before the internet was the internet, in the 1980s, people would call in on 300 bps modems which were shaped to hold standard bell system telephones. Before they could do this, They'd have to talk to my father on the phone. Do you think that a.i. is at a point yet where they would fool someone who's paying attention? If that person is one who believes everything he sees on tv then probably he could be fooled. But if he's not this sort of idiot I think it would be a lot harder. I think it makes more sense to actually get people involved to this level. We could even create wifi network connecting many of us to one internet connection quickly saving enough money to pay for the wifi equipment and also providing an unwatched communication network. Seems they're already working against this by making cpu's capable of preventing such good efforts from being able to work. As Linus made an operating system, maybe someone could make cpu for the community minded of the world.
Yes, I was there in the days of dinosaurs. The computer at our school had one of those old phone modems that did the beep and the blurb, which was still standard for hookups deep into the '90's.
I think the 1st month of the Ukraine War answers your question. The AI bots were posting so fast and furious the truth was being lost in a deluge of lies, and it was taking us quite an effort to get ahead of the curve. It was about a week before most of us figured out the Ghost of Kiev was fake and ghey.
Fortunately I was following Gonzala Lira early on. (Our lady always seems to lead me to the right websites. All I can remember was their mascot was a Red Crow, and one of the guys was British. It is uncanny.)
I don't think peer-to-peer connections are feasible anymore. Nobody has the storage capacity. Everything is on their cloud. What we would need is our own search engines, a firewall to keep out the shills, bots, and trolls, and guaranteed power.
When I worked for the Angelus Press, I recall how much work it took to keep our measly database of 1800 subscribers updated. I cannot even imagine the logistics involved to keep track of, say, half a million users.
Back in the days of DOS, I was quite tech savvy, and could even program. Now, I can barely work the menu on a smartphone. I'm sure the guts of the thing has the same core software Linux was using in the '80's. But it is surrounded by 50 layers of Geek.
And if I started to figure anything out, I would probably end up in 28 pieces in a Nebraska cornfield.
Yes, I was there in the days of dinosaurs. The computer at our school had one of those old phone modems that did the beep and the blurb, which was still standard for hookups deep into the '90's.
only two years ago I had no fibers, but some very competent vdsl's
I think the 1st month of the Ukraine War answers your question. The AI bots were posting so fast and furious the truth was being lost in a deluge of lies, and it was taking us quite an effort to get ahead of the curve. It was about a week before most of us figured out the Ghost of Kiev was fake and ghey.
I'd already been listening to Gerald Celente on David Knight for a while. As he always says, "when all else fails they take you to war". I knew without needing anybody to tell me that this was all about ridding themselves of stock of outdated weapons and getting full retail and emptying out the bread basket of Europe to infest it with brainwashed Israelis who seem to be even more brainwashable than the doofuses all around us here in the "west".
Fortunately I was following Gonzala Lira early on. (Our lady always seems to lead me to the right websites. All I can remember was their mascot was a Red Crow, and one of the guys was British. It is uncanny.)
I don't think peer-to-peer connections are feasible anymore. Nobody has the storage capacity.
Everything is on their cloud. What we would need is our own search engines, a firewall to keep out the shills, bots, and trolls, and guaranteed power.
It needs to be small and not big. groups of groups. For the last 20 years I've collected about 200 families connected to 10 fibers. I can isolate internet traffic and local traffic. and groups of such groups could be formed without needing any large groups. Distributed computing. And everybody can have both public internet and private networking on the same infrastructure. So no need for lots of storage.
When I worked for the Angelus Press, I recall how much work it took to keep our measly database of 1800 subscribers updated. I cannot even imagine the logistics involved to keep track of, say, half a million users.
Back in the days of DOS, I was quite tech savvy, and could even program. Now, I can barely work the menu on a smartphone. I'm sure the guts of the thing has the same core software Linux was using in the '80's. But it is surrounded by 50 layers of Geek.
And if I started to figure anything out, I would probably end up in 28 pieces in a Nebraska cornfield.
Well given that reincarnation is obviously real, 28 pieces in Nebraska sounds like an honorable end.
before the internet was the internet, in the 1980s, people would call in on 300 bps modems which were shaped to hold standard bell system telephones. Before they could do this, They'd have to talk to my father on the phone. Do you think that a.i. is at a point yet where they would fool someone who's paying attention? If that person is one who believes everything he sees on tv then probably he could be fooled. But if he's not this sort of idiot I think it would be a lot harder. I think it makes more sense to actually get people involved to this level. We could even create wifi network connecting many of us to one internet connection quickly saving enough money to pay for the wifi equipment and also providing an unwatched communication network. Seems they're already working against this by making cpu's capable of preventing such good efforts from being able to work. As Linus made an operating system, maybe someone could make cpu for the community minded of the world.
Yes, I was there in the days of dinosaurs. The computer at our school had one of those old phone modems that did the beep and the blurb, which was still standard for hookups deep into the '90's.
I think the 1st month of the Ukraine War answers your question. The AI bots were posting so fast and furious the truth was being lost in a deluge of lies, and it was taking us quite an effort to get ahead of the curve. It was about a week before most of us figured out the Ghost of Kiev was fake and ghey.
Fortunately I was following Gonzala Lira early on. (Our lady always seems to lead me to the right websites. All I can remember was their mascot was a Red Crow, and one of the guys was British. It is uncanny.)
I don't think peer-to-peer connections are feasible anymore. Nobody has the storage capacity. Everything is on their cloud. What we would need is our own search engines, a firewall to keep out the shills, bots, and trolls, and guaranteed power.
When I worked for the Angelus Press, I recall how much work it took to keep our measly database of 1800 subscribers updated. I cannot even imagine the logistics involved to keep track of, say, half a million users.
Back in the days of DOS, I was quite tech savvy, and could even program. Now, I can barely work the menu on a smartphone. I'm sure the guts of the thing has the same core software Linux was using in the '80's. But it is surrounded by 50 layers of Geek.
And if I started to figure anything out, I would probably end up in 28 pieces in a Nebraska cornfield.
regards.
Yes, I was there in the days of dinosaurs. The computer at our school had one of those old phone modems that did the beep and the blurb, which was still standard for hookups deep into the '90's.
only two years ago I had no fibers, but some very competent vdsl's
I think the 1st month of the Ukraine War answers your question. The AI bots were posting so fast and furious the truth was being lost in a deluge of lies, and it was taking us quite an effort to get ahead of the curve. It was about a week before most of us figured out the Ghost of Kiev was fake and ghey.
I'd already been listening to Gerald Celente on David Knight for a while. As he always says, "when all else fails they take you to war". I knew without needing anybody to tell me that this was all about ridding themselves of stock of outdated weapons and getting full retail and emptying out the bread basket of Europe to infest it with brainwashed Israelis who seem to be even more brainwashable than the doofuses all around us here in the "west".
Fortunately I was following Gonzala Lira early on. (Our lady always seems to lead me to the right websites. All I can remember was their mascot was a Red Crow, and one of the guys was British. It is uncanny.)
I don't think peer-to-peer connections are feasible anymore. Nobody has the storage capacity.
Everything is on their cloud. What we would need is our own search engines, a firewall to keep out the shills, bots, and trolls, and guaranteed power.
It needs to be small and not big. groups of groups. For the last 20 years I've collected about 200 families connected to 10 fibers. I can isolate internet traffic and local traffic. and groups of such groups could be formed without needing any large groups. Distributed computing. And everybody can have both public internet and private networking on the same infrastructure. So no need for lots of storage.
When I worked for the Angelus Press, I recall how much work it took to keep our measly database of 1800 subscribers updated. I cannot even imagine the logistics involved to keep track of, say, half a million users.
Back in the days of DOS, I was quite tech savvy, and could even program. Now, I can barely work the menu on a smartphone. I'm sure the guts of the thing has the same core software Linux was using in the '80's. But it is surrounded by 50 layers of Geek.
And if I started to figure anything out, I would probably end up in 28 pieces in a Nebraska cornfield.
Well given that reincarnation is obviously real, 28 pieces in Nebraska sounds like an honorable end.
regards.