Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. DOJ Sues Cloudera For Deliberately Excluding American Workers From Tech Jobs
  2. First Tesla Semi Rolls Off High-Volume Production Line
  3. Elon Musk Says OpenAI Betrayed Him, Clashes With Company’s Attorney
  4. New Sam Bankman-Fried Trial Would Be Huge Waste of Court’s Time, Judge Says
  5. Ubuntu’s AI Plans Have Linux Users Looking For a ‘Kill Switch’
  6. Joby Demos Its Air Taxi In NYC
  7. Apple Gives Up On the Vision Pro After M5 Refresh Flop
  8. California High-Speed Rail Price Tag Jumps To $231 Billion
  9. Colorado’s Anti-Repair Bill Is Dead
  10. GitHub ‘No Longer a Place For Serious Work’, Says Hashicorp Co-Founder
  11. Should Schools Get Rid of Homework?
  12. Humanoid Robots Start Sorting Luggage In Tokyo Airport Test Amid Labor Shortage
  13. FDA Grants Quick Review For 3 Psychedelic Drug Trials
  14. New Report Finds Some Babies Spend Up To Eight Hours a Day on Screens
  15. Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google

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.

DOJ Sues Cloudera For Deliberately Excluding American Workers From Tech Jobs

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from ZeroHedge:
The Justice Department on Tuesday sued Cloudera, accusing the enterprise data and artificial intelligence company of deliberately engineering a hiring process that excluded American workers from at least seven lucrative technology positions while the firm pursued permanent residency sponsorship for foreign workers on temporary visas. In a 14-page complaint filed with the Office of the Chief Administrative Hearing Officer, the department’s Civil Rights Division alleges that Cloudera, from March 31, 2024, through at least January 28, 2025, instructed job candidates to submit applications to a dedicated email address, amerijobpostings@cloudera.com, that rejected all external messages with an automated bounce-back error. The company did not advertise the roles on its public careers website or accept applications through its standard portal, as it did for non-sponsorship positions.

Cloudera then attested to the Department of Labor that it could not locate any qualified U.S. workers for the roles, which paid between approximately $180,000 and $294,000 annually, according to the filing. The positions included a Product Manager role in Santa Clara, California, with a listed salary range of $170,186 to $190,000. The case marks one of the most detailed enforcement actions under the Justice Department’s Protecting U.S. Workers Initiative, which was relaunched last year and has already produced 10 settlements targeting employers accused of discriminating against American workers in favor of temporary visa holders. “Employers cannot use the PERM sponsorship process as a backdoor for discriminating against U.S. workers,” Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon of the Civil Rights Division said in a statement. “The Division will not hesitate to sue companies who intentionally deter U.S. workers from applying to American jobs.”

I Wonder Why?

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 3 Thread

Typically the foreign worker scams are meant to hire cheap foreign labor and avoid paying domestic level wages. But for positions paying nearly $200k, what was Cloudera’s goal? If not for cheap labor, why did they want foreign workers for these positions?

Open borders would be better than this

By T34L • Score: 3 Thread

If the border was open then all the would-be immigrants would be competing with Americans on more or less equal terms. But H1B hires are defacto at mercy of their employer and risk of swift deportation if they try to play hardball, which means they’ll gladly take lower the pay and lot worse handling than a local would that doesn’t have to worry about getting displaced if they get fired or quit, would have to.

The idea that you have to have an employer sponsored work visa entirely depended on people primarily coming over to mooch off of benefits, but what fuckin’ benefits are there left for non-citizens in the US?

First Tesla Semi Rolls Off High-Volume Production Line

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Tesla has produced the first Semi from its new high-volume production line at Gigafactory Nevada, a milestone for the long-delayed electric Class 8 truck program after years of pilot builds and delays. Electrek reports:
The Tesla Semi has had one of the longest gestation periods in Tesla’s history. First unveiled in 2017, the truck was originally promised for production in 2019. That target slipped repeatedly — to 2020, then 2021, then 2022 — before Tesla finally delivered a handful of units to PepsiCo in late 2022. Those early trucks were essentially hand-built on a pilot line. Tesla spent the next three years refining the design, cutting roughly 1,000 lbs from the truck, and building out a dedicated factory adjacent to Gigafactory Nevada in Sparks. The company revealed the final production specs in February, confirming two trims: a Standard Range with 325 miles at full 82,000-lb gross combination weight, and a Long Range with 500 miles of range.

Tesla is quoting $290,000 for the 500-mile Long Range version and roughly $260,000 for the Standard Range — making it the lowest-priced Class 8 battery electric tractor on the market. The shift from a pilot line to a high-volume production line is significant. Tesla’s Semi factory is designed for an annual capacity of 50,000 trucks, though the company will ramp gradually. Analysts project deliveries between 5,000 and 15,000 units in 2026, but that sounds way too optimistic. […] Both trims feature an 800-kW tri-motor drivetrain producing 1,072 hp and support 1.2-MW Megacharger speeds, restoring 60% of range in roughly 30 minutes — conveniently timed around a driver’s mandatory rest break. Tesla has opened its first Megacharger station in Ontario, California, and has mapped 66 Megacharger locations across 15 states.

Did it roll off under its own power?

By T34L • Score: 3 Thread

Because we’ve had issues with semis (admittedly, for once not Teslas), being demonstrated with a little bit of gravity help…

Trailer with battery/solar

By SuperDre • Score: 3 Thread
I wonder if the range can be extended by having extra battery in the trailer (newly designed and optimized) and have lightweight solarpanels as the cover. Yeah the solar panels won’t add that much, but it can be enough to run the refrigerator of the trailer or some extra power. Also, docking stations should be adjusted so these (any EV) truck can be charged while (off)loading the cargo, do extending the range a bit between each station and making it viable for longer ranges. Also adding charging pads to all highways between cities can make sure these trucks can even be charged while driving (already successfull tests have been done in some countries).

Re:Did it roll off under its own power?

By Buchenskjoll • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Impressive! The nazis required many tanks for that.

Re:500 miles?

By AleRunner • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Maximum of 8 hours of driving before a 30 minutes break, with a maximum of a two hour extension in the case of adverse conditions according to US laws, so 10 hours would cover the worst case. You could average over 50MPH and still be fine.

Choke point

By burtosis • Score: 3 Thread
Battery capacity is increasing, and larger vehicles are being electrified but that brings us to a major charging problem. 350kW is the maximum available in the US, and vehicles like the Silverado have over 200kWh meaning fast charging isn’t possible, not because the battery and supporting systems can’t take it but because there is no such thing as a charger powerful enough. Somehow BYD in China already has 1,500 kW chargers and even supporting smaller capacity vehicles meaning the charge time is down to roughly the time it takes to fill up at a gas station. Puny 350kW chargers make things like large trucks and semis quite a bit less viable for no particularly good reason at all, maybe the US and other countries should get off their asses and actually support the power needed to properly support reasonable charging of large vehicles and fast charging of small ones. While they are at it, ideally not up charging 5x the cost they pay for electricity like they do here in the US making it just as expensive as fossil fuels when they could turn a profit at lower rates.

Elon Musk Says OpenAI Betrayed Him, Clashes With Company’s Attorney

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the San Francisco Chronicle:
Elon Musk returned to the witness stand Wednesday in Oakland federal court for a second day of testimony in his case against OpenAI, detailing his shift from being an enthusiastic supporter of the nonprofit to feeling betrayed. He also clashed repeatedly with OpenAI’s attorney over questions that Musk believed were unfair. He said his feelings towards OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and President Greg Brockman shifted from a “phase one” of support, “phase two” of doubts, and finally “phase three, where I’m sure they’re looting the nonprofit. We’re currently in phase three,” Musk said with a chuckle. Musk said he was a “fool” for giving OpenAI "$38 million of essentially free funding to create what would become an $800 billion company,” of which he has no equity stake.

In his 2024 lawsuit, Musk alleged breach of charitable trust and unjust enrichment, arguing OpenAI abandoned its original nonprofit mission to benefit humanity to pursue financial gain. OpenAI’s lawyer William Savitt argued Tuesday during his opening statement that the nonprofit entity remains in control of the for-profit public benefit corporation and is now one of the most well-funded nonprofits in the world. Musk is seeking to oust Altman from OpenAI’s board and upwards of $134 billion in damages, which he said would be used to fund OpenAI’s nonprofit mission. During cross-examination, Savitt clashed with Musk over questioning. Savitt asked whether Musk had contributed $38 million to OpenAI, rather than the $100 million that he later claimed to have invested on X. Musk said he also contributed his reputation to the company and came up with the idea for the name, leading Savitt to ask Musk to respond yes or no to “simple” questions.

“Your questions are not simple. They’re designed to trick me, essentially,” Musk said, adding that he had to elaborate or it would mislead the jury. He compared Savitt’s questions to asking, “have you stopped beating your wife?” Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers intervened, leading Musk to answer yes to the $38 million investment amount. The world’s richest man said his doubts grew and by late 2022, he thought “wait a second, these guys are betraying their promise. They’re breaking the deal.” “I started to lose confidence that they were telling me the truth,” Musk said. A turning point was co-defendent Microsoft’s investment of billions of dollars into OpenAI, Musk said. On October 23, 2022, Musk texted Altman that he was “disturbed” to see OpenAI’s valuation of $20 billion in the wake of the Microsoft deal. Musk called the deal a “bait and switch,” since a nonprofit doesn’t have a valuation. OpenAI had “for all intents and purposes” become primarily a for-profit company, Musk argued. Altman responded to Musk by text that “I agree this feels bad,” saying that OpenAI had previously offered equity in the company but Musk hadn’t wanted it at the time. Altman said the company was happy to offer equity in the future. Musk said it “didn’t seem to make sense to me” to hold equity in what should be a nonprofit.
Musk also testified about former OpenAI board member Shivon Zilis, who lives with him, is the mother of four of his children, and served as a senior advisor at Neuralink. He denied that she shared sensitive OpenAI information with him. Court evidence showed Musk had encouraged her to stay close to OpenAI to “keep info flowing” and had approved Neuralink recruiting OpenAI employees, which he defended by saying workers are free to change jobs. “It’s a free country,” Musk said.
Recap:
Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google (Day Two)
Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court (Day One)

OpenAI is not a nonprofit anymore

By memory_register • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Musk keeps using the term “looting the nonprofit” but the restructuring into a for-profit was done above board with the consent of the board of directors. I get there was drama, but all of it was legal. Don’t be mad when other people have a different vision and controlling power.

Objection, your honor

By Krishnoid • Score: 5, Funny Thread

“Your questions are not simple. They’re designed to trick me, essentially,” Musk said, adding that he had to elaborate or it would mislead the jury. He compared Savitt’s questions to asking, “have you stopped beating your wife?”

“Assumes facts not in evidence. Unless, of course, we missed something really, really unusual in discovery, or the artificial intelligence is hallucinating again.”

Re:OpenAI is not a nonprofit anymore

By phantomfive • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I get there was drama, but all of it was legal.

If that were obvious, then it would have been thrown out of court. The entire reason it’s in court still is because it’s not clear if it was legal or not.

Re:OpenAI is not a nonprofit anymore

By fluffernutter • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
We are talking about someone who has always gotten everything he has wanted in life here. Sounds like on both sides actually.

Re:OpenAI is not a nonprofit anymore

By quonset • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The legality of going for-profit is questionable.

So is Musk’s status as an illegal immigrant:

In 2013, Musk’s brother, Kimbal Musk, said in an interview, “We were illegal immigrants,” to which Elon Musk replied, “I’d say it was a gray area.”

New Sam Bankman-Fried Trial Would Be Huge Waste of Court’s Time, Judge Says

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
A federal judge denied Sam Bankman-Fried’s request for a new trial, calling his claims of DOJ witness intimidation “wildly conspiratorial” and unsupported by the record. Judge Lewis Kaplan said (PDF) the FTX founder’s motion appeared tied to a pre-indictment plan to recast himself as a Republican victim of Biden’s DOJ in hopes of gaining sympathy, leniency, or even a Trump pardon. Ars Technica reports:
Bankman-Fried was sentenced to 25 years in prison in 2024 for “masterminding one of the largest financial frauds in American history,” US District Judge Lewis Kaplan wrote in his order. He was convicted on all charges, including wire fraud, conspiracy to commit securities fraud, commodities fraud, and money laundering. There is already an appeal pending in another court, the judge noted. But Bankman-Fried filed a separate motion for a new trial, claiming that there were “newly discovered” witnesses and evidence that might have helped his defense, if Joe Biden’s Department of Justice hadn’t intimidated them into refusing to testify or, in one case, lying on the stand.

He also asked for a new judge, wanting Kaplan to recuse himself. However, Kaplan pointed out that “none of the witnesses” were “newly discovered.” And more concerningly, Bankman-Fried offered no evidence that the witnesses could prove the “wildly conspiratorial” theory the FTX founder raised, claiming that their absence at the trial was a “product of government threats and retaliation,” the judge wrote. Bankman-Fried’s theory is “entirely contradicted by the record,” Kaplan said. He emphasized that granting Bankman-Fried’s request “would be a large waste of judicial resources as it could require another judge to familiarize himself or herself with an extensive and complicated record.”

Additionally, all three witnesses that Bankman-Fried claimed could give crucial testimony in his defense were known to him throughout the trial, and he never sought to compel their testimony. And the “self-serving social-media posts” of one witness who now claims that he lied when testifying against Bankman-Fried — “Ryan Salame, who pleaded guilty” — must be met with “utmost suspicion,” Kaplan said. “If one were to take Salame at his current word, he lied under oath when pleading guilty before this Court,” Kaplan wrote. Even if taken seriously, “his out-of-court, unsworn statements could not come anywhere close to clearing the bar to warrant a new trial,” Kaplan said, deeming Salame’s credibility “highly questionable.” Further, “even if these individuals had testified for Bankman-Fried, his protestations that one or more of them would have supported his claims that FTX was not insolvent and that his victims all were compensated fully in the bankruptcy proceedings are inaccurate or misleading,” Kaplan concluded.

In the order, Kaplan’s frustration seems palpable, as there may have been no need for him to rule on the motion at all after Bankman-Fried requested to withdraw it. But the judge said the ruling was needed after Bankman-Fried waited to file his withdrawal request until after the DOJ and the court wasted time responding and reviewing filings, the judge said. Troublingly, Bankman-Fried’s request to withdraw his request without prejudice would have allowed him to potentially request a new trial after the appeal ended. Based on the substance of the filing, that risked wasting future court resources, Kaplan determined. To prevent overburdening the justice system, Kaplan deemed it necessary to deny Bankman-Fried’s motion and request for recusal, rather than allow him to withdraw the filing without prejudice.

When life is a game…

By Excelcia • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Bankman-Fried would, famously, play actual video games during investor meetings. And while he was praised for the ability at the time, maybe it goes to show that someone who can’t tell the difference between a game and reality will start to think of real-life stats as just more game artifacts to be manipulated to his advantage.

So, next time you’re in a meeting with someone and impressed by that person’s answers only to find he’s playing a video game while doing it… start to question that person’s grip on the difference between a game gank and a real one. Especially when the business is, by definition, something that’s pretty virtual to begin with.

I suspect he will continue to try and find a loophole out of his current situation, but that the courts are a little less likely to be snowed by ADHD-fueled shaking of his prison bars than others had been.

Everyone Is Lying to You for Money

By atrimtab • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Bankman-Fried just got caught…

There is yet another new movie about Cryptocurrency. Here is a trailer:

Everyone Is Lying to You for Money | Official Trailer UHD

Bitcoin Blockchain can only process 5 to 7 transactions per second.

Banks/payment networks: SWIFT is estimated at a little over 500 transactions per second, while card networks like Visa are often cited around 24,000 transactions per second.

Let’s put it this way, if it takes more compute to process YOU will be paying for it.

Crypto is for crime!

Honestly if he had held out just a little longer

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
The crazy boost to the crypto markets would have covered up his dirty dealings and he could have taken the money and paid the big investors that matter and screwed over the small investors that obviously don’t matter and gotten away with it.

The line between a successful grifter like Elon Musk and a guy rotting in prison like Bankman-Fried is actually pretty thin. It’s just a matter of keeping the scam going long enough so that people who matter don’t lose money and making sure that people who matter somehow know it’s a scam. That last one is the mistake Elizabeth Holmes and Bernie Madoff made.

Honestly though his parents have money and I think this was a federal case so I’m not sure why they don’t just buy a pardon from Trump like everybody else. Maybe they are just waiting for the heat to die down a little or maybe he just ripped off too many extremely rich people and Trump was told by one of the real billionaires not to do the pardon

Nice!

By Da_Big_G • Score: 3 Thread

Wow! It’s really nice to see a judge get it right on a high-profile case like this. All too often it seems like they bend to the will of the rich and powerful.

A ton of people worldwide were harmed by the shenanigans at FTX and SBF deserves to be punished for the harm he caused.

Honesty ? LOL

By hebertrich • Score: 3 Thread

Can a single republican take responsinility for his actions or is it a prerequisite for their lot to always portray themselves as innocent victims or democrat persecution and their evil deep state conspiracies and machiavelian plots to discredit and jail them ? Men take responsibility for their acts , republicans ? i never seen a single honest one, They’re ridiculous . The whole lot of them, I am so blessed , neither living in the USA nor being American. Canada is now the best nation and place to live in the Americas, We won.

Ubuntu’s AI Plans Have Linux Users Looking For a ‘Kill Switch’

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Canonical’s plan to add AI features to Ubuntu has sparked pushback from users who are concerned it could follow Windows 11’s AI-heavy direction. “After Canonical’s announcement earlier this week that it’s bringing AI features to Ubuntu, replies included requests for an AI ‘kill switch' or a way to disable the upcoming features,” reports The Verge. Canonical says it has no plans for a “global AI kill switch” but it will allow users to remove any AI features they don’t want. From the report:
In his original post, [Canonical’s VP of engineering, Jon Seager] said the upcoming AI features will include accessibility tools like AI speech-to-text and text-to-speech, along with agentic AI features for tasks like troubleshooting and automation. Canonical is also encouraging its engineers to use AI more and plans to begin introducing AI features in Ubuntu “throughout the next year.”

In a follow-up comment, Seager clarified that, “my plan is to introduce AI-backed features as a ‘preview’ on a strictly opt-in basis in [Ubuntu version] 26.10. In subsequent releases, my plan is to have a step in the initial setup wizard that allows the user to choose whether or not they’d like the AI-native features enabled.” Ultimately, he said, “All of these capabilities will be delivered as Snaps to the OS, layered on top of the existing Ubuntu stack. That means there will always be the option of removing those Snaps.”
Users who prefer to avoid AI entirely could switch to other distros like Linux Mint, Pop!_OS, or Zorin OS. “These distros have some similarities to Ubuntu, but may not necessarily adopt the new AI features Canonical is rolling out,” adds The Verge.

easy solution

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Don’t use freaking Ubuntu. The debacle with the Gnu coreutils replacement — shipping an LTS version with broken replacements — should have been the straw that broke the camel’s back. Debian is fine now, just use Debian.

I guess I stop using Ubuntu

By Baron_Yam • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

One of the things I like about Linux is that it’s common to follow a philosophy of “start with nothing then add what you need” rather than “throw in everything and good luck trying to remove anything problematic”.

Make it an optional component suggested during the installation procedure and it’s fine. Force it on everyone and you’re undermining good security and I have to suspect you’re doing it for reasons I wouldn’t like.

Move on

By markdavis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

>“Ubuntu has sparked pushback from users who are concerned”

Mint: https://www.linuxmint.com/down…
Mint Debian: https://www.linuxmint.com/down…
Debian: https://www.debian.org/

The kill switch is called Debian

By dskoll • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Debian is the answer. While a decade or so ago, Ubuntu was easier to install and more polished, Debian has pretty much caught up in terms of polish.

Re:Ubuntu is slowly becoming MS Win

By machineghost • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Slowly becoming? They’ve been this way for more than a decade: remember the whole Unity debacle?

Way back in 2010, LInux had two (major) UIs: KDE and GNOME. Canonical (specifically, Mark Shuttleworth) tried to force everyone to adopt a brand new system, Unity, despite the fact that no one asked for it. It was a straight up Bill Gates “We have the most market share, we can do whatever the fuck we want” power play.

It didn’t work: the larger Linux community revolted. But it took Shuttleworth SEVEN YEARS to give up and finally appreciate that he wasn’t a god who got to dictate what the Linux community … and clearly he never really learned that lesson.

Joby Demos Its Air Taxi In NYC

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Joby Aviation has completed demonstration flights of its electric air taxi over New York City, testing real routes between JFK and Manhattan helipads as it prepares for a future commercial service. The company says its eVTOL could turn a 60- to 120-minute airport trip into a flight of under 10 minutes, though commercial launch still depends on FAA certification. Electrive reports:
To launch operations in New York City, Joby acquired Blade Urban Air Mobility last year. Blade already enables helicopter flights for affluent travelers between Manhattan and airports such as JFK or Newark in just five minutes, avoiding up to two hours of traffic and typical airport hassles. Joby aims to replace this service with quiet, electric air taxis as soon as possible, transitioning Blade’s existing customers to the new technology.

However, introducing a new aircraft into commercial service requires a years-long certification process, overseen in the US by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). Joby is now in the final phase of FAA certification. Following a series of demonstration flights in the San Francisco Bay Area, the company has tested its air taxi in New York City on real flight routes and under real-world conditions. During these tests, Joby demonstrated the acoustics and performance metrics critical for entering the urban air taxi market.

During these demonstration flights, Joby’s air taxi took off from John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) and landed at various helipads across the city, including Downtown Skyport and the helipads at West 30th Street and East 34th Street in Midtown, where Blade Air Mobility’s premium passenger lounges are located. These locations represent some of the commercial routes Joby plans for New York […].
Fun fact: Joby’s eVTOL aircraft are over 100 to 1,000 times quieter than a conventional helicopter, operating at roughly 55-65 dB during takeoff and landing compared to 90+ dB for helicopters.

Great

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Funny Thread

It’s good billionaires are going to have something to spit on us from. I’d hate for them to have to use lung power to do it because they’re in a mere limousine.

This is Going to be a While…

By Koreantoast • Score: 5, Informative Thread
This is going to be a very long while before it ever scales. First, don’t ever underestimate the time it takes to certify a new aircraft. It takes years for traditional platforms which have established certification paths (conventional fixed wing aircraft and rotorcraft) - with the Bell 525, one of the latest helicopters seeking certification still not certified after first flight eleven years ago. Then the FAA is struggling even more with how to certify “powered lift” aircraft where eVTOL platforms are. Second, Joby, Archer and others are not yet solving the core problem that has capped this industry - the lack of pilots. The real promise of eVTOL was that the platforms would be autonomous, but, going back to the certification challenge, the FAA has yet to figure out how to certify autonomous aircraft let alone manage the air traffic in a sky full of them. The platforms today still going to need pilots which will limit their adoption. The Chinese are farther ahead in this space, with the CAAC leaning forward and even certifying a handful of autonomous eVTOL aircraft, but I’m curious how rapidly they will proliferate outside China until the FAA and EASA figure out how they want to move forward…

Safety schmaefty! theres $$$ to be made!

By Thud457 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
A couple of million dollars to the TRUMP Ballroom Fund should clear any irksome regulatory hurdles posed by the ineffectual FAA.

/s … ?

Back in the day…

By VAXcat • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Way back, there was a helicopter service from the roof of the Pan Am building to the airport in NYC. It was discontinued due to several people getting killed in an accident.

Apple Gives Up On the Vision Pro After M5 Refresh Flop

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
MacRumors reports that Apple has effectively paused work on Vision Pro after the M5 refresh failed to revive demand. The team has reportedly been reassigned and the company is now shifting focus toward smart glasses instead. From the report:
The Vision Pro has been criticized for its high price tag and its uncomfortable weight. The device is over 1.3 pounds, and even with the more comfortable Dual Knit Band that Apple added to redistribute weight, it continues to be hard to wear for long periods of time. The M5 chip added a 120Hz refresh rate, 10 percent more rendered pixels, and around 30 additional minutes of battery life, but the price tag stayed at $3,499, and it ended up not selling well. The Vision Pro has been unpopular since it first launched, and Apple only sold around 600,000 units in total. Insider sources told MacRumors that Apple has received an unusually high percentage of returns, far exceeding any other modern Apple product.

[…] If Apple finds a way to create a much cheaper, more comfortable VR headset in the future, the Vision Pro line could be revived, but right now, the company has no plans to launch a new model. Apple has not discontinued the Vision Pro and is continuing to sell the M5 model. Instead of continuing to experiment with virtual reality, Apple is working on smart glasses that will eventually incorporate augmented reality capabilities, but the first version will be similar to the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses with AI and no integrated display.

Oh no!

By kamapuaa • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I’m sorry to hear it, as the Oculus/Meta Quest is one of those few technologies that makes you think “holy shit!” It really is an amazing experience, it feels like living in Science Fiction. Then the best actual use is playing Resident Evil 4, a Gamecube game from 2005. I also enjoy taking 360 videos.

I thought Apple would be able to take this amazing technology and find some practical application for it…and I see I was wrong! I still think it can happen someday.

It’s the power brick, stupid!

By AmazingRuss • Score: 3 Thread
Nobody wants that thing hanging off their face, especially when they can get a quest for 1/7th the cost without the power brick. I thought apple was supposed to understand product design.

Why would a faster CPU revive demand?

By dgatwood • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I’m really not sure why they bothered to rev the CPU. Nobody who used one complained that it was too slow. What we complained about was:

Those were the biggest flaws, and two years later, Apple has still done nothing to address literally any of them. Until they do, this product isn’t likely to do much in the market, IMO.

Eye Doctor In Shambles

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 3, Insightful Thread

This blows up the business model of the eye surgeon using the Vision Pro for surgeries, reported on Slashdot earlier today.

This is what happens when interest rates rise

By Somervillain • Score: 3 Thread
This is quite simple. As interest rates rise, companies are less willing to stomach expensive, risky investments. If done right, this could have changed computing....done to displays what headphones did to audio. However, it’s very difficult to do at an affordable cost with today’s technology. They took a bold risk and now are being more cautious with their money…although in fairness, they didn’t really try to hard with this one.

California High-Speed Rail Price Tag Jumps To $231 Billion

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 writes:
California’s long-delayed high-speed rail project is now facing renewed scrutiny after state leaders revealed a dramatically higher price tag, now estimated at roughly $231 billion, nearly seven times the original $33 billion projection approved by voters in 2008. The revised figures have reignited talks in Sacramento over whether the project can realistically be completed, how long it will take, and whether the state can continue to fund it at this scale.

Senator Strickland pointed to comments from Lou Thompson, former chair of the California High-Speed Rail Authority peer review group, who recently criticized the latest draft business plan. Thompson wrote that the 2026 draft plan “has reached a dead end,” arguing that the project has drifted far from its original vision due to escalating costs, delays, and unfunded gaps. Under current projections, assuming funding and construction proceed as planned, service between San Francisco and Bakersfield could begin around 2033, while the full Los Angeles to San Francisco connection could extend to 2040.

Re:$231 Billion

By cayenne8 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You haven’t priced plane tickets in the past month or so, have you?

Considering what the end price tag for this will be at “completion” (if in fact it is ever completed and running)....I can’t imagine ticket prices for this train will be very competitive to the airplane ticket for same destination(s).

Re:What is the problem?

By BetterSense • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
“they” did consult with SNCF (the French national train company), and SNCF told them to build a train between LA and SF. I.e. connect the biggest population centers. That’s the logic in places like France: You build where you will serve the most people possible, sell the most tickets possible, get the most ridership possible, for the shortest distance, and then you build out from there.

For better or worse, that logic doesn’t work in America. The American logic is: LA and SF already have (limited) rail connections, but other cities in CA are completely unconnected by rail. Also, I5 is an infrastructure crisis, because it’s completely overloaded and there’s no solution, and a train between LA and SF wouldn’t do anything to solve the I5 crisis. Also, America has broken land policies, and acquiring land between LA and SF is just impossible. Also, taking tax money from the whole state and spending it on infrastructure only for in the biggest cities, isn’t politically popular. In France, it’s just understood that cities get more amenities than rural areas, and that’s the way it is. But in America, we like to shovel pork projects at our rural areas out of some kind of sentimental obligation to prop them up. So you have to bribe rural areas and secondary cities to get things done.

So, for better worse, the voters of California approved CAHSR only on the condition that it connect the inland cities. There’s a legitimate logic to it. It’s just American logic and not French logic.

Re:Just build more roads

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Traffic is largely caused by on ramps and exits.

Good point. A highway with no ramps and no exits would have no traffic at all.

Abundance (Klein and Thompson book) on this

By Paul Fernhout • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The book “Abundance” has an entire section on the failure of high speed rail in California despite ldecades-long government support at all levels. In general, the argument they make is that regulations created in previous generations (to avoid the worst excesses of reckless construction) now get in the way of creating solutions to today’s issues like a need for clean energy, improved transportation, and affordable housing. The authors claim the book is written “by liberals, for liberals” and there whole point is to show how a previous generation of “liberals” made it impossible for this generation of “liberals” to get anything done. This also happens in conjunction with conservatives who stop liberal projects by using laws liberals created, since it is much easier to stop things using the law than to make them happen. As another example, the authors say it is common for liberals to do things like put up signs in their yards that say they stand with the homeless while simultaneously voting for zoning policies to defend their property values by making it impossible to build affordable housing (including things like rooming houses, which are often prevented by minimum lot size requirements and also minimum parking area requirements for occupants who generally don’t own cars).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
“Abundance is a nonfiction book by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson published by Avid Reader Press in March 2025. The book examines the reasons behind the lack of progress on ambitious projects in the United States, including those related to affordable housing, infrastructure, and climate change. It became a New York Times Bestseller. Klein and Thompson argue that the regulatory environment in many liberal cities, while well intentioned, stymies development. …”

Re:$231 Billion

By ObliviousGnat • Score: 5, Informative Thread

How much track have they laid for the $231 billion?

“You’ve raised this pig since birth and how many pounds of pork have you harvested so far?”

Only $13.8 billion has been spent so far, not $231 billion. Here is a list of structures (bridges, viaducts, etc.) that have been built, and most of the land for the initial operating segment has been acquired. The reason why it’s taking so long is because the funding is trickling in very slowly.

Colorado’s Anti-Repair Bill Is Dead

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired:
A controversial bill in Colorado that would have undone some repair protections in the state has failed. The bill had been the target of right-to-repair advocates, who saw it as a bellwether for how tech companies might try to undo repair legislation more broadly in the US. Colorado’s landmark 2024 repair law, the Consumer Right to Repair Digital Electronic Equipment, went into effect in January 2026 and ensured access to tools and documentation people needed to modify and fix digital electronics such as phones, computers, and Wi-Fi routers. The new bill, SB26-090, would have carved out an exception to those repair protections for “critical infrastructure,” a loosely defined term that repair advocates worried could be applied to just about any technology.

SB26-090 was introduced during a Colorado Senate hearing on April 2 and was supported by lobbying efforts from companies such as Cisco and IBM. It passed that hearing unanimously. The bill then passed in the Colorado Senate on April 16. On Monday evening, the bill was discussed in a long, delayed hearing in the Colorado House’s State, Civic, Military, and Veterans Affairs Committee. Dozens of supporters and detractors gave public comments. Finally, the bill was shot down in a 7-to-4 vote and classified as postponed indefinitely.
“While we were making progress at chipping away at the momentum for it, we had still been losing,” said Danny Katz, executive director of the local nonprofit consumer advocacy group CoPIRG. “So, we took nothing for granted, and I believe the incredible testimony from the broad range of cybersecurity experts, businesses, repair advocates, recyclers, and people who want the freedom to fix their stuff made a big difference.”

So now I suppose …

By PPH • Score: 3 Thread

… its sponsors will make an attempt to fix it.

as Ron White sips from a supposed glass of gin

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Sure, though due to the prevalence of LLMs in law, the lobbyists’ lawyers are rapidly losing their ability to draft legally coherent bad-faith legislation. On the other hand, the legislators are rapidly losing the ability to identify legally incoherent bad-faith legislation, for much the same reason. It’s going to end with two sets of LLMs apologizing to each other for screwing things up. It’s like a reverse arms race.

But…

By LordHighExecutioner • Score: 3 Thread
…can it be repaired ?

Next up Federal Preemption

By hwstar • Score: 3 Thread

The companies locking up products to make them non-repairable by the user aren’t going to give up. There’s too much money in their high margin monopolistic repair services.

They’ll introduce a bill in Congress and the Senate “Unifiying” the right to repair to only apply to the manufacturer of the product. The excuse will be to eliminate a patchwork of state laws.

Critical Infrastructure

By evanh • Score: 3 Thread

is exactly where “right to repair” is needed most. Governments have been screwed over more than anyone else.

GitHub ‘No Longer a Place For Serious Work’, Says Hashicorp Co-Founder

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Hashicorp co-founder Mitchell Hashimoto says GitHub’s frequent outages have made it “no longer a place for serious work,” prompting him to move his Ghostty terminal emulator project elsewhere after 18 years on the platform. The Register reports:
“I’ve been angry about it. I’ve hurt people’s feelings. I’ve been lashing out. Because GitHub is failing me, every single day, and it is personal. It is irrationally personal,” he wrote. The reason for his ire is the service has become unreliable. “For the past month I’ve kept a journal where I put an ‘X’ next to every date where a GitHub outage has negatively impacted my ability to work,” he wrote. “Almost every day has an ‘X’. On the day I am writing this post, I’ve been unable to do any PR review for ~2 hours because there is a GitHub Actions outage.”

Hashimoto penned his post a few days before an April 28 incident that saw pull requests fail to complete due to an Elasticsearch SNAFU. Incidents like that mean Hashimoto has decided GitHub “is no longer a place for serious work if it just blocks you out for hours per day, every day.” “It’s not a fun place for me to be anymore,” he lamented. “I want to be there but it doesn’t want me to be there. I want to get work done and it doesn’t want me to get work done. I want to ship software and it doesn’t want me to ship software.”

The developer says he wants GitHub to improve, but “I also want to code. And I can’t code with GitHub anymore. I’m sorry. After 18 years, I’ve got to go.” He’s open to a return if GitHub can deliver “real results and improvements, not words and promises.” But for now, he’s working to move Ghostty to another collaborative code locker. “We have a plan but I’m also very much still in discussions with multiple providers (both commercial and FOSS),” Hashimoto wrote. “It’ll take us time to remove all of our dependencies on GitHub and we have a plan in place to do it as incrementally as possible.”

He’s doing the equivalent of leaving a toothbrush at a former partner’s house by leaving a read-only mirror of Ghostty on GitHub, and by keeping his personal projects on the Microsoft-owned service. But Hashimoto’s moving his day job somewhere new. “Ghostty is where I, our maintainers, and our open source community are most impacted so that is the focus of this change. We’ll see where it goes after that,” he concluded.

it’s git

By caseih • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

While I understand his frustration, this is git. Your repo is always local so you can always work with it without relying on a central service. In fact there are ways to run GitHub actions locally. And it can pull and merge from your local command line. I get the convenience of GitHub. But if you’re choosing to be dependent on GitHub for everything, then I can’t really blame Microsoft for your inability to do work.

Instability

By rel4x • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Am I the only one noticing a huge escalation in the number of seemingly rookie mistakes at large companies that are leaning into AI the hardest? The internet has seemed a lot more feeble lately. I encounter pretty large bugs on a regular basis, downtime seems to be going up across multiple respectable services. I do try to not pin a convenient narrative on a series of anecdotes but it is definitely standing out to me.

Anyone had any doubt?

By HnT • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Anyone had any doubt that this is EXACTLY what would happen once micro$oft got its claws into GitHub?
That is what they have been doing since at least the 90s.

Re:Instability

By XopherMV • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Amazon lost 6.3 million orders because of the use of AI coding tools.
https://www.digitaltrends.com/…

Re:GitHub has been terrible for years

By Jeremi • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The Git command line utility itself is also bloated nowadays.

Perhaps, but one of the nice properties of a command-line app is that the addition of features needn’t slow down people who don’t need those features.

E.g. git could add 300 more keywords, and as long as the basic “git clone”, “git update”, “git commit”, and “git push” keep working, I won’t be effected by that at all.

A GUI-based tool, OTOH, will find its user interface getting increasingly cluttered (and/or cryptic) proportional to the number of features that get shoehorned into it.

Should Schools Get Rid of Homework?

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Tony Isaac shares a report from NPR:
Federal survey data shows that the amount of math homework assigned to fourth and eighth grade students, in particular, has been steadily declining for the past decade. Some educators and parents say this is a good thing — students shouldn’t spend six or more hours a day at school and still have additional schoolwork to complete at home. But the research on homework is complicated. Some studies show that students who spend more time on homework perform better than their peers. For example, a longitudinal study released in 2021 of more than 6,000 students in Germany, Uruguay and the Netherlands found that lower-performing students who increased the amount of time they spent on math homework performed better in math, even one year later.

Other studies, however, suggest homework has minimal outcomes on academic performance: A 1998 study of more than 700 U.S. students led by a researcher at Duke University found that more homework assigned in elementary grades had no significant effect on standardized test scores. The researchers did find small positive gains on class grades when they looked at both test scores and the proportion of homework students completed. More homework was also associated with negative attitudes about school for younger children in the study. “The best educators figured out a long time ago that we can control what we can control,” and that’s what happens during the school day, Superintendent Garrett said, not homework. “There has been a shift away from it naturally anyway, and I felt like this made it equitable across our entire school system.”
“The best argument for homework is that mathematical procedures require practice, and you don’t want to waste classroom time on practice, so you send that home,” said Tom Loveless, a researcher and former teacher who has studied homework.
Ariel Taylor Smith, senior director of the Center for Policy and Action at the National Parents Union, said: “The thing they point to is that it’s an equity issue, and not all parents have the same availability and ability to support their students. I would make the argument that if a kid is really far behind in school, that’s an equity issue. They need the additional time to practice.” Kids, she said, “need more practice … Sometimes, you do have to practice the boring stuff, like math.”

“The interesting issue for folks to consider is not should there be more homework, but should there be better homework,” said Joyce Epstein, who has studied homework and is the co-director of the Center on School, Family, and Community Partnerships at the Johns Hopkins University School of Education. “Better homework in math might be knowing the fact that kids don’t have to be practicing for hours, 10 to 20 examples,” when they could establish mastery in less time.

Re: Yes

By dbialac • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Depends on the kid. It needs to be adaptive. I’m a listen to the teacher type. Others are book learners. Still others need homework. What’s needed is an understanding of what works best for the individual child, and the actual test should be the ultimate basis for the class grade.

Better idea.

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I don’t think getting rid of homework is a solution to the current issues facing kids. I think a better idea is to stop trying to cram ten bazillion extra curricular activities into every moment of their lives so that they can never have any actual downtime. Homework becomes an overwhelming impossibility when you also have way too many other activities to ever fit in a day. I sat and chatted with my nieces one time about their weekly schedules and my mind was blown by the time they got to Wednesday with how many scheduled activities they had. There’s truly never a down moment for them. I don’t know how they have time to get addicted to the devices they all carry with all the shit they’re trying to cram into a day.

I think light, but steady, homework is fine. The argument to get rid of it is just as ridiculous as the idea that we need to increase it to the point it’s the only thing kids have time to tackle. How about we have a debate about the right balance, instead of the black or white, all or nothing approach we tend to take toward everything else?

Homework does not work*

By Fons_de_spons • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Teacher here, not a homework fan. Very simply put, the good ones put effort in it and learn little because they payed attention in class. The slouches copy it from a friend, use chatgpt or deliver something miserable. So I rarely give homework as it is ineffective in my view. Only in classes that do not pay attention. I have deadlines to meet. If they do not cooperate in class, they can do it at home. Luckily that rarely happens. (I am lucky to teach in a nice school.)
What does happen is that students fail in December. They get guidelines on what to do and have ample of exercises to try at home. They can chose which ones they make. I provide constructive feedback every week. It works reasonably well. In other words, homework for those kids that need it. Parents are motivated to help, kid is motivated because there is a good reason to do better. But yes, I have stories where it works very well and other ones as well. It is not a golden ticket.
Education is a struggle. If it is not, you are not doing a good job ;-).

* in general

Re: Yes

By rayzat • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I have children in every phase of schooling in one of the top 10 largest school districts in the US. My kids essentially do zero homework. Almost straight A’s. Even things like book reports and research papers all mostly done in class. Actual work at home amounts to maybe 30 minutes a week at most.

The big problem I see isn’t the HW learning feedback cycle it’s my daughter who is a freshman in college has no idea how to plan college hw and projects.

Some things need rote learning or private study

By Bruce66423 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Multiplication tables, history dates, state and country locations on the world map, Chemical formulae including the Periodic Table, Physics equations, foreign language vocabulary and reading set texts in English. There is no virtue in learning / doing those in school time.

To a large extent however this debate is avoiding the main issue; why are we spending vastly more on education than lots of other countries and achieving far less…

Humanoid Robots Start Sorting Luggage In Tokyo Airport Test Amid Labor Shortage

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Humanoid robots are getting a new gig as baggage handlers and cargo loaders at Tokyo’s Haneda Airport — part of a Japan Airlines experiment to address a human labor shortage as airport visitor numbers have surged in recent years. The demonstration, set to launch in May 2026, could eventually test humanoid robots in a wide range of airport tasks, including cleaning aircraft cabins and possibly handling ground support equipment such as baggage carts, according to a Japan Airlines press release. The trials are scheduled to run until 2028, which suggests that travelers flying into or out of Tokyo may spot some of the robots at work.

[…] Japan Airlines is interested in testing whether humanoid robots powered by some of the latest AI models can adapt more readily to human work environments — such as airports — without requiring dedicated work stations or other significant workplace modifications. The airline’s subsidiary, JAL Ground Service, has teamed up with GMO AI & Robotics Corporation to oversee the demonstration. The Japanese companies will test the G1 robot and Walker E robot from Chinese companies Unitree Robotics and UBTECH Robotics, according to The Asia Business Daily. Humanoid robots still typically cost tens of thousands of dollars per unit despite Chinese robotics manufacturers scaling up mass production, although the Unitree G1 robot costs as low as $13,500 for the baseline model.

A new video from an apparently staged demonstration in an aircraft hangar shows one of the humanoid robots tottering up to a large, metal cargo container and making a vague pushing gesture. But the cargo container only begins to move once a human worker starts the conveyor belt to move the container toward the aircraft. Presumably, the robots will need to put in much more effective work if they’re to prove as productive as human airport workers. Having robots working directly alongside humans will also introduce new safety considerations for airports like Haneda Airport, which is Japan’s second-largest airport, with flights arriving approximately every two minutes. The first step in the pilot program will involve identifying which airport areas will be safest for humanoid robots.

Sorting?

By AmiMoJo • Score: 3 Thread

The video shows one struggling to apply light pressure to a cargo container, and that’s it. I’d love to know what their actual capabilities are.

Labor shortage

By rossdee • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Thats OK, we can’t afford to fly now anyway.

Any robot will be better

By sentiblue • Score: 3 Thread
Not that I praise robots replacing human jobs. But I’ve seen countless times luggage handling employees literally abuse luggage. I even saw a dude slamming the luggage, then followed with a kick for good measure. Dunno if he just had a bad day or he indeed hated his job.

amazing

By kencurry • Score: 4, Funny Thread
A robot that can slam luggage against wall, dent it, and steal my laptop. Technology is a marvel.

FDA Grants Quick Review For 3 Psychedelic Drug Trials

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from NBC News:
The Food and Drug Administration on Friday granted a quick review of three experimental psychedelic drugs meant to treat major depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. It’s the latest move by the Trump administration signaling a shift in policy toward treatments that also give users a high — coming a day after the Justice Department said it would ease restrictions on state-licensed medical marijuana.

UK-based biotech company Compass Pathways said Friday it has received an expedited review for its experimental form of synthetic psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression. In a press release the company cited two large, phase 3 studies that had “generated positive data.” Usona Institute, headquartered in Wisconsin, also said it’s received a voucher for its work with psilocybin to treat major depressive disorder. In an email, a Usona spokesperson said the company expects the review process to last one to two months after it submits its application. “The voucher expedites the timeline only; it does not alter scientific or regulatory standards,” the spokesperson wrote. New York-based Transcend Therapeutics has also been granted a priority review voucher for its experimental drug methylone for PTSD, Blake Mandell, the company’s chief executive officer, said.
“There’s a battle still raging in their mind that we don’t fully understand biochemically,” FDA Commissioner Marty Makary said. “When you see something that looks promising for a community that is suffering with mental health illness, despair and suicidal ideation, you can’t help but recognize that.”
Makary told NBC News that with the priority voucher program, the agency could potentially approve the first psychedelic drug by the end of summer.

Oh, good.

By sabbede • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
My nephew has pretty severe PTSD from his time as a sniper in Afghanistan. The results that have come from experimental treatments with psylocibin and other psychedelics are impressive. This could save his life.

Re:Echoes of COVID vaccine

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Informative Thread

COVID-vax skeptics are the idiots…

Correct, because as you demonstrated here you don’t actually have good reason to be other than vibes and what your media diet feeds you. When should all our bad side effects kick in? Any day now we’ll all start dropping dead!

“Well your honor, we’ve got plenty of hearsay and conjecture. Those are KINDS of evidence.”

Meanwhile in the real world

A massive, 4 year old study of nearly 30 million people in France found that individuals who received a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine had a 74% lowerrisk of death from severe COVID-19 compared to unvaccinated individuals and zero increased risk of all-cause mortality.

Pancreatic cancer mRNA vaccine shows lasting results in an early trial

HHS nixes publication of study showing effectiveness of COVID vaccines /a

Re:Of course the psilocybin is synthetic

By ArchieBunker • Score: 4 Thread

It’s 2026. Given the option of a mega dollar patented synthetic drug or something that grows for free in cow shit, I know what they’ll pick.

The grocery store sells mushrooms without the fear or anyone dying.

Re:Echoes of COVID vaccine

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

There was the entire Phase I, II, and III trials available at the time, the phase III trial alone was almost 44,000 people.

There has been information available since it started. If you wanted to be skeptical in 2021 I’d call you silly but sure, whatever, just shut up about it if you dont want to take it.

But in 2024, 2025, 2026? You’re either a liar, a grifter, profoundly ignorant or just so lost that you simply cannot, ever, ever admit you were wrong about this.

“I won’t change my mind on anything, regardless of the facts that are set out before me. I’m dug in, and I’ll never change.”

Hmmmm.

By jd • Score: 3 Thread

I don’t criticise the concept, but the concern is whether it has long-term adverse neurological effects, and a “quick study” doesn’t sound like it’ll tell us that.

It’s essential we have more ways of dealing with treatment-resistant depression. We just need to make sure that they’re less harmful than the depression itself. You willl, of course, recall that each and every single bad decision by medical boards to approve a treatment has been because they wanted to rush through a “medical cure” that turned into a medical hell.

I’m not stupid enough to say that mushrooms would cause long-term damage, but equally I’m not stupid enough to say that we should only look to see if it has short-term benefits.

The correct approach would seem to be to make sure there aren’t any immediate hazards and, if there aren’t, then to continue the study to check for consequences of long-term use whilst authorising short-term prescription use, on the understanding that the prescription use permission will be extended outwards to whatever the data cansafely tolerate. In other words, don’t deprive people of necessary treatment but equally don’t claim greater confidence than the data supports.

This tightrope has only got to be walked because nobody has been seriously studying depression for a very long time and now we’ve got a hunge backlog of cases that are refusing to shut up, making it hard to ignore. This research should have been done years ago, but politicians were far too ignorant and far too swayed by religious money. But that doesn’t mean we should rush.

I’m sure the scientists know how to keep a level head, but the CEOs and the politicians clearly can’t and they’re the ones who will be making the demands.

New Report Finds Some Babies Spend Up To Eight Hours a Day on Screens

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
fjo3 shares a report from The Times:
More than two-thirds of babies under two use screens, a report has found, and some are exposed for up to eight hours a day. Nearly a third of newborns were found to be watching screens for more than three hours a day, while almost 20 percent of infants of four to 11 months used screens for more than an hour a day. The report comes after the government issued guidance that children under two do not use screens at all, apart from communal activities such as video-calling relatives.

In a review of the current research, researchers found evidence linking screen time to poorer outcomes for children, including an increased risk of obesity, short-sightedness, sleep and behavioural difficulties, and later challenges with friendships. […] The research also revealed why children and parents use screens, with families reporting children doing so for educational purposes, entertainment, play and to communicate and bond with others. Parents, meanwhile, used screens to occupy or distract children, which helped caregivers to complete domestic duties, paid employment and other caring responsibilities. Nearly a quarter of parents — 23.6 percent — either had no childcare or were not aware of the government’s early years offer.

Raising children

By reanjr • Score: 5, Funny Thread

But at least you didn’t vaccinate and give them autism.

1960s orphanage survivor

By puzzled • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I was born with hip dysplasia and spent six of my first nine months in a half body cast. I was in a state run orphanage, I was growing inside the cast, which left me with terrible scars on the front of my shins, and I was a “fussy” baby, so they “treated” me with phenobarbitol.

The experience left me faceblind and with some other developmental stuff that nicely compliments my otherwise mild autism. I am the squarest of square pegs, a misfit in every situation my whole entire life, except when I am blessedly alone.

I don’t agonize about how I am, I enjoy intellectual pursuits, and my ability to focus on stuff in ways that neurotypicals can not. But if I had it to do all over again, I would very much like to have a bit more understanding from others, given that I had no say in how I came to be so different.

Small brains should develop normally, with limited screen time, until they are fully formed. Maybe that’s late tweens, maybe it’s sixteen, maybe we are going to learn that we need to treat dark pattern engagement magnet software just like we do slot machines.

Re: Tablets in restaurants safe or not?

By MrNaz • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Alternatively we fix that problem at both ends: we raise kids to behave well in public, and we as a society understand that putting up with kids who are in the process of learning etiquette is the price we pay for not going extinct.

Re: Tablets in restaurants safe or not?

By AleRunner • Score: 5, Funny Thread

The union rules say 6 hours per day, and if everybody stuck with it that it’ll be fine. Unfortunately some parents don’t stick with the plan and spoil it for everyone childless people are often left alone dining in a silent restaurant with no screaming children for company. That means that some of us parents have to spend ten hours a day just moving from restaurant to restaurant and looking for people trying to read quietly. No rest for the wicked, as they say.

Re:Tablets in restaurants safe or not?

By SomePoorSchmuck • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you’re exposed to restaurants enough to an extent that this would develop behavioural difficulties I think you have bigger issues that need to be addressed. Kids will be exposed to screens, it’s a question of dose.

The point is that adults who give their kids a stim drug to keep them vacuously quiet in a restaurant (because that’s what a tablet does - it produces, via visual/auditory/haptic stimulation, an internal neurochemical change and consequent behavioral pattern as if you had dosed your toddler with a combination of alprazolam and an amphetamine), are the same adults who are stim-drugging their kid with that screen in the car on the way to/from the restaurant, on the pew at church, in the shopping cart at the grocery store, on the train to grandma’s house for Christmas, in the waiting room at the doctor, in the evening when the adults get home from work and need some time to take care of their own daily needs, etc.

Each of those situations is understandable. Just like every game theory or economic scenario consists of large groups of perfectly rational choices, which collectively result in pervasive systemic negative consequences that are far worse than the sum of the individual choices. I think saying “kids will be exposed to screens” is akin to saying “kids will be exposed to nicotine”. Hm, actually, yeah, that tracks, because if I gave a toddler a cigarette it would also help neurochemically pacify/sedate them while I celebrate my birthday at Cheesecake Factory.

Why would you choose to bring a toddler to an entirely optional environment if your toddler is incapable of being in that environment without you drugging them? Is it so you can enjoy the experience of being at a sit-down restaurant? You getting to have tableside guac and a skinny marg with the other wives is worth drugging your kid and distorting their neurological development?

It’s a missed learning opportunity. Childhood is a process. The entire point of the process of childhood is to develop the self-regulation that will allow them to navigate the world. Self-regulation is a tremendously complex art, composed of thousands of soft skills that allow you to maintain yourself while:
being in unfamiliar physical spaces
being the center of attention
not being the center of attention
interacting with your family
interacting with strangers
listening to others while they talk
processing external stimuli and filtering for relevance (your table vs other tables)
adding something to the conversation
assessing your level of hunger and satiety
using cups, plates, spoons, napkins
the list goes on for pages and pages.

Yes, you could be reductive and say missing any one instance is not a big deal. It won’t hurt them to give them a stim-drug so dad can watch The Big Game with his buddies at Buffalo Wild Wings. These skills do not programmatically pop into your head at age 14. Humans are not spiders. We do not live to instinctively build webs based on inherited firmware. Humans are cultural animals. Childhood is when these skills are acquired, via acculturation. And they are acquired through a million instances of practice. Children are not spiders running a program of “Climb up, find space, squirt web across space”. Children must actively, repeatedly, and progressively encounter and confront their external environment and their internal sensory state. If you do not give your toddler the gift of a million instances to practice and develop self-regulation and navigation, you are choosing to reduce their future functional capacity. You are choosing to acculturate them to a dependence on external stim drugging. You are choosing to numb them to their own bodily sensations of hunger, thirst, boredom, comfort, pain, safety, danger, etc. You are choosing to retard their development of internal resilience.

Why come to a restaurant and bring them out into the outside world if you are going to then administer a nerve block that prevents them from actually encountering and processing that outside world?

But this conversation is so hard to have, because raising and teaching kids is hard. It is where you will need to call on every ounce of resilience and self-regulation and navigation skill you yourself have managed to develop. It’s the hardest job you’ll ever have. No breaks, no comp time, poor training/documentation, abysmal administrative support, a seemingly endless march of costs on a terrifyingly uncertain budget, chaotic policy/procedure changes they way you did it for the past 2 years suddenly no longer works today and never will work again. And your PHB is literally a child who has absolutely no understanding of the kind of pressure you’re under and what you have to do to keep this operation glued together, but their ignorance doesn’t stop them from making constant demands on you anyway.

Nobody wants to be the a-hole who walks up to a table and tells another parent how to parent their kid. And there’s nothing - not even political/religious debate - that makes you defensively angry faster than someone telling you you’re parenting wrong.

Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google

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Elon Musk testified on day two of his trial against OpenAI, saying he helped create the company as a nonprofit counterweight to Google and would not have backed it if the goal had been private profit. CNBC reports:
Musk on Tuesday was the first witness called to testify in the trial. He spoke about his upbringing, his many companies, his role in founding OpenAI and his understanding of its structure. Musk said in his testimony that he was not opposed to the creation of a small for-profit subsidiary, “as long as the tail didn’t wag the dog.” Musk said he was motivated to start OpenAI to serve as a counterweight to Google. He got the idea after an argument he had with Google co-founder Larry Page, who called Musk a “speciesist for being pro-human,” he testified. “I could have started it as a for profit and I chose not to,” Musk said on the stand.

Earlier, attorneys for Musk and OpenAI presented their opening arguments to the jury. Musk’s lead trial lawyer, Steven Molo, delivered the opening statement for the Tesla and SpaceX CEO. OpenAI lawyer William Savitt gave the opening statement for the AI company, Altman and Brockman. OpenAI has characterized Musk’s lawsuit as a baseless “harassment campaign.” The company said Monday in a post on X that it “can’t wait to make our case in court where both the truth and the law are on our side.”

During his testimony on Tuesday, Musk repeatedly emphasized that he founded OpenAI to serve as a counterweight to Google. He said he got the idea after an argument about AI safety with Google co-founder Larry Page, who Musk said called him “a speciesist for being pro-human.” Musk said he was concerned Page was not taking AI safety seriously, so he wanted there to be an nonprofit, open source alternative to Google. “I could have started it as a for profit and I chose not to,” Musk said on the stand.
Further reading: Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court

Re:So since you got kicked out of the non-profit -

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“This social-media-shortsighted mentality, is the exact reason Elon is concerned.”

No, it is not. Elon Musk isn’t even capable of concern, only hate and avarice. Also, the most abhorrent social media in the world? Controlled by Elon Musk.

Also: “I could have started it as a for profit and I chose not to,” Musk said on the stand.

Musk did not create OpenAI, nor could he have. This is the depraved level of sociopathy that people worship here.

Re:So since you got kicked out of the non-profit -

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Correct, Musk’s problem is that he failed to seize ownership of other people’s work.

Re:I just can’t believe I used to look up to Musk

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Elon Musk has never changed, and you are a sad sack for failing to realize it.

Regardless of which side you are on

By rnmartinez • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
This sets a dangerous precedent - get government funds, donations, partnerships with univerisities and non-profits, get sees money for free, then give absolutely nothing back and become a for profit without repayment or consequences?

Re:I just can’t believe I used to look up to Musk

By ledow • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I can’t believe anyone ever looked up to that twat.

Honestly, working in tech, I had conversations with a number of people who should know about things, going back decades, and they absolutely couldn’t get why I couldn’t stand the man, or his companies, or his actions.

People commented on me closing my Twitter (yes, Twitter) account.

He was a clearly-identifiable twat, WAY, WAY, WAY before things like the Thai cave divers, WAY before he just bought and bankrolled companies for the sake of it, etc. Back to the “I founded Paypal” days (no, you didn’t).

Sorry but like Trump - I judge you for EVER having giving a damn about anything the man has ever said. Or almost any “tech celebrity” come to that, especially the ones - like Musk, Jobs, Bezos, etc. - with absolulely zero personal technical knowledge, expertise or skill.

They’re salesman. Bad ones. And people fall for it like they fall for dodgy car dealership patter all the time. And I honestly can’t fathom how people DON’T SEE THAT.