Millie Mackintosh and Hugo Taylor 'file for divorce' a month after their shock split following seven years of marriage with both keen for a 'clean break'
Millie Mackintosh and Hugo Taylor have reportedly filed for divorce following their their split after seven years of marriage.
How I became an accidental war correspondent: DAVID PATRIKARAKOS on how disaster followed him from Ukraine's frontlines to LA's wildfires
I am very much an accidental war correspondent. Every place I went descended into disaster.
Jaywick road 'riddled with potholes' to be repaired after calls from locals
They are looking to improve the road to make sure it stays usable for 'the next few years'
Florence Pugh leaves boutique gym in west London dressed all in brown with her beloved Staffordshire terrier Billie
It looks as if Florence Pugh's usually glamorous dress sense has gone to the dogs...
New Freenet Network Launches, Along With 'River' Group Chat
Wikipedia describes Freenet as "a peer-to-peer platform for censorship-resistant, anonymous communication," released in the year 2000. "Both Freenet and some of its associated tools were originally designed by Ian Clarke," Wikipedia adds. (And in 2000 Clarke answered questions from Slashdot's readers...)
And now Ian Clarke (aka Sanity — Slashdot reader #1,431) returns to share this announcement:
Freenet's new generation peer-to-peer network is now operational, along with the first application built on the network: a decentralized group chat system called River.
The new version is a complete redesign of the original project, focusing on real-time decentralized applications rather than static content distribution. Applications run as WebAssembly-based contracts across a small-world peer network, allowing software to operate directly on the network without centralized infrastructure.
An introductory video demonstrating the system is available on YouTube.
"While the original Freenet was like a decentralized hard drive, the new Freenet is like a full decentralized computer," Clarke wrote in 2023, "allowing the creation of entirely decentralized services like messaging, group chat, search, social networking, among others... designed for efficiency, flexibility, and transparency to the end user."
"Freenet 2023 can be used seamlessly through your web browser, providing an experience that feels just like using the traditional web,"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
'Worse than Afghanistan' task facing US troops if Trump opts for boots on the ground: How Iran hides its military might in 'natural fortress' mountains... while ships in Persian Gulf become sitting ducks
For the first time since the conflict began the US sent 5,000 US Marines to the Middle East.
The extraordinarily unusual Essex church that's now someone's home
The church is one of many unusual properties in the county
Inside the datacenter where the day starts with topping up cerebrospinal fluid
Biological computing is messy and gassy – It’s now cloudy, too
At the start of the working day at Cortical Labs’ datacenter in Melbourne, Australia, technicians top up the resident computers with a liquid modelled on the cerebrospinal fluid that surrounds the human brain.…
The leafy Essex street with expensive homes that's perfect for commuters
Homes here often cost over £1 million
Beloved young dad and inspiring female 'Air Force superstar' among US heroes killed in Iran mission crash as all six are named
The US KC-135 plane went down in the western part of Iraq, which authorities said was 'friendly airspace', and the tragedy was not caused by 'hostile fire.'
Essex bridge will close for essential repairs after vehicle strike caused damage
Finchingfield Bridge on the B1053 in Essex will close for essential repairs from March 16 after vehicle damage.
The Essex primary school where 'children never want to miss a day' rated as 'exceptional'
“Pupils demonstrate positive attitudes to their learning and exemplary behaviour"
Investigation into missile strike on Iranian girls' school won't cover up the truth, US general insists
The probe 'should have been done sooner', said General David Petraeus, former CIA director and commander of American forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Iran's foreign minister admits Islamic Republic is receiving military support from Russia and China
Top American officials had claimed that Russia was behind Iran's knowledge of sensitive intelligence, such as the precise locations of US warships.
Eye tests could spot signs of Alzheimer's years before symptoms first appear, new research suggests
Experts believe the retina may predict Alzheimer's risk because it is part of the central nervous system and connected directly to the brain via the optic nerve.
Will AI Bring 'the End of Computer Programming As We Know It'?
Long-time tech journalist Clive Thompson interviewed over 70 software developers at Google, Amazon, Microsoft and start-ups for a new article on AI-assisted programming. It's title?
"Coding After Coders: The End of Computer Programming as We Know It."
Published in the prestigious New York Times Magazine, the article even cites long-time programming guru Kent Beck saying LLMs got him going again and he's now finishing more projects than ever, calling AI's unpredictability "addictive, in a slot-machine way."
In fact, the article concludes "many Silicon Valley programmers are now barely programming. Instead, what they're doing is deeply, deeply weird..."
Brennan-Burke chimed in: "You remember seeing the research that showed the more rude you were to models, the better they performed?" They chuckled. Computer programming has been through many changes in its 80-year history. But this may be the strangest one yet: It is now becoming a conversation, a back-and-forth talk fest between software developers and their bots...
For decades, being a software developer meant mastering coding languages, but now a language technology itself is upending the very nature of the job... A coder is now more like an architect than a construction worker... Several programmers told me they felt a bit like Steve Jobs, who famously had his staffers churn out prototypes so he could handle lots of them and settle on what felt right. The work of a developer is now more judging than creating...
If you want to put a number on how much more productive A.I. is making the programmers at mature tech firms like Google, it's 10 percent, Sundar Pichai, Google's chief executive, has said. That's the bump that Google has seen in "engineering velocity" — how much faster its more than 100,000 software developers are able to work. And that 10 percent is the average inside the company, Ryan Salva, a senior director of product at the company, told me. Some work, like writing a simple test, is now tens of times faster. Major changes are slower. At the start-ups whose founders I spoke to, closer to 100 percent of their code is being written by A.I., but at Google it is not quite 50 percent.
The article cites a senior principal engineer at Amazon who says "Things I've always wanted to do now only take a six-minute conversation and a 'Go do that." Another programmer described their army of Claude agents as "an alien intelligence that we're learning to work with." Although "A.I. being A.I., things occasionally go haywire," the article acknowledges — and after relying on AI, "Some new developers told me they can feel their skills weakening."
Still, "I was surprised by how many software developers told me they were happy to no longer write code by hand. Most said they still feel the jolt of success, even with A.I. writing the lines... "
A few programmers did say that they lamented the demise of hand-crafting their work. "I believe that it can be fun and fulfilling and engaging, and having the computer do it for you strips you of that," one Apple engineer told me. (He asked to remain unnamed so he wouldn't get in trouble for criticizing Apple's embrace of A.I.) He went on: "I didn't do it to make a lot of money and to excel in the career ladder. I did it because it's my passion. I don't want to outsource that passion"... But only a few people at Apple openly share his dimmer views, he said.
The coders who still actively avoid A.I. may be in the minority, but their opposition is intense. Some dislike how much energy it takes to train and deploy the models, and others object to how they were trained by tech firms pillaging copyrighted works. There is suspicion that the sheer speed of A.I.'s output means firms will wind up with mountains of flabbily written code that won't perform well. The tech bosses might use agents as a cudgel: Don't get uppity at work — we could replace you with a bot. And critics think it is a terrible idea for developers to become reliant on A.I. produced by a small coterie of tech giants.
Thomas Ptacek, a Chicago-based developer and a co-founder of the tech firm Fly.io... thinks the refuseniks are deluding themselves when they claim that A.I. doesn't work well and that it can't work well... The holdouts are in the minority, and "you can watch the five stages of grief playing out."
"How things will shake out for professional coders themselves isn't yet clear," the article concludes. "But their mix of exhilaration and anxiety may be a preview for workers in other fields... Abstraction may be coming for us all."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Sarah Michelle Gellar 'blindsided' after Hulu abruptly cancels Buffy the Vampire Slayer reboot as she shares emotional video
Sarah Michelle Gellar wanted fans to hear it from her first - Hulu has scrapped plans for a Buffy the Vampire Slayer reboot.
I looked like a monster after a car accident burned off my face... but a pioneering face transplant gave me my life back. See what I look like now
Joseph DiMeo remembers hopping into the car and blinking back sleep. Then he woke up in a hospital, three and a half months later, with 80 percent burns.
MAIL ON SUNDAY COMMENT: What has it come to when the French navy puts ours to shame?
Several things were wrong. And so it continued. Between the wars, the giant battlecruiser HMS Hood looked tremendous. But the truth was less impressive.
Phil Campbell dead at 64: Motörhead guitarist passes away after a 'complex major operation'
In an emotional statement they paid tribute to the late Welsh rocker who died following a 'long and courageous battle in intensive care after a complex major operation'.