Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. 50% of Consumers Prefer Brands That Avoid GenAI Content
  2. Firefox Announces Built-In VPN and Other New Features - and Introduces Its New Mascot
  3. SystemD Adds Optional ‘birthDate’ Field for Age Verification to JSON User Records
  4. Jeff Bezos Seeking $100 Billion to Buy Manufacturing Companies, ‘Transform’ Them With AI
  5. NASA’s Hubble Unexpectedly Catches Comet Breaking Up
  6. Officer Leaks Location of French Aircraft Carrier With Strava Run
  7. White House Unveils National AI Policy Framework To Limit State Power
  8. CBS News Shutters Radio Service After Nearly a Century
  9. Microsoft Says It Is Fixing Windows 11
  10. Work From Home and Drive More Slowly To Save Energy, IEA Says
  11. OpenAI Plans Launch of Desktop ‘Superapp’
  12. Oregon School Cell Phone Ban: ‘Engaged Students, Joyful Teachers’
  13. DOJ Charges Super Micro Co-Founder For Smuggling $2.5 Billion In Nvidia GPUs To China
  14. Chuck Norris Dies At 86
  15. Amazon Plans Smartphone Comeback More Than a Decade After Fire Phone Flop

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.

50% of Consumers Prefer Brands That Avoid GenAI Content

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Slashdot reader BrianFagioli writes:
According to the research firm Gartner, 50% of U.S. consumers say they would prefer to do business with brands that avoid using GenAI in consumer facing content such as advertising and promotional messaging. The survey of 1,539 Americans, conducted in October 2025, also found growing skepticism about the reliability of online information, with 61% saying they frequently question whether information they use for everyday decisions is trustworthy… Gartner found that 68% of consumers often wonder whether the content they see online is real, while fewer people now rely on intuition alone to judge credibility [only 27%]. Instead, more consumers are actively verifying information and checking sources.
Gartner’s senior principal analyst offered suggests discretion for brands trying to use AI. “The brands that win will be the ones that use AI in ways customers can immediately recognize as helpful, while being transparent about when AI is used, what it’s doing, and giving customers a clear choice to opt out.”

Firefox Announces Built-In VPN and Other New Features - and Introduces Its New Mascot

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
A free built-in VPN is coming to Firefox on Tuesday, Mozilla announced this week:
Free VPNs can sometimes mean sketchy arrangements that end up compromising your privacy, but ours is built from our data principles and commitment to be the world’s most trusted browser. It routes your browser traffic through a proxy to hide your IP address and location while you browse, giving you stronger privacy and protection online with no extra downloads. Users will have 50 gigabytes of data monthly in the U.S., France, Germany and U.K. to start. Available in Firefox 149 starting March 24.

We also recently shared that Firefox is the first browser to ship Sanitizer API, a new web security standard that blocks attacks before they reach you [for untrusted HTML XSS vulnerabilities].
“The roadmap for Firefox this year is the most exciting one we’ve developed in quite a while,” says Firefox head Ajit Varma. “We’re improving the fundamentals like speed and performance. We’re also launching innovative new open standards in Gecko to ensure the future of the web is open, diverse, and not controlled by a single engine.

“At the same time we’re prioritizing features that give users real power, choice and strong privacy protections, built in a way that only Firefox can. And as always, we’ll keep listening, inviting users to help shape what comes next and giving them more reasons to love Firefox.”

Two new features coming next week:

And Firefox also released a video this week introducing their new mascot Kit.


New Mascot

By PPH • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Found it

SystemD Adds Optional ‘birthDate’ Field for Age Verification to JSON User Records

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“The systemd project merged a pull request adding a new birthDate field to the JSON user records managed by userdb in response to the age verification laws of California, Colorado, and Brazil,” reports the blog It’s FOSS.

They note that the field “can only be set by administrators, not by users themselves” — it’s the same record that already holds metadata like realName, emailAddress, and location:
Lennart Poettering, the creator of systemd, has clarified that this change is “an optional field in the userdb JSON object. It’s not a policy engine, not an API for apps. We just define the field, so that it’s standardized iff people want to store the date there, but it’s entirely optional. "

In simple words, this is something that adds a new, optional field that can then be used by other open source projects like xdg-desktop-portal to build age verification compliance on top of, without systemd itself doing anything with the data or making it mandatory to provide. A merge request asking for this change to be repealed was struck down by Lennart, who gave the above-mentioned reasoning behind this, and further noted that people were misunderstanding what systemd is trying to do here.
“It enforces zero policy,” Poettering said. “It leaves that up for other parts of the system.”

Not very good at this

By abulafia • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
“It enforces zero policy,” Poettering said. “It leaves that up for other parts of the system.”

“Calm down, stop being so jumpy. The explosives around your neck will not detonate. Unless I push this button.”

Love systemd

By karmawarrior • Score: 3, Interesting Thread

SystemD has genuinely been a positive on the computers I administer and has saved my butt multiple times. I had numerous occasions with sysvinit where “dependencies” had to be implemented using “sleep” commands in shell scripts and as a result the system wouldn’t come up properly. So please do not take this as one of the tribal kneejerk anti-SystemD people.

But… this is idiotic, and SystemD is rapidly turning into a parody of itself. The other week they announced they were integrating a whole new “VM” system into SystemD (add that to VirtualBox, KVM, Xen, LXD/Incus, etc…) Why? All of the existing VM management systems can easily have their own .service files, why does SystemD need to have its own? It doesn’t.

They really need to pull back and ask themselves why they’re virtually giving ammunition to the weird SysVInit cultists. Because this is ammunition.

Enforces no policy

By nicolaiplum • Score: 4, Informative Thread

… yet supports the easy implementation of bad policy beforehand. Technical choices are policy choices, Lennart. You can’t get away from that.

This is all in line with the systemd attitude: more monolithic, less extendable or modular. More like Windows, less like UNIX.

Legal landmine

By OrangeTide • Score: 3 Thread

California (AB-1043) and Colorado (SB26-051) may seem to require age verification. But US federal law, the Privacy Act of 1974, seemingly contradicts this. If states are effectively deputizing every operating system to collect information and deliver it ad hoc through intermediates, it still violates the spirit and principle of this federal act.

The fact that this particular implementation in SystemD stores the new birthDate field in the
regular (non-privileged) JSON. Meaning that there is little user control over which applications get access to this information.
If at the very least, the user was able to control access to PII in their SystemD / unix accounts, then I think they would potentially have a legal leg to stand on.

As they stand right now, we’re only a lawsuit away from reverting the change in the git repo. No need to fork, if SystemD wants to bend over backwards for California and Colorado law so badly, then we can take them to court in the US. Honestly, taking them to court in California would probably be the most effective right now.

Re:Love systemd

By PPH • Score: 4 Thread

But… this is idiotic, and SystemD is rapidly turning into a parody of itself.

You are starting to understand why the systemd haters think like they do. If Poettering had proposed a drop-in replacement for SysV init and then stopped, I would have thought, “Why not?” But we got a hairball of event-logging, network management, file mounting, user authentication crap all bundled in.

But what really sank it was when I discovered that it was relatively simple to launch SysV shell scripts from the unit files to start services, thus saving all the work involved in re-inventing the wheel. And the systemd fans came absolutely unglued when I posted that. Sorry. Linux, and all the other UNIXes involve collections of simple “do one thing well” applications that can be tied together, at times with pipes, files and other tools. And you can’t tell developers what tools or languages to use. If you want an OS that is becomming one giant EXE to dynamically load and run everything as a DLL, go use Windows*.

*I had to repair someone’s Windows 10 system (barf emoji) after a Microsoft update attempted to cripple it (just upgrade to Windows 11, they say). I was amazed at how much of that involved command line stuff. So much for your Utopia.

Jeff Bezos Seeking $100 Billion to Buy Manufacturing Companies, ‘Transform’ Them With AI

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Jeff Bezos “is in early talks to raise $100 billion,” reports the Wall Street Journal, “for a new fund that would buy up manufacturing companies and seek to use AI technology to accelerate their path to automation.”

“The Amazon.com founder is meeting with some of the world’s largest asset managers to raise funding for the project.”
A few months ago, [Bezos] traveled to the Middle East to discuss the new fund with sovereign wealth representatives in the region. More recently, he went to Singapore to raise funding for the effort as well, according to people familiar with the matter. The fund, described in investor documents as a “manufacturing transformation vehicle,” is aiming to buy companies in major industrial sectors such as chipmaking, defense and aerospace…

Bezos was recently appointed co-CEO of Project Prometheus, a new startup that is building artificial-intelligence models that can understand and simulate the physical world. Bezos plans to use the company’s technology to boost the efficiency and profitability of businesses owned by the fund, a playbook that some investment firms are similarly deploying in sectors such as accounting and property management… [Prometheus has also hired employees from OpenAI and Google DeepMind, the article points out.]

While much of the AI revolution has been focused on large language models, billions of dollars have begun to flow to companies that are seeking to apply spatially focused AI systems toward industries including robotics and manufacturing… Amazon, one of [America’s] largest employers, has closed in on the milestone of having as many robots as humans.

Dickhead

By liqu1d • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Put your own money where your mouth is

Re:OMG he is implementing this scenario

By rsilvergun • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
No this is techno fascism. Basically we’re going back to the robber baron era where about seven or eight guys owned literally everything. The difference is they have access to technology that will let them maintain that control indefinitely. Basically hyper militarized police coupled with a surveillance state and military grade drones.

Imagine if you had a cyberpunk world but without the cool netrunners because there wasn’t any room for them and they got picked off before they did anything. All the bad and none of the good.

We could do something about it but about 40% of the country for reasons I cannot explain things that they are going to come out ahead during techno fascism. Some of them have crazy religious beliefs some of them just fall for various moral panics and some of them fancied themselves temporarily inconvenienced millionaires. All of them will be ground into the same paste with the rest of us.

Raise

By ArchieBunker • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

In other words the man with nearly the greatest wealth on earth is asking for funds. This is rule one of being rich. You invest other people’s money.

Re:Why?

By karmawarrior • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Probably the same as Sam Altman’s:

Why did you decide to devote your life to AI?

I just saw so much suffering in the world that needed to be automated.

.

(Disclaimer due to the inevitable “ACKSURELYs” on Slashdot: The Onion is a parody site, please don’t respond as if Altman really said that. But you know he and Bezos really think that…)

NASA’s Hubble Unexpectedly Catches Comet Breaking Up

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope unexpectedly captured a rare, early-stage breakup of comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) just days after it first began disintegrating. Phys.org reports:
“Sometimes the best science happens by accident,” said co-investigator John Noonan, a research professor in the Department of Physics at Auburn University in Alabama. “This comet got observed because our original comet was not viewable due to some new technical constraints after we won our proposal. We had to find a new target — and right when we observed it, it happened to break apart, which is the slimmest of slim chances.”

Noonan didn’t know K1 was fragmenting until he viewed the images the day after Hubble took them. “While I was taking an initial look at the data, I saw that there were four comets in those images when we only proposed to look at one,” said Noonan. “So we knew this was something really, really special.” Hubble caught K1 fragmenting into at least four pieces, each with a distinct coma, the fuzzy envelope of gas and dust that surrounds a comet’s icy nucleus. Hubble cleanly resolved the fragments, but to ground-based telescopes, at the time they only appeared as barely distinguishable, bright blobs. […]

“Never before has Hubble caught a fragmenting comet this close to when it actually fell apart. Most of the time, it’s a few weeks to a month later. And in this case, we were able to see it just days after,” said Noonan. “This is telling us something very important about the physics of what’s happening at the comet’s surface. We may be seeing the timescale it takes to form a substantial dust layer that can then be ejected by the gas.”
The findings have been published in the journal Icarus.

That’s actually cool

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 3 Thread

News for space nerds that matter!

Officer Leaks Location of French Aircraft Carrier With Strava Run

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
schwit1 shares a report from the BBC:
A French officer has reportedly revealed the location of an aircraft carrier deployed towards the Middle East after publicly registering a run on sports app Strava. French news outlet Le Monde first reported the officer, referred to as Arthur, logged a 35-minute run on the app while exercising on the deck of aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle on 13 March. He used a smartwatch to record his run and upload the activity to the app, the paper said, creating a map that showed his location. […] The location of the vessel was said by Le Monde to have been northwest of Cyprus, around 100km (62 miles) from the Turkish coast, with satellite images capturing the carrier and its escort.
A representative from the French Armed Forces said the officer’s behavior “does not comply with current guidelines,” which “sailors are regularly made aware of.”

So what?

By Harold Halloway • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Does anyone seriously think that any country that might have an interest in the location of that ship doesn’t already know exactly where it is?

Re:Not so difficult to locate

By Bu11etmagnet • Score: 5, Funny Thread

> it cannot dive to hide itself.

It can, but at most once.

Re:Not so difficult to locate

By teg • Score: 5, Informative Thread

And what assets does current foe have that are capable of tracking an aircraft carrier on such journey in real time, and what is their current resource subscription situation for those assets?

The main foe at the moment is Russia, and they surely know where the carrier is. If Iran is interested at all, they get the information from their allies in Russia.

Not just any sailor

By Teun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Just shows you even the stupid can become officer.
Because we’ve heard these tales before, it’s not exactly new that fitness apps follow you around.

Re:France should just surrender now

By hcs_$reboot • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Surrender to who? Iran or the US?

White House Unveils National AI Policy Framework To Limit State Power

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC:
The Trump administration on Friday issued (PDF) a legislative framework for a single national policy on artificial intelligence, aiming to create uniform safety and security guardrails around the nascent technology while preempting states from enacting their own AI rules. The six-pronged outline broadly proposes a slew of regulations on AI products and infrastructure, ranging from implementing new child-safety rules to standardizing the permitting and energy use of AI data centers. It also calls on Congress to address thorny issues surrounding intellectual-property rights and craft rules “preventing AI systems from being used to silence or censor lawful political expression or dissent.”

The administration said in an official release that it wants to work with Congress “in the coming months” to convert its framework into a bill that President Donald Trump can sign. The White House wants to codify the framework into law “this year” and believes it can generate bipartisan support, Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, said in an interview with Fox News on Thursday evening. That won’t be easy in a deeply divided Congress where Republicans hold thin and often fractious majorities, and where Trump has already urged GOP lawmakers to prioritize his controversial voter-ID bill above all else ahead of the November midterms.
BCLP has an interactive map that tracks the proposed, failed and enacted AI regulatory bills from each state.

So much for state’s rights.

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
The thing I don’t get about Republican voters, the politically aware of ones not the ones who are just clueless and trying to make it through one more day, the thing I don’t get about them is they know that the party they support lies constantly about every single principle day claim to have. I mean Christ Donald Trump literally said out loud that he’s going to hell…

And I get all politicians lie and blah blah blah but if they’re going to sit there and lie to you about fundamental principles what makes you think that they’re going to not fuck you over? What makes you think you’re part of the club?

What counts as ‘prevention’?

By grmoc • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Does a DoS attack count as prevention?

Shannon-Hartley’s theory— Capacity Limit: As noise approaches infinity relative to signal, capacity approaches zero, meaning reliable communication becomes impossible without increasing power.

So, DoS attacks effectively prevent communication.

Is AI slop a DoS attack? It sure as heck feels that way…

Re:So much for state’s rights.

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Ya, but letting the states regulate this within their borders would interfere with Trump and his donors getting even richer, probably at our expense.

Re: Yeah but they don’t look at it like that

By toutankh • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Here is the page referred to about leopards eating faces: https://www.reddit.com/r/Leopa…

It’s a bunch of stories about people who voted for Trump and who then suffer unforeseen (by them but not by anyone with at least two neurones) consequences for it. It’s very depressing.

Re:So much for state’s rights.

By MTEK • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

As someone who grew-up in a conservative household and listened to conservative talk radio, the point is this: owning the libs. It’s ideological sadism— deriving pleasure from inflicting pain, suffering, or humiliation on others as a means of upholding or enforcing a specific belief system, ideology, or social structure. That’s the whole point of Trump. That’s why he keeps “winning”. How else would a crude, pathological liar, insurrectionist, and unrepentant felon get re-elected? He makes people like you miserable. Not only that, Trump proves Niccolo Machiavelli was right. 500 years ago he observed an uncomfortable truth about human psychology and power dynamics that organizational psychologists have since confirmed: malignant narcissism, not competence, is often the strongest predictor of who emerges as a leader.

Personally, I suspect American civilization peaked ~10 years ago. Trump’s first term should have been a one and done, but here we are. Democrats may win the upcoming mid-terms and next presidency, but I wouldn’t be surprised if the successor of MAGA finds a bigger, more evil idiot. They can’t help themselves. It’s pathological.

CBS News Shutters Radio Service After Nearly a Century

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
CBS News is shutting down its nearly 100-year-old radio news service due to economic pressures and the shift toward digital media and podcasts. Longtime CBS News anchor Dan Rather said: “It’s another piece of America that is gone.” The Associated Press reports:
When it went on the air in September 1927, the service was the precursor to the entire network, giving a youthful William S. Paley a start in the business. Famed broadcaster Edward R. Murrow’s rooftop reports during the Nazi bombing of London during World War II kept Americans listening anxiously. Today, CBS News Radio provides material to an estimated 700 stations across the country and is known best for its top-of-the-hour news roundups. The service will end on May 22, the network said Friday.

“Radio is woven into the fabric of CBS News and that’s always going to be part of our history,” CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss said in delivering the news to the staff. “I want you to know that we did everything we could, including before I joined the company, to try and find a viable solution to sustain the radio operation.” But with the radical changes in the media industry, she said, “we just could not find a way to make that possible.”

It was unclear how many people will lose their jobs because of the radio shutdown. CBS News was cutting about 6% of its workforce, or more than 60 people, on Friday. It’s not the end of turmoil at the network, as parent company Paramount Global is likely to absorb CNN as part of its announced purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery.

Re: They are a state-owned media now

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You can’t even get her location right. She’s from PA you twat.

As for her opinions, she’s a right wing nutjob. Always has been. What left wing opinions does she have beyond vague platitudes towards freedom of speech that do not extend to, say, criticism of Israel’s government?

Re:But I thought the phrase went the other way?

By JoshuaZ • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Bari Weiss is right wing? From what perspective? I mean, she doesn’t buy into the Steele Report, supports free speech, and doesn’t think Musk is a Nazi, but that’s hardly “right wing”. Is it? Or does the left wing club require thinking Musk is a Nazi, supporting censorship, and assuming Trump is a Putin super spy?

That Bari Weiss doesn’t buy into some of the most extreme ideas of the modern right doesn’t make her not right wing, it just shows how utterly off the walls the American right has gone. As for the idea that free speech is a right-wing approach the last year of the Trump administration should make it very clear how much of the right cared only about free speech when it was useful for them. Trying to do things like take away broadcast licenses because one doesn’t like what channels have to say https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c626ye5gq16o is not remotely free speech. And Weiss herself has shown that same hypocrisy which I find particularly, disappointing because she was someone who I disagreed with on some issues but seemed 2 or 3 years ago as a genuine advocate for free speech. And you’ll find that I’m someone on Slashdot who had a history of saying that the left had serious free speech issues. But much of her behavior, including her time at CBS, but also her actions at the University of Austin, showed that her support of free speech was only a fig leaf for when she was not in power. Censorship is coming far more from the right right now than the left. Most of the rest of your comment is essentially a strawman of what people on the left generally believe (and I say that as a pretty center-left person who finds much of the left pretty aggravating).

Re:They are a state-owned media now

By karmawarrior • Score: 5, Informative Thread

ABC and NBC are centrist corpo-media.

NPR has a legal obligation to be balanced and factual. It has also had one source of funding removed (which ironically, if it survives, may ultimately mean the legal limits on its speech are unconstitutional, leading it to reasonably start siding with its donors. Given how much money it makes from “foundations” designed to launder Billionaire’s reputations though, there’s no guarantee that’ll mean it falls to the left.)

MSNBC doesn’t exist, it was spun off as MSNOW. MSNOW has a mix of different hosts with radically different politics. Its morning show is still headed an ex-Republican congressman, albeit one sane enough to reject MAGA.

CNN is in the process of being taken over by CBS.

Fox was, prior to CBS being turned into a Fox News clone, not the only right wing news channel, or even the one to the furthest right. OANN and Newsmax, as you well know, competed with it.

Basically centrist, both-sidesy, media is going away, being replaced by corpo-fascist and fascist media on the right. NPR may remain as a balanced, truthful, outlet, it’s too early to tell, and MS NOW might possibly continue to be the commercial non-MAGA channel.

This is a shitshow if you want media to improve, rather than cater to particular points of view. I don’t want “left” or “right” or “corporate” media, I want truthful media. We haven’t had that for 25 years, just corporate and right wing media, with the occasional token leftish talking head.

Re: They are a state-owned media now

By Ender_Wiggin • Score: 5, Informative Thread

She literally calls herself a Zionist extremist. Her actions have been in extreme support of Israel and defense of Trump.

The only thing “liberal” about her is that she’s a lesbian but there’s plenty of rightwing LGBT people out there.

Re:They are a state-owned media now

By e432776 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Yup. And if you are a visual person, here is a chart showing changes in quantified media outlet bias over some years, It’s a shame I was not able to find an updated one, but the picture is pretty clear.

Microsoft Says It Is Fixing Windows 11

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
BrianFagioli writes:
Microsoft says it is finally listening to user complaints about Windows 11, promising a series of changes focused on performance, reliability, and reducing everyday annoyances. In a message to Windows Insiders, the company outlined plans to bring back long requested features like taskbar repositioning, cut down on intrusive AI integrations, and give users more control over updates. File Explorer is also getting attention, with promised improvements to speed, stability, and general responsiveness.

The bigger picture here is less about new features and more about fixing what already exists. Microsoft is talking about fewer forced restarts, quieter notifications, and a more predictable experience overall, along with improvements to Windows Subsystem for Linux for developers. While the roadmap sounds reasonable, users have heard similar promises before, so the real test will be whether these changes actually show up in day to day use.

Meaningless

By markdavis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Notable missing, perhaps the two most important and biggest problems for people:

* Remove/reverse artificial hardware requirements
* Remove/reverse requiring a “cloud” login

Don’t hold your breath

Windows Explorer 11= terrible

By flug • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Explorer in Windows 11 is so slow and terrible I finally just quit using it. It was taking like several minutes to simply open up a new, blank, explorer window.

Switched to File Pilot and the same directory opens up instantly.

So one guy from Croatia can out-program an entire, massive $2.9 trillion tech company. OK . . .

The thing about Explorer is: It is literally the most basic, commonly used function in the OS. Well, that and the Taskbar, which has also been a continuous clusterf#$*& for literally years now.

When you can’t even get the most basic, commonly used functions in your OS right, it really does undermine confidence.

Re:Will believe it when it happens

By supremebob • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I think that Microsoft saw the lines of people at the Apple Store picking up MacBook Neo’s and realized that they’re going to continue to lose customers in droves if don’t fix Windows 11 ASAP. People are getting tired of their computers being used as billboards for selling XBox Live, Office, Onedrive, and CoPilot.

Re:Will believe it when it happens

By taustin • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

How did they let it get this bad?

They put MBAs in charge who are programmed to listen to the marketing droids, who are mindless idiots.

The shortcut word for it is “enshittification.”

Happens to nearly all companies when they get to a certain size.

Feature requests

By devslash0 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

- Offline mode by default, until I connect it.
- No AI present by default, until I install it.
- Works with a fully local account.
- Functional UI with the classic menu bar.
- Proper control panel.
- …and no Settings app at all.
- Normal, customisable right-click menu.
- No ads in Windows apps.
- No forced updates.
- … security updates completely separate to feature updates.
- Updates don’t change / reset my settings.

Here. Just a starting list.

Work From Home and Drive More Slowly To Save Energy, IEA Says

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
As energy prices soar from the Iran conflict, the International Energy Agency is urging governments to cut energy use by taking up measures like remote work and reduced speed limits. The group warns the energy security crisis could persist for months, even if supply routes stabilize. “I believe the world has not yet well understood the depth of the energy security challenge we are facing,” said IEA’s executive director, Fatih Birol. “It is much bigger than what we had in the 1970s… It is also bigger than the natural gas price shock we experienced after the Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.” The BBC reports:
Thirty-two countries are members of the IEA, including the US, the UK, Australia, Canada, Japan and 24 other European nations. Its role is to act as a global watchdog, providing analysis and recommendations on global energy problems, such as energy security and the transition to clean energy. The IEA’s other suggestions for governments, businesses and individuals include:

- Promoting use of public transport
- Giving private cars access to city centres on alternate days
- Encouraging car sharing and efficient driving habits
- Avoiding air travel where possible, especially business flights
- Switching to electric cooking

It also said there should be a focused effort to preserve liquid petroleum gas for cooking and other essential uses, by switching bio-fuel converted vehicles onto gas and introducing other measures to reduce its use. Birol said these proposals were in addition to action taken by IEA member countries earlier this month, when they agreed to release 400 million barrels of oil, 20% of its emergency reserves.
Several countries in Asia have implemented emergency four-day workweeks and work-from-home mandates as they have been hit particularly hard from the conflict. Fortune notes: “Asia is particularly dependent on oil exports from the Middle East; Japan and South Korea respectively source 90% and 70% of their oil from the region.”

Energy Crisis

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

By “energy crisis” do you mean petty asshole starting a war in the middle east like the last two republican presidents?

Silver lining on a very gray cloud.

By Brain-Fu • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I am happy about renewed interest and political pressure in favor of working from home. Such events help to persuade business leaders who still (selfishly and ignorantly) insist that people should work from an office even when their role does not require it.

Of course, I would never wish for something like the Iran conflict in order to create this political pressure. It would be much better if public awareness and acceptance of the environmental consequences of widespread business travel (including driving to work every day) would create the necessary political pressure.

But, that’s not the world we live in, unfortunately.

Re:Energy Crisis

By ZombieCatInABox • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

And invading another country. And treathening to invade two other allied countries and NATO members.

But what’s the point ? The only rebuttals you’ll get from the resident trumptards will be something about Obama or Biden, or some emails or some laptop. Oh, and TDS. Let’s not forget TDS.

Re:The sky is falling....?

By MachineShedFred • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Just wait.

The fuel price hikes we are seeing today are the result of the futures market pricing in a lack of crude production for contract delivery.

Nobody has even started pricing in scarcity, which will hit when those futures contracts do not get delivered, and there is less refined petroleum distillates available than orders. That’s when we’re gonna see a spike in prices that is going to make the last two weeks look like Fischer-Price “My First Petrowar” pricing - when demand outstrips supply.

We are only at the beginning of this thing. And LNG exports worldwide are going to follow due to this week’s crippling of one of the biggest natural gas fields in the world.

The oil shocks of the 70s were not caused by war and destruction. Those were simply a political argument among countries, which could be ended in a day with negotiations and verbal agreements.

There’s no verbal agreement that can replace 20% of global oil deliveries, or 20% of global natgas production. This is going to get a whole lot worse before it gets any better.

Re: Work from home? I’m all in!

By fluffernutter • Score: 4, Informative Thread

You have no reason to be smug. Most of the fossil fuels anyone uses comes from the products they buy, not their own travel. Do you make all your own food from scratch or are they shipped by plane/boat/truck like everyone else’s?

OpenAI Plans Launch of Desktop ‘Superapp’

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joshuark shares a report from Neowin:
OpenAI is planning to combine its Atlas web browser, ChatGPT app, and Codex coding app into a singular desktop “superapp.” CEO of Applications, Fidji Simo, said the company was doubling down on its successful products. By taking this move, the AI company aims to streamline the user experience and reduce fragmentation. Simo said in an internal memo: “We realized we were spreading our efforts across too many apps and stacks, and that we need to simplify our efforts. That fragmentation has been slowing us down and making it harder to hit the quality bar we want.”

Bloat

By liqu1d • Score: 3 Thread
Super apps tend to be shit at a lot of things at once. Perhaps this will be the one to break the trend.

Translation

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

By taking this move, the AI company aims to streamline the user experience and reduce fragmentation.

Increase our data capture.

Oh boy

By RitchCraft • Score: 3 Thread

SuperSlop 1.0 coming your way!

Oregon School Cell Phone Ban: ‘Engaged Students, Joyful Teachers’

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An anonymous reader quotes a repot from the Portland Tribune:
There was plenty of uncertainty and debate about the effectiveness of a cell phone ban decreed (PDF) by executive order last summer. But at least in Estacada, the policy has earned two thumbs up, including approval from a “grumpy old teacher.” Jeff Mellema is a language arts teacher at Estacada High School. He has worked in the building for 24 years, and he said the new policy that prohibits students from using their phones during the day has been a breath of fresh air.

“There is so much better discourse in my classroom, be it personal or academic,” Mellema said. “Students can’t avoid those conversations anymore with their phones.” “This ban has brought joy back to this old, grumpy teacher,” he added with a smile. That is the kind of feedback Gov. Tina Kotek was hoping for as she visited Estacada High School on Wednesday afternoon, March 18. Her goal was to visit classrooms, speak with administrators, and meet with students one-on-one to hear about the effectiveness of her phone policy. […] In the classrooms, she was able to take a straw poll around the cell phone ban and then get specific, direct feedback from the kids. Overall, it was positive.

The Rangers said they noticed changes in how they interact with teachers and peers. They don’t feel that “siren’s song” tug of their phones as often, and the changes are bleeding into everyday life as well — think less reminders to put phones away during family dinners. Phones also led to issues around bullying and online toxicity during the school day. There are some hiccups. The students spoke about difficulties in tracking busy schedules. Many athletes relied on their phones for practice times and locations. Some advanced placement kids said the overzealous programs monitoring school laptops blocked access to needed resources for studying/researching schoolwork. There is even a strange quirk with school-provided tech that prevents them from accessing their calculators. “Maybe the filters are too strong right now,” Gov. Kotek said. “That is why we are working with the districts to best implement the policy.”

The kids also weighed in on the debate around the extent of the ban. The two options bandied in Salem were a “bell-to-bell” policy or just inside classrooms. The latter would allow kids to use their phones during passing period and lunch. Several advocated for that change. That mirrored the debate within the Oregon legislature. It ultimately led to a stalemate and the need for Gov. Kotek’s executive ruling. “When you make a decision like this, you don’t know how it will ultimately work,” Kotek told the students. “I appreciate you adapting to the situation and making it work for you.” While things could change in the future, the governor is pleased with the early results. The phone ban is here to stay.

Re:Are they not old enough to remember…?

By Local ID10T • Score: 4, Informative Thread

My high school had a smoking area -although it was restricted to Seniors only. And you could leave for lunch and go downtown to the shops. And there was a student parking lot. Hell, when I was in grade school, the local high school had both a pistol and rifle range…

Pepperidge Farm Remembers!

Re:Are they not old enough to remember…?

By JaredOfEuropa • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
We grew up better without them, and some of the kids recognize that (here in Europe we’ve had similar experimental bans as well). When asked, one notable point some kids made was that they felt more carefree, secure in knowing that an embarrassing misstep or misspoken word is not going to be filmed to haunt you for the rest of the year.

Re:Are they not old enough to remember…?

By sabbede • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Yeah, the idea that my parents would ever need to interrupt a class to contact me directly would have been dismissed out of hand by everyone involved when I was in school. It isn’t necessary. That’s why the school has its own phones - parents call the school, not the student. There’s nothing so urgent that the child has to be called directly. Examples of things I was notified of in class include my mom setting the backyard on fire and my grandmother dying. Calling me directly about either would not have helped.

And kids simply can’t be trusted to only have their phone for contacting their parents under whatever incredibly unlikely scenario anyone wants to imagine.

Re:cucking for ChatGPT

By sabbede • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Here’s the thing I can’t help but notice and be bothered by - We rolled out tablets and chrome books to schools fast. Huge drive, lots of donations, lots of taxes, lots of computers distributed because, well, of course they will help make kids smarter. Never did anyone stop and say, “hey, this is kind of an experiment. Maybe we shouldn’t put everyone in the experimental group all at the same time. Maybe we should try giving kids laptops in just some places and see how it goes for 5-10 years before changing every school?” But of course educators, who include science teachers, are really f-ing bad at experiments. They’re really good with fads though.

Will the drive to undo that mistake go as quickly? I doubt it, but time will tell. Will we remove cell phones from schools as quickly as we replaced the books with cheap computers? Maybe we’ll luck out.

The results of removing cell phones from Jr High here in Georgia has gone so well that they’re expanding the law to include High Schools.

results after two year ban

By Fons_de_spons • Score: 3 Thread
Belgium here, high school teacher… Our school banned smartphones two years ago. 12 to 15 year olds have to hand them in. The older ones have to put them somewhere where it is out of hand’s reach. Parents rejoiced, kids were disappointed. Now it is routine. Colleagues teaching the young ones say the focus is a lot better. In the higher grades, where I teach, I notice little difference. I have to add though that students in our school are generally… more well behaved than in average schools.
Government mandated a phone ban last year. A (reliable) newspaper reported that screentime remained the same. Meaning that kids use their phones more at home now.
Personally I have mixed feelings about this. I am pro the ban. Especially for young kids. I see smartphone zombies at every bus stop that I pass by car every morning. It is a sad view. Then again, us adults have little credibility there. We are not giving a good example. My son was at a music camp. I went to get him. Most parents were clinging to their smartphones while waiting for the kids to come out. If we make rules for the kids, we should also make rules for parents.
In short, smartphone ban has some advantages. It is not a miracle solution though. It is easy to bash kids. Lead by example…

DOJ Charges Super Micro Co-Founder For Smuggling $2.5 Billion In Nvidia GPUs To China

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Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from CNN:
The co-founder of Super Micro Computer and two others were charged with diverting $2.5 billion worth of servers with Nvidia’s artificial intelligence chips to China, in violation of U.S. laws barring exports to that country without a license. Yih-Shyan Liaw, known as Wally; Ruei-Tsang Chang, known as Steven; and Ting-Wei Sun, known as Willy, were charged with conspiring to violate export control laws, smuggling goods from the U.S. and conspiring to defraud the U.S.

Liaw, who co-founded Super Micro Computer and served on its board of directors, was arrested Thursday in California and released on bail. Sun, a contractor, is held awaiting a detention hearing. Chang, who worked in the Taiwan office of Super Micro, remains at large. […] According to the indictment, the men used a pass-through company based in Southeast Asia to place orders to obscure that the servers would end up in China. The men worked with executives at the pass-through company to provide false documents to the server manufacturer to further the deception, the indictment said. They used a shipping and logistic company to repackage the servers into unmarked boxes to conceal their contents before they were shipped to China.

To deceive the manufacturer’s auditors, who checked the pass-through company for compliance with export laws, the men allegedly used “dummy” nonworking copies of the servers when the actual servers were on their way to China. Two of the defendants allegedly worked to stage the dummy servers at a warehouse rented by the pass-through company, according to the indictment. Sun took photos and videos of the staged servers to one of the compliance auditors who instead of conducting the audit was “off-site enjoying entertainment paid for” by the pass-through company, according to the indictment. In another instance, prosecutors said surveillance cameras documented individuals using hair dryers to remove labels and add labels and serial number stickers to the boxes and dummy servers.
Super Micro said it’s fully cooperating with the investigation, but that hasn’t prevented its stock from plunging. It’s down nearly 30% following the news.
The company issued the following statement: “The conduct by these individuals alleged in the indictment is a contravention of the Company’s policies and compliance controls, including efforts to circumvent applicable export control laws and regulations. Supermicro maintains a robust compliance program and is committed to full adherence to all applicable U.S. export and re-export control laws and regulations.”

Games Nexus

By SumDog • Score: 3 Thread
Gamers Nexus had a documentary about GPU smuggling:

https://youtu.be/1H3xQaf7BFI

It was taking down shortly by a false copyright claim from Bloomberg. There’s, honestly not enough about actual GPU smuggling in it except towards the end. Still interesting to see actual arrests.

Re:Supermicro is a bottom feeder

By Junta • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I think he suggests how they operate and perhaps their resultant product quality, not their relative performance business wise.

There were the accounting violations before, and now we see that a significant chunk of that revenue was allegedly on the back of ultimately illegal activity.

They tend to play fast and loose with various facets of running their business compared to others, and it shows in their quality, which isn’t exactly great.

However, they do tend to come in much cheaper, and if you deem ‘white box’ type systems adequate, they are the only ostensibly American company to be found in that game.

Chuck Norris Dies At 86

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Longtime Slashdot reader SchroedingersCat writes:
Chuck Norris, known for his roles in action films and as Texas Ranger Cordell Walker on the TV show “Walker, Texas Ranger,” passed away on March 19, leaving behind a legacy of inspiring millions around the world. He was 86.

He became Internet phenomenon after "Chuck Norris Facts" went viral online with such wildly hyperbolic statements as, “Chuck Norris had a staring contest with the sun — and won,” and, “When Chuck Norris does push-ups, he doesn’t push himself up, he pushes the Earth down.”

His death was announced by his family through his official Instagram account, but no further details were immediately available. He was hospitalized earlier that day in Hawaii after experiencing a medical emergency, the family said.

Re:Great action hero and good human

By cayenne8 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I guess that now just leaves us with Keith Richards as humanity’s last hope for immortality.....

Re:Time to spend some karma

By kaatochacha • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Oh god, the old “You’re not really left, THIS is really left” adage we always see. But you did manage to work Donald Trump into the death of a random celebrity, so bonus points for that.

Chuck Norris doesn’t die

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

He Levels Up.

Re:Time to spend some karma

By JustAnotherOldGuy • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“Pro-heterosexual”?

What does that even mean? Sounds like bullshit to me.

Are you also “pro breathing air” as well?

Re:Chuck once brought a knife to a gunfight…

By dsgrntlxmply • Score: 5, Funny Thread
The best that I heard: “When Chuck Norris was born, he drove his mom home from the hospital.’

Amazon Plans Smartphone Comeback More Than a Decade After Fire Phone Flop

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Amazon is reportedly developing a new AI-focused smartphone that doesn’t rely as heavily on traditional apps. “The phone is seen as a potential mobile personalization device that can sync with home voice assistant Alexa and serve as a conduit to Amazon customers throughout the day,” reports Reuters. From the report:
As envisioned, the new phone’s personalization features would make buying from Amazon.com, watching Prime Video, listening to Prime Music or ordering food from partners like Grubhub easier than ever, the people said. They asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal matters. A key focus of the Transformer project has been integrating artificial intelligence capabilities into the device, the people said. That could eliminate the need for traditional app stores, which require downloading and registering for applications before they can be used. Alexa would likely be a core feature but not necessarily the primary operating system of the phone, the people said.
When Amazon launched the Fire Phone in 2014, it aimed to compete directly with offerings from Samsung and Apple. Instead, the device received mixed reviews and failed to impress reviewers, leading Amazon to abandon the effort just over a year later.

Smartphone failed. Smartphone with bad AI won’t!

By nightflameauto • Score: 3 Thread

This is just Amazon assuming that tossing some crappy Alexa + AI on the failed idea from a while ago will create a winning product. I expect to see a lot of failed ideas making a comeback as $failed_idea + AI!

We’re all waiting for the announcement of Zune+Copilot.