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  1. Embed this notice
    Forrest Brazeal (forrestbrazeal@hachyderm.io)'s status on Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 18:03:26 JST Forrest Brazeal Forrest Brazeal

    Did someone say "AIOps"?

    In conversation Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 18:03:26 JST from hachyderm.io permalink

    Attachments


    1. https://media.hachyderm.io/media_attachments/files/109/903/487/374/261/366/original/3c0524d85eb1d539.png
    • clacke repeated this.
    • Embed this notice
      Rui Seabra (ruiseabra@mastodon.social)'s status on Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 18:03:53 JST Rui Seabra Rui Seabra
      in reply to
      • Gerardo Lisboa

      @forrestbrazeal

      @gvlx

      LoL who says ai will eliminate jobs? ;)

      In conversation Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 18:03:53 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      Benoît Valiron (b3nb3n@social.sciences.re)'s status on Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 23:41:37 JST Benoît Valiron Benoît Valiron
      in reply to

      @forrestbrazeal #AltForYou
      Panel 1: current situation. Sad engineer next to a dirty pile of complexity (language, toolchain, infra). The pile is in the way to the sought app.

      Panel 2 : what people think AI will do. Happy engineer contemplation an AI cloud magically hiding the pile of complexity.

      Panel 3 : what is actually going to happen. Sad engineers in front of 2 piles of complexity: one for AI ( AI pipelines, templates, etc), leading to the other, unhidden, language pile.

      In conversation Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 23:41:37 JST permalink
      clacke likes this.
    • Embed this notice
      Jeremy Kahn (trochee@dair-community.social)'s status on Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 23:41:41 JST Jeremy Kahn Jeremy Kahn
      in reply to

      @forrestbrazeal as one of the sad engineers in figures A and C, I love this and I want to boost it
      ...and I don't have time to write the alt text

      In conversation Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 23:41:41 JST permalink
      clacke likes this.
    • Embed this notice
      Bornach (bornach@fosstodon.org)'s status on Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 23:41:43 JST Bornach Bornach
      in reply to
      • Jeremy Kahn

      @trochee @forrestbrazeal
      Just ask an AI to fill in the ALT Text for you. What could possibly go wrong?

      In conversation Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 23:41:43 JST permalink
      clacke likes this.
    • Embed this notice
      Y⃒̸̷̝̜̙ͥͥͥngmar (yngmar@social.tchncs.de)'s status on Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 23:41:46 JST Y⃒̸̷̝̜̙ͥͥͥngmar Y⃒̸̷̝̜̙ͥͥͥngmar
      in reply to

      @forrestbrazeal It's a subplot of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Deepness_in_the_Sky where the ancient hacker can break all the new tech because he's such a relic that he still understands the underlying technology it's all built on, which the current generation of techies have completely detached themselves from, operating so many layers of abstraction higher than him that they can't begin to understand how he could have possibly undermined all their fancy gadgets so completely.

      In conversation Thursday, 28-Dec-2023 23:41:46 JST permalink

      Attachments

      1. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: upload.wikimedia.org
        A Deepness in the Sky
        A Deepness in the Sky is a science fiction novel by American writer Vernor Vinge. Published in 1999, the novel is a loose prequel (set twenty thousand years earlier) to his earlier novel A Fire Upon the Deep (1992). The title is coined by one of the story's main characters in a debate, in a reference to the hibernating habits of his species and to the vastness of space. Background The plot begins with the discovery of an intelligent alien species on a planet orbiting an anomalous star, dubbed OnOff because for 215 of every 250 years it is dormant, releasing almost no detectable energy. During this period, the planet freezes and its fauna go into hibernation. The planet's inhabitants, called "Spiders" by the humans for their resemblance to arachnids, have reached a stage of technological development very similar to that of Earth's humans in the early 20th century, although humans believe that they may once have been capable of space travel. If this is true, then whoever can establish ties with the aliens first could reap unimaginable rewards; humans have made contact with only one other intelligent (but non-technological...
      clacke likes this.

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