![](https://lemmy.cafe/pictrs/image/e2f1f086-fe5a-4823-8676-e270b5554992.webp)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0d5e3a0e-e79d-4062-a7bc-ccc1e7baacf1.png)
Wait until you find out about shamrock.
You are growing red weed.
An excellent film but I wouldn’t call it “without sound”. In fact sound is extremely important in this film. It’s more like “without spoken words”.
Sad
Let’s double the fun.
I am a free user, and it is still chatgpt 4.
And the new voice model doesn’t seem to be available yet, even for paid users.
Is it able to use a LLM?
Then there will be class action lawsuit from all the owners who paid for the devices.
Based on what I’ve read, you can still do what you bought them for without paying the monthly fee. You just have to deal with the old dumb Alexa.
By the way…
The New Siri seems to be quite useful, with “personal context” understanding my calendar, messages, mail etc.
ChatGPT 4 voice mode is very impressive, with the conversation getting clarifications and finding exactly the information I want (when it is not hallucinating). ChatGPT-4o will be amazing if it is as good as what we saw from the demo.
It is not for everyone, but I personally use AI chat every day and find it useful.
I am quite interested in what Google and Apple will do about their voice assistant devices. The New Siri appears to be quite useful, if it can actually do what we saw in WWDC. But Apple hasn’t mentioned anything about the HomePods.
Google Home/Nest has been stuck with the dumb version of Google Assistant, and has been getting worse. It has no integration with any other Google services, and there was no mention of Home/Nest in Google I/O.
If either HomePod or Nest gets released without requiring subscriptions, I might move away from Alexa devices.
… and pushing ads on echo show devices.
The scum who signed the ban is responsible for this: Critics say Florida aims to rewrite history by rejecting African American studies
CCTV. Ironic China Central Television has the same acronym as closed-circuit TV.
My Nokia phone from 2 decades ago had more pixels.
We would want the hyperloop to enter city centers.
Not necessarily. There could be connecting transportation so the hyperloop doesn’t go into the city centre. Or, we can build new cities around the hyperloop.
In a few decades, we will have an extremely advanced version of VR and AR, people will meet virtually without travelling physically.
When should an organisation stop complying with totalitarian governments? First they stop the extensions.
What if they request for Firefox to add site filters, or else?
What if China demands similar bans for extensions related to Taiwan, Hong Kong, Tibet etc?
It can go on and on. Some baselines should not be negotiable.
How else would you explain Mozilla’s decision?
I disagree.
Lemmy has alternative UI such as Voyager and Photon, they are way ahead of Mbin in terms of look and feel.
What do you like about Mbin’s UX?