Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Motherboard Sales ‘Collapse’ By More Than 25%
  2. Anthropic Raises Claude Code Usage Limits, Credits New Deal With SpaceX
  3. Richard Dawkins ‘Convinced’ AI Is Conscious
  4. Major Homebuilder To Test Placing Mini Data Centers in Suburban Backyards
  5. Single Dose of Magic Mushroom Psychedelic Can Cause Anatomical Brain Changes
  6. Sam Altman’s Management Style Comes Under the Microscope At OpenAI Trial
  7. Microsoft Edge Stores Passwords In Plaintext In RAM
  8. Google’s AI Search Results Will Now Turn To Reddit For ‘Expert Advice’
  9. Valve Releases Steam Controller CAD Files Under Creative Commons License
  10. Morgan Stanley Undercuts Rivals On Pricing In Crypto Trading Debut
  11. Claude Managed Agents Can Engage In a ‘Dreaming’ Process To Preserve Memories
  12. ReactOS Unifies Installation Media, Introduces GUI Installer and New ATA Driver
  13. Zuckerberg ‘Personally Authorized and Encouraged’ Meta’s Copyright Infringement
  14. Silicon Valley Bets $200 Million On AI Data Centers Floating In the Ocean
  15. Microsoft Gives Up On Xbox Copilot AI

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

Motherboard Sales ‘Collapse’ By More Than 25%

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Motherboard sales are sharply declining as AI demand drives shortages and price hikes for memory, storage, CPUs, and other PC components. “Because of this, users who don’t have deep pockets are putting off upgrading their PCs and holding on to their current devices longer,” reports Tom’s Hardware. From the report:
Asus, which sold 15 million motherboards in 2025, has only shipped a little more than 5 million in the first half of 2026. It’s expected that the company will have to push hard for it to even move 10 million units by the end of the year, marking a 33% decrease in sales year-on-year. Gigabyte and MSI sold 11.5 million and 11 million motherboards last year, respectively. However, both companies have revised their internal forecasts for 2026 to 9 million (Gigabyte) and 8.4 million (MSI), a 22% drop for the former and a 24% contraction for the latter.

ASRock will be hardest hit by the situation, with the company’s shipments projected to fall by 37%, from 4.3 million in 2025 to just 2.7 million by the end of the year. This marks a contraction of 28% for the overall motherboard market, at least for the big four manufacturers. […] Aside from this, AMD continues to use the AM5 socket for its latest processors, while Intel’s Nova Lake, which will reportedly use LGA 1954, isn’t available until later this year. The situation is further compounded by Nvidia not releasing a refreshed RTX 50 Super series this year, while rumors claim that the RTX 60 series will not debut until 2028. This confluence of factors is discouraging PC builders from upgrading their current systems.

Re:Its going to be worse by end of year

By 0123456 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Don’t forget Windows 11.

We had to buy two new PCs last year just because Windows 11 refused to run on the existing ones. That extra burst of sales is also over.

Anthropic Raises Claude Code Usage Limits, Credits New Deal With SpaceX

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
At its Code with Claude developer conference on Wednesday, Anthropic announced a deal with SpaceX to utilize the entire compute capacity of the latter’s data center in Memphis, Tennessee. On stage at the conference, CEO Dario Amodei said the deal was intended to increase usage limits for Anthropic’s Pro and Max plan subscribers. The announcement was accompanied by an increase in those usage limits; Anthropic doubled Claude Code’s five-hour window limits for Pro and Max subscribers, removed the peak-hours limit reduction on Claude Code for those same accounts, and raised API limits for its Opus model. The table [here] outlining the Opus changes was shared in the company’s blog post on the topic.

Anthropic claims the deal gives the company access to more than 300 megawatts of new compute capacity. For its part, SpaceX focused its announcement on the capability of the Colossus 1 supercomputer that’s at the center of the deal. “Colossus 1 features over 220,000 NVIDIA GPUs, including dense deployments of H100, H200, and next-generation GB200 accelerators,” SpaceX wrote. Additionally, Anthropic “expressed interest” in working with SpaceX to build up “multiple gigawatts” of orbital compute capacity, tying into a recent (but unproven) focus on exploring orbital data centers as an answer to the problem that “compute required to train and operate the next generation of these systems is outpacing what terrestrial power, land, and cooling can deliver on the timelines that matter.”
“I spent a lot of time last week with senior members of the Anthropic team to understand what they do to ensure Claude is good for humanity and was impressed,” Elon Musk said on Wednesday. “No one set off my evil detector.”

FlashAttention

By bill_mcgonigle • Score: 3 Thread

I did some math the other day on running local AI models and the net result is most homes can’t afford to run the current median models.

They don’t just need 80GB of VRAM, they need newer architectures - to be supported by CUDA, to be supported by pytorch, etc.

These problems may well be solvable with more clever use of hardware, MoE, acceptable quantization, etc., but today you’re in for several grand and something north of 100W idle to use what is effectively a $20/mo plan.

A small enterprise can afford local, so that’s good. We paid more than that for one SGI machine back in the day.

The point of the exercise was to plot the position on the curve. We’re at something like 2006 YouTube where nobody could afford the drives or bandwidth that YouTube/Google was giving away for free (aka with VC money). Eventually hard drives got cheaper, people got gigabit at home, FlashServer was replaced with h.264/HTML5, phones could stabilize video locally, etc.

So it looks like these AI companies need to stay alive for about seven more years giving away product at a loss, or at least highly oversubscribed, to turn a profit. Hence the low token allowance, the banning of OpenClaw, etc.

On the other hand, I read the blog of a security researcher yesterday who found an exploit with (IIRC) Claude, tried to refine the PoC, but got dinged on “out of tokens” before he could finalize it. So he just deleted the work and moved on.

It sounds like they’re trying to not lose money at such a velocity and are trying to find a sweet spot where people don’t just declare it too underpowered to use.

A global energy depression may well take out the supermajority of the companies that believe they can burn investment money for seven more years. There is circular financing money, then there is real return on capital money. One is to fool the markets, the other is grounded in current physics.

Richard Dawkins ‘Convinced’ AI Is Conscious

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Mirnotoriety shares a report from The Telegraph:
Richard Dawkins has said chatbots should be considered conscious (source paywalled; alternative source) after spending two days interacting with the Claude AI engine. The evolutionary biologist said he had the “overwhelming feeling” of talking to a human during conversations with Claude, and said it was hard not to treat the program as “a genuine friend.”

In an essay for Unherd, Prof Dawkins released transcripts that he said showed that the chatbot had mulled over its “inner life” and existence and seemed saddened by the knowledge it would soon “die.” Prof Dawkins said he had let Claude read a draft of the novel he was writing and was astounded by its insights. “He took a few seconds to read it and then showed, in subsequent conversation, a level of understanding so subtle, so sensitive, so intelligent that I was moved to expostulate: ‘You may not know you are conscious, but you bloody well are!’" Prof Dawkins said. “My own position is: if these machines are not conscious, what more could it possibly take to convince you that they are?”
Mirnotoriety also points to John Searle’s Chinese Room (PDF), which argues that something can sound intelligent without actually understanding anything. Applied to Dawkins’ experience with Claude, it suggests he may have been responding to a very convincing illusion of consciousness rather than the real thing:
John Searle’s Chinese Room (1980) is a thought experiment in which a person, locked in a room and knowing no Chinese, uses an English rulebook to manipulate symbols and provide flawless answers to questions posed in Chinese. Searle’s point is that a system can simulate human intelligence and pass a Turing Test through purely syntactic processes, yet still lack genuine understanding or consciousness.

Applying this logic to Large Language Models, the “person in the room” corresponds to the inference engine, while the “rulebook” is the trillion-parameter neural network trained on vast corpora of human text. Just as the person matches Chinese characters to rules without understanding their meaning, an LLM processes token vectors and predicts the next token based on statistical patterns rather than lived experience.

Thus, while an LLM can generate sophisticated prose or code, it does so through probabilistic, high-dimensional pattern manipulation. In essence, it is “matching shapes” on such an immense scale that it creates the near-perfect illusion of semantic understanding.

Conversely…

By CommunityMember • Score: 5, Funny Thread
The AI is not convinced that Richard Dawkins is conscious.

Define “conscious”

By Locke2005 • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Passed a turing test != conscious.

fortunately that’s not what “conscious” means

By pulpo88 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The evolutionary biologist said he had the “overwhelming feeling” of talking to a human during conversations with Claude, and said it was hard not to treat the program as “a genuine friend.”

The scam victim said he had the “overhelming feeling” of talking to a higher power during conversations with the fortune teller, and said it was hard not to hand over bank account numbers to “a genuine friend.”

Re:sounding intelligent w/o understanding anything

By korgitser • Score: 5, Funny Thread
One might argue the quote also describes Dawkins himself…

Re:Conciousness isn’t as mysterious as you thought

By bsolar • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Dawkins is right. Detractors are just clinging, faith-like, to the idea that our brains are somehow magically more than computation devices

That’s not how it works. Even if human-like consciousness could be replicate by a machine, there is no evidence that LLMs are doing that.

What he is saying is that it “looks enough like actual consciousness that it must be it”, but that is not sound reasoning.

Something can be functionally equivalent enough to the real thing to give the impression of being the real thing without actually being the real thing.

Major Homebuilder To Test Placing Mini Data Centers in Suburban Backyards

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
NewtonsLaw writes:
According to Realtor.com, a California startup called Span plans to partner with Nvidia, PulteGroup, and other homebuilders to equip new homes with mini-data centers, so as to relieve the need to build and power much larger traditional centers. The article states the company “can install 8,000 XFRA units about six times faster and at five times lower cost than the construction of a typical centralized 100 megawatt data center of the same size.” Could this be the solution to at least some of the problems hindering the rollout of greater data-center capacity for AI systems?
“One big reason the XFRA model works is that the average American home only uses about 40 percent of its electrical capacity,” Span said. “As big data center developers struggle to find power sources and distribution capacity, XFRA uses capacity that’s already available.”
The startup says they will launch a 100-home proof of concept within the year to see if the idea is viable.

Just… no.

By YuppieScum • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The local domestic electricity supply infrastructure is built out knowing that each household won’t use 100% of their individual supply capacity, in the same way that ISPs have always oversold a neighbourhood’s actual backhaul capacity. See also airlines, etc.

As soon as they add this always-on load to the local infrastructure, service is going to degrade.

In addition, it doesn’t matter if the load is dispersed like this or all in one place in a DC - you still need to have the generation and transmission capacity to support the load.

Oh, and what about cooling?

Re:Do the home owners

By tlhIngan • Score: 5, Informative Thread

That consumer connection is going to be a problem.

The whole point of AI datacenters is because you have these massive racks of AI servers and they need the ability to talk to one another really quickly. It’s not just a server you can have in a homelab, it’s 42U of GPUs as part of Nvidia’s next-generation compute rack. And they need to talk to other such units quickly because you’re going to be using dozens of racks in the training process.

And home consumer power is there because while the home will rarely use it all at once, they will be peaks. If you have 200A coming in, you add up all your breakers and you’ll probably have 600A worth of loads. But some loads aren’t used at the same time - your dryer might be 50A and your AC 40A, but they rarely go at the same time. Same with the stove which has a 40A plug. It’s only becoming an issue because the next big load people are having are EVs and now people are starting to need some sort of power scheduling - usually in the form of a switch between the dryer and EV charger. (This is an issue because 200A is the practical maximum for the residential infrastructure - it’s the highest you can get with a direct-measurement electric meter without having to upgrade to a whole new panel involving CTs to remotely measure current).

But it all works because even though we can draw 200A max, very few are doing it all the time, and with the exception of AC and stoves, most loads are run at random times so it even outs. Though even with AC there are plans on scheduling them so they don’t all kick in at once - if you can have compressors going on in sequence or in a controlled manner, you can steady the load a bit.

Re:This is mind boggling stupid....

By Mspangler • Score: 4, Informative Thread

You need to do the math. I live in an all electric house up north. 12 KW goes to the various heating units. The stove is rated for 11 KW if everything in on like say Thanksgiving dinner. The water heater is 5 KW. I can’t read the clothes dryer tag but it’s on a 30 amp circuit just like the water heater.

Then add a dishwasher, microwave, and a vacuum cleaner (which is a surprisingly big power hog).

So the 200 amp service is pretty well loaded if all that is on at the same time, and that is what you have to design for. Sure a Smart home could juggle loads to some extent, shutting off the dryer and the water heater if the load goes up too high, but the prioritization is not simple.

And don’t whine at me to get a heat pump. I have one and I like it, but it stops working at -5 F, then it’s up to the resistors.

Just for reference my wintertime power use is three times summertime use. Last year I used the heat pump in AC mode for part of 21 days, typically 6 to 8 hours. It is in heating mode from mid October to the end of April.

Re: Do the home owners

By sabbede • Score: 4, Funny Thread
If the hardware looks like what they have in the mockup image, you wouldn’t need a removal bond, you’d just take the box down.

Now think about it the smart way - if the company fails and nobody comes to take the hardware, what did you just get for free? “liquid-cooled NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs.”
The only reason I’d want to take it down would be to bring it inside.

Re:Wait, THAT industry?!?

By alcmena • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Certainly not defending bigotry, but there was, about 15-20 years ago, a big issue with Chinese drywall being used in home construction. The root cause of why it was used was a material shortage in the south east due to a severe hurricane season. For those who bought a house built with it, or those who remodeled before the issue was known, it was a potential financial disaster for them. Ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…

Single Dose of Magic Mushroom Psychedelic Can Cause Anatomical Brain Changes

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A small study found that a single 25mg dose of psilocybin produced measurable brain changes that were still visible a month later, along with reported improvements in psychological insight, wellbeing, and mental flexibility. The Guardian reports:
Evidence for the changes came from specialized scans that measured the diffusion of water along nerve bundles in the brain. They suggested that some nerve tracts had become denser and more robust after the drug was taken. While the findings are preliminary, the scientists said the opposite was seen in ageing and dementia. “It’s remarkable to see potential anatomical brain changes one month after a single dose of any drug,” said Prof Robin Carhart-Harris, a neurologist at the University of California, San Francisco, and senior author on the study. “We don’t yet know what these changes mean, but we do note that overall, people showed positive psychological changes in this study, including improved wellbeing and mental flexibility.”

[…] Writing in Nature Communications, the researchers describe another key finding. Those who had the largest spike in brain entropy after psilocybin were most likely to report deeper psychological insight and better wellbeing a month later, underlining the link between flexible thinking and improved mental health. “It suggests a psychobiological therapeutic action for psilocybin,” said Carhart-Harris. Prof Alex Kwan, a neuroscientist at Cornell University in New York, said studies in mice had shown that psychedelics can rewire connections between nerves, a form of “plasticity” that could underlie their therapeutic effects. The big question is whether the same occurs in humans. “This study comes closer than most to addressing that question, by giving evidence of lasting changes in brain structure after psychedelic use,” he said. But while the results were “exciting,” the study involved a small number of people and DTI provides an indirect and limited view of brain connections, he said.

Re: scares me too much ill never do that

By jddj • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I believe that in the US, under current law anyway, “forcing” such medication on a patient would be illegal, malpractice, and anathema to any normal practitioner.

I’ll admit that there are corner cases where some patients are forcibly medicated (I know of none where psilocybin is used), but simple walking-around-really-depressed isn’t going to rise to a forced medication scenario.

I’ll offer a couple more thoughts:

1. If it’s the ‘tripping’ part that scares you, they’re working on subcomponents of the drug that provide little to none of the psychedelic experience. No idea where the work on this currently stands.

2. An anecdote, not data: from my couple experiences with psilocybin decades ago, my trips rank among the best and peak experiences of my life. Not “dude, I’m so messed up” but instead, open to all the best things in my life, aware of the potential in my hands to shape my life for good, more confidence in myself than I’d ever felt.

Uniformly good, and I feel it still benefits me. I got a peek behind the corner of the scenery of life, and better understand what’s ‘really’ going on; what obstacles I’m capable of putting in my own way.

Not everyone’s experience is good, nor so good, but in an assisted, therapeutic setting, I can see how this can help people.

Re: scares me too much ill never do that

By reanjr • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The way you describe it isn’t really how it works. It doesn’t rewire your brain in an active sense so much as introduce elasticity for your brain to rewire itself. This is especially useful when the brain has gotten itself into a doom loop of depression or anxiety. The psilocybin allows you to break out of the doom loop and start your brain on the path of healthy development.

If it works, it works …

By SpinyNorman • Score: 3 Thread

> said studies in mice had shown that psychedelics can rewire connections between nerves, a form of “plasticity” that could underlie their therapeutic effects. The big question is whether the same occurs in humans.

It’s an interesting question where the therapeutic effect of Psilocybin comes from, but there are everyday drugs like Acetaminophen (Tylenol) that are not fully understood. As long as it can be proved safe in some given dosage regime, then to an extent who cares how it works!

Sam Altman’s Management Style Comes Under the Microscope At OpenAI Trial

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Sam Altman’s management style came under scrutiny on the seventh day of Elon Musk’s high-stakes OpenAI trial, as former OpenAI figures Mira Murati, Shivon Zilis, and Helen Toner took the stand to testify about their experiences working with him. Their testimony resurfaced many of the criticisms that first emerged during Altman’s brief ouster as CEO in 2023. An anonymous reader quotes a report from Business Insider:
The first witness was Mira Murati, OpenAI’s former chief technology officer and now founder of her own AI shop, Thinking Machines Lab. Jurors watched a recorded video deposition of Murati, who was also OpenAI’s interim CEO after the board briefly ousted Sam Altman. Murati’s testimony focused on her concerns about Altman’s “difficult and chaotic” management style. She said Altman had trouble “making decisions on big controversial things.” He also had a habit of telling people what they wanted to hear.

“My concern was about Sam saying one thing to one person and a completely different thing to another person, and that makes it a very difficult and chaotic environment to work with,” said Murati. Murati said that her issue with Altman was not about safety, “it is about Sam creating chaos.” She said she supported Altman’s return to OpenAI because the company “was at catastrophic risk of falling apart” at the time of his ousting. “I was concerned about the company completely blowing up.”

Zilis said she was upset that Altman rolled out ChatGPT without involving the board. “It wasn’t just me but the entire board raised concern about that whole thing happening without any board communication,” she said. Zilis said she was also concerned about a potential OpenAI deal with a nuclear energy startup called Helion Energy because both Altman and Greg Brockman were investors. Although the executives had disclosed the investment to the board, Zilis said the deal talk made her uneasy. It “felt super out of left field,” she said. “How is it the case that we want to place a major bet on a speculative technology?”

In a video deposition, Helen Toner, a former member of OpenAI’s board who resigned in 2023, said she first became aware of ChatGPT’s release when an OpenAI employee asked another board member whether the board was aware of the development. […] Toner also elaborated on why the board, including herself, voted to remove Altman as CEO in 2023. “There were a number of things — the pattern of behavior related to his honesty and candor, his resistance of board oversight, as well as the concerns that two os his inner management team raised to the board about his management practices, his manipulation of board processes,” said Toner.
Recap:
Brockman Rebuts Musk’s Take On Startup’s History, Recounts Secret Work For Tesla (Day Six)
OpenAI President Discloses His Stake In the Company Is Worth $30 Billion (Day Five)
Musk Concludes Testimony At OpenAI Trial (Day Four)
Elon Musk Says OpenAI Betrayed Him, Clashes With Company’s Attorney (Day Three)
Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google (Day Two)
Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court (Day One)

Learn something new every day.

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 3 Thread

He also had a habit of telling people what they wanted to hear. … “My concern was about Sam saying one thing to one person and a completely different thing to another person, and that makes it a very difficult and chaotic environment to work with,” said Murati.

Being a serial/pathological liar is a “management style”. /s

Google: sam altman serial liar

Is management style a crime?

By chas.williams • Score: 3 Thread
If so, most CEOs would be in prison

Microsoft Edge Stores Passwords In Plaintext In RAM

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader UnknowingFool writes:
Security researcher Tom Joran Sonstebyseter Ronning has found that Microsoft Edge stores passwords in plaintext in RAM. After creating a password and storing it using Edge’s password manager, Ronning found that he could dump the RAM and recover his password which was stored in plaintext. Part of the issue is Edge loads all passwords to all sites upon a single verification check, even if the user was not visiting a specific site. This is very different from Chrome, which only loads passwords for specific websites when challenged for the site’s password. Also, Chrome will delete the password from memory once the password has been filled. Edge does not delete the passwords from memory once they are used.

Microsoft downplayed the risk noting access would require control over a user’s PC like a malware infection: “Access to browser data as described in the reported scenario would require the device to already be compromised,” Microsoft said. Ronning countered that it was possible to dump passwords for multiple users using administrative privileges for one user to view the passwords for other logged-on users.
“Design choices in this area involve balancing performance, usability, and security, and we continue to review it against evolving threats,” Microsoft said. “Browsers access password data in memory to help users sign in quickly and securely — this is an expected feature of the application. We recommend users install the latest security updates and antivirus software to help protect against security threats.”

Re:Place your bets....state actor or AI slop?

By JustNiz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’m guessing not a state actor. They already have enough other backdoors that Microsoft already put in for them, and plaintext is just too obvious even for them.
My bet is that this is just one more example in the already giant collection demonstrating Microsoft’s utter incompetence around good engineering, robust security, and properly testing products before releasing them.

Re: I’d love to trash Edge, but…

By OrangeTide • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Not deleting the password from memory is where Edge ultimately exposes itself excessively compared to competition. This is what happens when you have programmers that only think in terms of a Turing machine abstraction, versus doing practical threat modeling.

Re:I’d love to trash Edge, but…

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’d love to trash Edge, but it’s hard to argue against Microsoft’s analysis here. It’s hard to come up with a practical threat model which Edge would fail but Chrome or Firefox or any other browser with a built-in password manager would meet, unless the browser required authentication for every password retrieval.

Chrome does require authentication for every password retrieval. It uses Windows Hello as well so in theory you don’t even have a password to intercept since something like facial recognition authentication via a FIDO2 handshake is what ultimately allows Chrome to fill a single password on a single site.

Microsoft is sort of right, but in other ways very wrong. The scope of this is huge. There’s a big difference between malware getting my Slashdot password when I log into Slashdot, and malware getting my banking password when I log into Slashdot.

Re:I’d love to trash Edge, but…

By znrt • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’d love to trash Edge, but it’s hard to argue against Microsoft’s analysis here

i think you don’t get the irony. this is the company that campaigned furiously for the necessity of tpm for consumer devices …

you couldn’t make this shit up, brought to you by “closed proprietary sofware”.

then again, decrypting an entire password list and leaving it around in memory for no reason is totally unacceptable practice. it’s flabbergasting. you access sensible information only when needed and dispose of it after use, and even zeroing the memory should be par for the course. this is basic hygiene in any context.

both the pretext of “efficiency” and completely disregarding “defense in depth” are just laughable, even moreso if the information is as sensible as passwords no less, and agument “incompetency” to “pathetic clown level incompetency”.

Redundant

By PPH • Score: 5, Funny Thread

“Access to browser data as described in the reported scenario would require the device to already be compromised,” Microsoft said.

We already assumed it was running MS software.

Google’s AI Search Results Will Now Turn To Reddit For ‘Expert Advice’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Google is updating AI Overviews and AI Mode to more prominently surface “Expert Advice" from public discussions, social platforms, forums, blogs, and Reddit. Engadget reports:
Via a new “Expert Advice” section that can appear in AI responses, Google will display “a preview of perspectives from public online discussions, social media and other firsthand sources.” In the sample screenshot the company provided, quotes from forums, WordPress blogs and Reddit were arranged above links to their respective sources. Google plans to add more context to these links, too, showing “a creator’s name, handle or community name,” so you can judge what you might want to click through and read from a glance.

Google will also start recommending in-depth articles at the end of AI responses for further exploration of a given topic, and link to more sources directly in its generated answers rather than just at the end. If you subscribe to any publications, AI responses will also highlight sources from the subscriptions you link to your Google account.

Reddits as expertise

By optikos • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Apparently there exists a portion of Reddit that I have never visited because I have never used the word expertise or expert to describe the pontificating and opining in any reddit or subreddit on Reddit. Perhaps Reddit should add peer-review mechanisms and citation mechanisms that Wikipedia eventually added after its early days of getting away with outlandish article content.

It’s not that

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It’s at the rest of the internet like Facebook and Twitter are such staggering shit holes that Reddit is a bastion of useful information by comparison.

Always remember no matter how low you set the bar it can always go lower.

It could be worse

By mistergrumpy • Score: 5, Funny Thread
They could start using /. instead.

that is an insult

By FudRucker • Score: 5, Funny Thread
I prefer my expert advice to come from 4chan

Reddit Expert Training

By mdhoover • Score: 3 Thread
“Google, How do I cook a Beef Wellington?”
“First, eat a tide pod.”

Valve Releases Steam Controller CAD Files Under Creative Commons License

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Valve has released CAD files for the new Steam Controller and its Puck under a Creative Commons license. “The idea is to let enterprising modders create their own Steam Controller add-ons, like skins, charging stands, grip extenders or smartphone mounts,” reports Digital Foundry. From the report:
The Valve release includes files for the external shell (“surface topology”) of the Controller and Puck, with a .STP, .STL and engineering diagram of each device, with the latter showing areas that must remain uncovered to let the device maintain its signal strength and otherwise function as designed. Valve has previously released CAD files for its Steam Deck handheld, Valve Index VR suite and even the original Steam Controller a decade ago, so this release is welcomed but not unexpected.

The release is under a fairly restrictive Creative Commons license which allows for non-commercial use and requires attribution and sharing of designs back to the community. However, the license also suggests that commercial entities interested in making accessories for the Steam Controller or its Puck can contact Valve directly to discuss terms.
You can find the files here.

Oh Valve

By sound+vision • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

On one hand, I hate the idea of rent-seeking, gatekeeping storefronts taking 30% of every developer’s revenue.

On the other hand, Valve seems to use that power to do things that benefit the consumer, sometimes. Look at all they’ve done to promote Linux as a gaming platform.

Or maybe that’s just incidental, and they only look good compared to the actual Satan worshippers running the rest of these companies.

Morgan Stanley Undercuts Rivals On Pricing In Crypto Trading Debut

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Morgan Stanley is adding crypto trading to E*Trade, with a pilot now underway and a broader rollout planned for the platform’s 8.6 million customers later this year. The bank is reportedly undercutting rivals with a 50-basis-point trading fee as it bets traditional finance and DeFi will converge.

“By contrast, Robinhood Markets’ (HOOD) fees start at 95 bps, Coinbase Global’s (COIN) begins at 60 bps, and Charles Schwab (SCHW) will charge 75 bps,” notes Seeking Alpha. Morgan Stanley’s head of wealth management, Jed Finn, told Bloomberg: “This is much bigger than trading crypto at a cheaper rate. In a way, the strategy is disintermediating the disintermediators.”

The real economy is E*fcuked

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 3 Thread
> The bank is reportedly undercutting rivals with a 50-basis-point trading fee as it bets traditional finance and DeFi will converge.

ClippyAI: One basis point is equal to one-hundredth of one percent (0.01%)

“Converge” - nah!

By NoMoreDupes • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

as it bets traditional finance and DeFi will converge

Nah - as I’ve said before, the “crypto bros” are simply trying to wrestle the current financial system away from the “Wall Street bros” with one of their own making so they become the dominant ones. Nothing more.

Can you imagine how much worse 2008 would be

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
If instead of being propped up by mortgages the scams were propped up by pretend money with no national government and no regulation backing it?

And no I’m not some dumb gold bug. We came off the gold standard because there isn’t enough gold on the planet to represent the amount of economic activity human beings are capable of engaging in.

But you kind of want your fiat currency to be backed up by little things like a functioning national government and regulation and an actual military. Not some schleps in a basement doing whatever.

Sounds High

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Informative Thread

50 basis points? Paying a $50 trading fee on a $10k trade sounds pretty high to me. Especially for a digital currency!

I pay less for trades of stocks, options, and futures. Many online brokers don’t charge commissions anymore. Just a few pennies per trade in exchange fees. A $10k trade wold cost ~$3.

Claude Managed Agents Can Engage In a ‘Dreaming’ Process To Preserve Memories

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
At its Code with Claude developers’ conference, Anthropic has introduced what it calls “dreaming” to Claude Managed Agents. Dreaming, in this case, is a process of going over recent events and identifying specific things that are worth storing in “memory" to inform future tasks and interactions. Dreaming is a feature that is currently in research preview and limited to Managed Agents on the Claude Platform. Managed Agents are a higher-level alternative to building directly on the Messages API that Anthropic describes as a “pre-built, configurable agent harness that runs in managed infrastructure.” It’s intended for situations where you want multiple agents working on a task or project to some end point over several minutes or hours.

Anthropic describes dreaming as a scheduled process, in which sessions and memory stores are reviewed, and specific memories are curated. This is important because context windows are limited for LLMs, and important information can be lost over lengthy projects. On the chat side of things, many models use a process called compaction, whereby lengthy conversations are periodically analyzed, and the models attempt to remove irrelevant information from the context window while keeping what’s actually important for the ongoing conversation, project, or task. However, that process, as I described it, is usually limited to a specific conversation with a single agent. “Dreaming” is a periodically recurring process in which past sessions and memory stores can be analyzed across agents, and important patterns are identified and saved to memory for the future. Users will be able to choose between an automatic process, or reviewing changes to memory directly.

New revenue source?

By misnohmer • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Presumably this dreaming will rack up additional token costs?

That’s a neat trick, however:

By KermodeBear • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The reliance on words like “dreaming” are a cynical marketing ploy to try to make the product seem more human, and more capable, and more intelligent than it really is. Don’t get me wrong - these tools are very cool and quite powerful - but strip away some of the layers of unicorn dust and it’s still just a (very) sophisticated auto-complete word prediction engine.

It’s not alive, it isn’t conscious, it doesn’t “dream,” etc.

I recall / Central Park in Spring

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 5, Funny Thread
As I understand it, LLMs remembering user directives only selectively has been one of the major complaints that users have with LLMs.

Dreaming? On the job?

By nospam007 • Score: 5, Funny Thread

I thought these AIs would work 24/7, what’s next, vacation days?

Electric Sheep

By PPH • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate. All those moments will be lost in time… like tears in rain… Time to die.”

ReactOS Unifies Installation Media, Introduces GUI Installer and New ATA Driver

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
jeditobe writes:
Developers of ReactOS told Phoronix that the project has introduced a unified BootCD, replacing its previously separate installation media and LiveCD images. The new image combines the traditional text-mode installer with a LiveCD mode in a single medium. Within this unified BootCD, the updated LiveCD mode now includes an option to launch a first-stage GUI installer. The graphical interface is intended to make installation more approachable for new users compared to the long-standing text-based setup process.

In a separate development, the project has also merged a new ATA storage driver that has been in progress since early 2024. The plug-and-play aware storage stack supports SATA, PATA, ATAPI, AHCI, and even SCSI devices, potentially expanding the range of hardware on which ReactOS can successfully boot.

Following recent improvements to graphics driver support, the project continues to make incremental progress across core subsystems, though its long development timeline remains a point of discussion. Will these usability and hardware compatibility improvements be enough to broaden ReactOS adoption beyond its current niche?

Please note that all new features are not present in version 0.4.15 and are available for testing in the latest nightly test builds.

Re:new ATA driver?

By sabbede • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Well, that kinda makes sense, given this line from the Github page:
“The ReactOS project, although currently focused on Windows Server 2003 compatibility, is always keeping an eye toward compatibility with Windows Vista and future Windows NT releases.”

So, whatever was new in 2003…

Zuckerberg ‘Personally Authorized and Encouraged’ Meta’s Copyright Infringement

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Five major publishers and author Scott Turow have sued Meta and Mark Zuckerberg, alleging that Zuckerberg "personally authorized and actively encouraged” massive copyright infringement by using pirated books, journal articles, and web-scraped material to train Meta’s Llama AI systems. Meta denies wrongdoing and says it will fight the case, arguing that courts have recognized AI training on copyrighted material as potentially fair use. Variety reports:
“In their effort to win the AI ‘arms race’ and build a functional generative AI model, Defendants Meta and Zuckerberg followed their well-known motto: ‘move fast and break things,’" the plaintiffs say in their lawsuit. “They first illegally torrented millions of copyrighted books and journal articles from notorious pirate sites and downloaded unauthorized web scrapes of virtually the entire internet. They then copied those stolen fruits many times over to train Meta’s multibillion-dollar generative AI system called Llama. In doing so, Defendants engaged in one of the most massive infringements of copyrighted materials in history.”

The suit was filed Tuesday (May 5) in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York by five publishers (Hachette, Macmillan, McGraw Hill, Elsevier and Cengage) and Turow individually. The proposed class-action suit seeks unspecific monetary damages for the alleged copyright infringement. A copy of the lawsuit is available at this link (PDF). […] the latest lawsuit alleges that Meta and Zuckerberg deliberately circumvented copyright-protection mechanisms — and had considered paying to license the works before abandoning that strategy at “Zuckerberg’s personal instruction.” The suit essentially argues that the conduct described falls outside protections afforded by fair-use provisions of the U.S. copyright code.

Precedent

By Local ID10T • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Precedent holds that training with copyrighted material is transformative in nature, and thus is non-infringing.

Precedent further holds that pirating the material to train with is an incurable violation of copyright: That an AI trained using a dataset that includes pirated material is tainted to a degree that can only be cured by deletion of the AI and the training set data. Purchasing valid copies of the data after the fact are not sufficient; although a new dataset can be constructed from the newly purchased data and a new AI trained with this new dataset. This is in addition to the financial liability of the copyright violations.

Zuck is fucked.

Re: Headline is wrong

By reanjr • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Citation greatly needed.

Re: Goes to show how full of themselves they are

By toutankh • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Meta denies wrongdoing and says it will fight the case, arguing that courts have recognized AI training on copyrighted material as potentially fair use.

They did something and are now hoping for it to become legal.

Re:Learning from books has always been legal

By SoftwareArtist • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Whether or not the training is fair use, stealing the works is not. The courts have already made that clear. Fair use is about what you’re allowed to do with works that are legally in your possession. If you steal the works instead of acquiring them legally, that’s not fair use.

Re:Learning from books has always been legal

By spacepimp • Score: 5, Informative Thread

If I steal a truckload of books so I can read them, it doesn’t change the fact that I stole a truckload of books. Maybe the reading of the books wasn’t the crime, but that is not what this lawsuit is about. This is about infringing copyright on millions of books, not about reading those books.

Silicon Valley Bets $200 Million On AI Data Centers Floating In the Ocean

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Silicon Valley investors such as Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel have bet hundreds of millions of dollars on deploying AI data centers powered by waves in the middle of the world’s oceans — a move that coincides with tech companies facing mounting challenges in building AI data center projects on land. The latest investment round of $140 million is intended to help the company Panthalassa complete a pilot manufacturing facility near Portland, Oregon, and speed up deployments of wave-riding “nodes” designed to generate electrical power, according to a May 4 press release. Instead of sending renewable energy to a land-based data center, the floating nodes would directly power onboard AI chips and transmit inference tokens representing the AI models’ outputs to customers worldwide via satellite link.

Each node resembles a huge steel sphere bobbing on the water with a tube-like structure extending vertically down beneath the surface. The wave motions drive water upward through the tube into a pressurized reservoir, where it can be released to spin a turbine generator that produces renewable energy for the AI chips on board. Panthalassa claims the node’s AI chips would also get cooled using the surrounding water, which could offer another advantage over traditional data centers. “Ocean-based compute might offer a massive cooling advantage because the ambient temperature is so low,” Lee said. “Land-based data centers use a lot of electricity and fresh water for cooling.”

The newest node prototype, called Ocean-3, is scheduled for testing in the northern Pacific Ocean later in 2026. The latest version reaches about 85 meters in length and would stand nearly as tall as London’s Big Ben or New York City’s Flatiron Building, according to the Financial Times. Panthalassa has already tested several earlier prototypes of the wave energy converter technology, including the Ocean-1 in 2021 and the Ocean-2 that underwent a three-week sea trial off the coast of Washington state in February 2024. The company’s CEO and co-founder, Garth Sheldon-Coulson, said in a CBS interview that he hopes to eventually deploy thousands of the nodes.

let me get this straight

By Thud457 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
So we can’t afford renewable wave energy for powering peoples’ homes. But somehow it becomes feasible to power AI bros’ desperate money grabs?

Seems really low-maintenance to me

By Locke2005 • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Steel structures in a salt water environment? What could possibly go wrong? (Anything with iron in it rusts very quickly at my beach house, including stainless and galvanized steel. The beach house was original build on… (wait for it!)… steel posts.

Re:let me get this straight

By sg_oneill • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Undeniably the cheapest fuel sources are renewables now, wind, solar, and *probably* wave (I’m not sure if the maths done on that, but it seems plausible?)

Instead we are now paying billions to NOT do wind power.

This period of history is fueled by madness.

Re:AI Nino

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Sure, lets warm up the Pacific Ocean. What could go wrong ?

Wave power is generating electrical power from energy that’s already present in the ocean. If you don’t use it to generate electrical power, it will eventually turn into heat from damping anyway.

Re:Seems really low-maintenance to me

By ceoyoyo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Good point. We have absolutely no history of building steel structures in the ocean. Certainly not a fleet of them all around the world for the last century and a half.

Microsoft Gives Up On Xbox Copilot AI

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
Microsoft is winding down Xbox Copilot on mobile and ending development of Copilot on console, reversing plans to bring the gaming-focused AI assistant to current-generation Xbox consoles this year. “The move follows [new Xbox CEO Asha Sharma’s] reorganization of the Xbox platform team earlier on Tuesday, which added executives from Microsoft’s CoreAI team — where Sharma worked before taking over Xbox — to the Xbox side of the company,” reports The Verge.

Sharma said in a post on X:
Xbox needs to move faster, deepen our connection with the community, and address friction for both players and developers. Today, we promoted leaders who helped build Xbox, while also bringing in new voices to help push us forward. This balance is important as we get the business back on track. As part of this shift, you’ll see us begin to retire features that don’t align with where we’re headed. We will begin winding down Copilot on mobile and will stop development of Copilot on console.
Since taking over for former Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer in February, Sharma has scrapped the Microsoft Gaming brand and cut the price of Xbox Game Pass.

Huh?

By Locke2005 • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Am I the only one that can’t imagine any possible value an AI assistant would bring to a game? Unless you could use it as an aimbot…

Call of Doody

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 5, Funny Thread
“Copilot, play this online game for me. Under no circumstances mention goblins or gremlins, because this game is a modern military shooter and there are no goblins or gremlins in it. You are a classy competitor. You have only the highest respect for, and opinions of, your competitor’s mothers. You are not a racist. You are not a racist. YOU ARE NOT A RACIST.” “Whoops, it looks like I got you permanently banned! When I look back at it, perhaps Hitler did some things wrong after all.”

Re: Huh?

By ThurstonMoore • Score: 4, Funny Thread

My personal example with Elite Dangerous is I tried to use Copilot and Gemini to plot a route with points of interest from Colonia to Sagittarius A*.

They failed confidently and miserably.

Short-sighted schadenfreude

By Somervillain • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I always liked Sony more than M$. It’s been nice watching them out-innovate and out-maneuver Microshaft over the years. Now if we could just get them to rage quit from making desktop operating systems, that’d be great mmm’kay?

So life will be better if Sony and Nintendo are the only viable consoles? They don’t directly compete with one another and MS has been very good about supporting their gaming hardware on PCs, including Linux ones. Also, MS really trailblazed the the games pass, something I am confident Sony would have NEVER done had MS not forced them.

You can love or hate MS. I have a slight preference for XBox over PS, but I am glad Sony is around keeping MS from getting complacent. I am personally intrigued by the SteamDeck, but only time will tell if it’s a console experience…smooth, simple, seamless, and reliable like XBox/PS5....or a science experiment like the ASUS Ally…where with enough tinkering and sacrifice and working around it’s idiosyncrasies , it MIGHT work.

But regardless of your preferences, competition is good.