of them make incredibly effective use of managed tablets and iPads for on-site management personnel, like foremen and project managers, to give a practical example. Easy to set up, easy to swap around, and easy to use with very low failure rates. Great for people who don't need to do super technical work but need to be very effective communicators.
But that's not what we should be teaching people on, because it ruins any chance at proper problem-solving thinking. What we want to train them on is a system that has room for failure, and room for troubleshooting. And that is where the open source and full desktop environments comes to the rescue.
If you want your kid to learn how a computer works, give them a locked down (or not-so-locked down, up to you) Windows PC. Or even better, give them a clean copy of Ubuntu on a laptop with a touchscreen to work with for their childhood. Shit will break, fail, go lopsided, bug out, etc. Part of the cost for using that device will, inevitably, be learning how to fix it, and also as they get older, fixing it themselves.
We can bring these skills back. But it means, like in all things, standing up and resisting the ever encroaching rise of corporations and their locked down technology.
another thought about "gen z and gen alpha don't know how to use computers, just phone apps" is that this is intentionally the direction tech companies have pushed things in, they don't want users to understand anything about the underlying system, they want you to just buy a subscription to a thing and if it doesn't do what you need it to, you just upgrade to the more expensive one. users who look at configuration files are their worst nightmare
#sysadmin#it technology#technician#internet technology#computing#computers#windows#tech industry#text post#opinion piece#opinion
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One of the creators of my industry. We stand on the shoulders of giants, like Lynn.

Goodbye, Lynn. Thank you for your constant support and encouragement since the day I started these comics. It has meant the world to me, and I wish I could have told you. We will remember you forever.
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WAIT
I JUST REMEMBERED HEARING AN ELON MUSK QUOTE WHERE HE TALKS ABOUT HOW HE BELIEVES CHESS IS "TOO SIMPLE" OR WHATEVER AND HE SAID HIS FAVORITE GAME WAS A GAME CALLED "POLYTOPIA"
I JUST REMEMBERED THAT IVE PLAYED POLYTOPIA
It being Elon's favorite game (or at least one so important to him that his biographer dedicates a lot of time to it) is.....really really funny.
Basically, imagine Civilization, but as a mobile game. So like if Civilization Revolution was even more dumbed down (that's a Civilization insult. That's devastating. It's devastated right now). For what it's worth, it's not a bad game. On the contrary, from what I could tell in the little bit of time I played it, it's a perfectly competent game with good design. But it's not a deep game by any means. I played through it once, won easily on my first go, then saw that the other playable characters had barely any differences between them.
Like, not to imply you can judge a book by its cover, but here's what it looks like

I came across an article by Dave Karpf discussing this exact thing, and I think it describes it wonderfully
#i didnt link the article itself because its substack and i dont fuck with substack#but i did want to at least provide credit to the author because it was very well written#anyway i think about elon describing chess with the phrase 'no fog of war...no technology tree'#honestly it just reads like someone who really likes Polytopia and wishes every game were polytopia#it would be like me complaining chess doesnt have passive relics randomized paths and deckbuilding#slay the spire addresses these limitations
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i feel like it says something about us as a species that somebody worked real hard to invent 3D printing when i think anyone who has ever used a printer would agree with me that we have not really gotten our arms around 2D printing yet. we’re getting ahead of ourselves.
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I work on IT and copilot is making my life hell. It's fucking complicated to block it, because you need to access the computer's registry, which isn't something most people usually do.
And my coworkers decide to "ask copilot" instead of checking our resources or knowledge bases, which in turn ends up in "I didn't find how to do this, so I'm gonna escalate it"; which you can guess how it goes. They're doing this for the most simplest stuff: having no audio, the computer freezing, installing a printer, writing an email etc. When copilot doesn't have the answer they end up contacting me, and I don't know if I feel more annoyed or worried about how I end up solving these things in minutes, but they can't because they expect copilot to do it for them, and give up when it doesn't.
Bear in mind that "AI" use wastes a lot of water, and I live in a place that only gets water 3x per week. So my coworkers decide to use copilot to write an email instead of spending about 5 minutes doing it themselves, and then I spend 3 days without water, yay.
Worst part of it is that the chief of operations is the one pushing this, a wealthy kid whose hobby (and I'm quoting) is "funding business and then selling them", so IT is not his career, he just has a lot of money. He even proposed giving a bonus for anyone who came to him with "AI ideas" (whatever that means), while the IT guys on higher positions like me are worried AF about a breach of information.
One of the common mistakes I see for people relying on "AI" (LLMs and image generators) is that they think the AI they're interacting with is capable of thought and reason. It's not. This is why using AI to write essays or answer questions is a really bad idea because it's not doing so in any meaningful or thoughtful way. All it's doing is producing the statistically most likely expected output to the input.
This is why you can ask ChatGPT "is mayonnaise a palindrome?" and it will respond "No it's not." but then you ask "Are you sure? I think it is" and it will respond "Actually it is! Mayonnaise is spelled the same backward as it is forward"
All it's doing is trying to sound like it's providing a correct answer. It doesn't actually know what a palindrome is even if it has a function capable of checking for palindromes (it doesn't). It's not "Artificial Intelligence" by any meaning of the term, it's just called AI because that's a discipline of programming. It doesn't inherently mean it has intelligence.
So if you use an AI and expect it to make something that's been made with careful thought or consideration, you're gonna get fucked over. It's not even a quality issue. It just can't consistently produce things of value because there's no understanding there. It doesn't "know" because it can't "know".
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Microsoft Office, like many companies in recent months, has slyly turned on an “opt-out” feature that scrapes your Word and Excel documents to train its internal AI systems. This setting is turned on by default, and you have to manually uncheck a box in order to opt out.
If you are a writer who uses MS Word to write any proprietary content (blog posts, novels, or any work you intend to protect with copyright and/or sell), you’re going to want to turn this feature off immediately.How to Turn off Word’s AI Access To Your Content
I won’t beat around the bush. Microsoft Office doesn’t make it easy to opt out of this new AI privacy agreement, as the feature is hidden through a series of popup menus in your settings:On a Windows computer, follow these steps to turn off “Connected Experiences”:
File > Options > Trust Center > Trust Center Settings > Privacy Options > Privacy Settings > Optional Connected Experiences > Uncheck box: “Turn on optional connected experiences”
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Happy New Year 2024 from Korea.
Year of the 🐲🐉!
#Seoul#korea#happy 2024#new year#drone show#drone#fireworks#amazing#video#viral#3d#technology#🎇#nature#space#Star#night#earth#awesome#tumblr#hd#dragon#dragon year#chinese#tradition#art#love#moon#animal
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#technology#tech#lgbtq#lgbtqia#lgbt#trans#transgender#twitter#tweets#memes#meme#funny#lol#lmao#humor#mostly-funnytwittertweets
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I feel like this is not talked about enough, but AI is also found to be trained on CSAM, which should be bad enough for everyone to ask for regulations, but for some reason it isn't
"content creator" is a corporate word.
we are artists.
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