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It’s anecdotal, I know, but my main entertainment business revenue is down 50% over the past 3 months. Our main paid source of leads was Google Ads, which have served us well over the past 10 years or so — I think I know what I am doing in adwords by now.
Once per month I check the analytics, updating keywords and tweaking ad campaigns. Over the past year we increased our budget, and then I started looking at it once per week, running simultaneous campaigns with different settings, just trying to get SOMETHING.
Last month Google gave us a bonus — free money! This was 5x our monthly ad spend, to spend just when we needed it most — over the December holidays. I added another new campaign, updated the budgets for the existing ones. Still no change. The last week there was money to burn, left over from unused ad spend. I increased our budget to 10x. ZERO RETURN.
The money ran out. I am not putting more in. Where do we go from here?
Research shows that many young people are getting their information from short video platforms like TikTok and Instagram. We are trying ads on there.
Our customer base is comprised of 50% returning customers (I am proud of that statistic!). We have an email newsletter, we started sending them regularly over the past 2 months. Remember us?
We also plan to do some actual physical advertising — I am going to a market next weekend, doing a free show or two, handing out cards.
Also, we are branching out — I have some projects I want to make, related to the Magic Poi project, and hopefully sell. We ordered supplies last week.
Right now, though — I’m broke. Anyone need a website or IOT project built? I am AI assisted, very fast!
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Read the original on www.circusscientist.com »
At Netflix, we are always exploring ways to make our content look and sound even better. To provide a common reference for prototyping bleeding-edge technologies within entertainment, technology and academic circles without compromising the security of our original and licensed programming, we’ve developed test titles oriented around documentary, live action, and animation.
Many open source assets are available from each project listed below. Our hope is this will encourage more experimentation, learning, and discovery that will benefit the whole industry. Many of these titles are also streaming on Netflix and are best enjoyed with any HDR configured device with your Premium subscription.
You can download single files directly through your web browser, but for large files and long frame sequences, you may wish to use command line tools. Guidance is included below. Ad Blockers may cause errors in your downloading process, so try turning it off if you have issues.
Our open source content is available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License.
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I’ve been a computer programmer all-told for 43 years. That’s more than half the entire history of electronic programmable computers.
In that time, I’ve seen a lot of things change. But I’ve also seen some things stay pretty much exactly the same.
I’ve lived through several cycles of technology that, at the time, was hailed as the “end of computer programmers”.
WYSIWYG, drag-and-drop editors like Visual Basic and Delphi were going to end the need for programmers.
Wizards and macros in Microsoft Office were going to end the need for programmers.
Executable UML was going to end the need for programmers.
No-Code and Low-Code platforms were going to end the need for programmers.
And now, Large Language Models are, I read on a daily basis, going to end the need for programmers.
These cycles are nothing new. In the 1970s and 1980s, 4GLs and 5GLs were touted as the end of programmers.
And before them, 3GLs like Fortran and COBOL.
And before them, compilers like A-0 were going to end the need for programmers who instructed computers in binary by literally punching holes in cards.
But it goes back even further, if we consider the earliest (classified) beginning of electronic programmable computers. The first of them, COLOSSUS, was programmed by physically rewiring it.
Perhaps the engineers who worked on that machine sneered at the people working on the first stored-program computers for not being “real programmers”.
In every cycle, the predictions have turned out to be very, very wrong. The end result hasn’t been fewer programmers, but more programs and more programmers. It’s a $1.5 trillion-a-year example of Jevons Paradox.
And here we are again, in another cycle.
Yes, it certainly is. Different in scale to previous cycles. I don’t recall seeing the claims about Visual Basic or Executable UML on the covers of national newspapers. I don’t recall seeing entire economies betting on 4GLs.
And there’s another important distinction: in previous cycles, the technology worked reliably. We really could produce working software faster with VB or with Microsoft Access. This is proving not to be the case with LLMs, which — for the majority of teams — actually slow them down while making the software less reliable and less maintainable. It’s a kind of LOSE-LOSE in most cases. (Unless those teams have addressed the real bottlenecks in their development process.)
But all of this is academic. Even if the technology genuinely made a positive difference for more teams, it still wouldn’t mean that we don’t need programmers anymore.
The hard part of computer programming isn’t expressing what we want the machine to do in code. The hard part is turning human thinking — with all its wooliness and ambiguity and contradictions — into computational thinking that is logically precise and unambiguous, and that can then be expressed formally in the syntax of a programming language.
That was the hard part when programmers were punching holes in cards. It was the hard part when they were typing COBOL code. It was the hard part when they were bringing Visual Basic GUIs to life (presumably to track the killer’s IP address). And it’s the hard part when they’re prompting language models to predict plausible-looking Python.
The hard part has always been — and likely will continue to be for many years to come — knowing exactly what to ask for.
Edgar Dijkstra called it nearly 50 years ago: we will never be programming in English, or French, or Spanish. Natural languages have not evolved to be precise enough and unambiguous enough. Semantic ambiguity and language entropy will always defeat this ambition.
And while pretty much anybody can learn to think that way, not everybody’s going to enjoy it, and not everybody’s going to be good at it. The demand for people who do and people who are will always outstrip supply.
Especially if businesses stop hiring and training them for a few years, like they recently have. But these boom-and-bust cycles have also been a regular feature during my career. This one just happens to coincide with a technology hype cycle that presents a convenient excuse.
There’s no credible evidence that “AI” is replacing software developers in significant numbers. A combination of over-hiring during the pandemic, rises in borrowing costs, and a data centre gold rush that’s diverting massive funds away from headcount, are doing the heavy lifting here.
And there’s no reason to believe that “AI” is going to evolve to the point where it can do what human programmers have to do — understand, reason and learn — anytime soon. AGI seem as far away as it’s always been, and the hard part of computer programming really does require general intelligence.
On top of all that, “AI” coding assistants are really nothing like the compilers and code generators of previous cycles. The exact same prompt is very unlikely to produce the exact same computer program. And the code that gets generated is pretty much guaranteed to have issues that a real programmer will need to be able to recognise and address.
When I write code, I’m executing it in my head. My internal model of a program isn’t just syntactic, like an LLM’s is. I’m not just matching patterns and predicting tokens to produce statistically plausible code. I actually understand the code.
Even the C-suite has noticed the correlation of major outages and incidents proceeding grand claims about how much of that company’s code is “AI”-generated.
The folly of many people now claiming that “prompts are the new source code”, and even that entire working systems can be regenerated from the original model inputs, will be revealed to be the nonsense that it is. The problem with getting into a debate with reality is that reality always wins. (And doesn’t even realise it’s in a debate.)
So, no, “AI” isn’t the end of programmers. I’m not even sure, 1-3 years from now, that this current mania won’t have just burned itself out, as the bean counters tot up the final scores. And they always win.
To folks who say this technology isn’t going anywhere, I would remind them of just how expensive these models are to build and what massive losses they’re incurring. Yes, you could carry on using your local instance of some small model distilled from a hyper-scale model trained today. But as the years roll by, you may find not being able to move on from the programming language and library versions it was trained on a tad constraining.
For this reason, I’m skeptical that hyper-scale LLMs have a viable long-term future. They are the Apollo Moon missions of “AI”. In the end, quite probably just not worth it. Maybe we’ll get to visit them in the museums their data centres might become?
The foreseeable future of software development is one where perhaps “AI” — in a much more modest form (e.g., a Java coding assistant built atop a basic language model) — is used to generate prototypes, and maybe for inline completion on production code and those sorts of minor things.
But, when it matters, there will be a software developer at the wheel. And, if Jevons is to be believed, probably even more of us.
Employers, if I were you, I might start hiring now to beat the stampede when everyone wakes up from this fever dream.
And then maybe drop me a line if you’re interested in skilling them up in the technical practices that can dramatically shrink delivery lead times while improving reliability and reducing the cost of change, with or without “AI”. That’s a WIN-WIN-WIN.
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Read the original on codemanship.wordpress.com »
Stranger Things creator Ross Duffer offered a piece of advice to viewers who plan on watching the season 5 premiere.
On Instagram, Duffer guided fans through their TV settings so they could watch the new season of Stranger Things the way it was meant to be seen. He stated, “A little PSA before you watch tonight. I want to make sure that your TVs are set up properly.” He proceeded to tell his followers to turn off all their settings, especially dynamic contrast, super resolution, edge enhancer, and color filter. He even described those features as “garbage.”
The Stranger Things creator then returns to the picture settings menu, pointing out that viewers should disable noise reduction, too. He also said that truemotion and smoothmotion are the biggest “offenders” and should be turned off most of all because they cause “the dreaded soap opera effect.”
He explains that most televisions will fix many of these problems if you switch to their advanced viewing presets, such as Dolby Vision Movie Dark. However, even those modes aren’t perfect. He urges fans to manually confirm each setting is off and adds, “Whatever you do, do not switch anything on ‘vivid’ because it’s gonna turn on all the worst offenders. It’s gonna destroy the color, and it’s not the filmmaker’s intent.”
Duffer’s advice highlights a conflict between technological advances and creators’ goals. Features like the ones he mentioned are designed to appeal to casual viewers by making images appear sharper or more colorful, but they alter the original look of the content. By asking fans to turn these features off, he is stressing the importance of preserving the director’s vision.
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Stranger Things season 5, volume 1, is available to stream now on Netflix. Volume 2 will be released on December 25, 2025, and the finale on December 31, 2025.
Eleven looking into an opening of the Upside Down with pink light in Stranger Things season 1Eleven with cables all over her head in Stranger Things season 4Vecna looking towards Will in the trailer for Stranger Things season 5 (2025)The Upside Down in Stranger Things season 5
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Read the original on screenrant.com »
Bye Bye Big Tech: How I Migrated to an almost All-EU Stack (and saved 500€ per year)“Bye bye bye.” It took some time, and a serious amount of research, but I have finally crossed the finish line. I have officially migrated my digital life to pure, EU-hosted solutions. For a long time, the narrative has been that if you want privacy and data sovereignty, you have to sacrifice usability. But after settling into this new stack, I’ve realized that isn’t true anymore. In fact, most of these tools aren’t just more private; they are significantly better than the US-based giants I left behind.Here is a breakdown of the tools I’m using, the money I’m saving, and the few hurdles I’m still trying to jump over.by the way, this post is for personal setups not for companies. Yet, I think most tools can be used for teams and companies too.The biggest impact on this migration has come from Proton. They have matured from a simple encrypted email provider into a (almost) full-suite productivity powerhouse.before we continue, yes Proton is not in the EU, but the Swiss data protection is aligned with EU requirements, are on some cases even stronger and implicit, while on others being more open and flexible to the end user provider… Drive: Secure cloud storage, having docs for a while, and now also tables.Standard Notes: My go-to for note-taking, now under the Proton umbrella.Lumo AI: A privacy-first GenAI, I’m not yet frequently using it, but we will talk about it later.Everything is integrated and the user experience is superb. I’m also eagerly awaiting the release of Proton Meet to complete the suite.This entire setup replaces for me my Google Drive and Gmail ecosystem. Plus NordVPN, Notion, 1Password and Authenticator. Curious? I will drop you my referral link here.AI is the hardest thing to decouple from Big Tech, but improvements are happening fast here, too.For privacy-first GenAI tasks within my workflow, I’m using Lumo AI. It’s great for quick, private queries.However, sometimes you need raw power. For that, I started using Mammouth. I use this less for privacy reasons and more for the sheer value and flexibility. Getting access to every major AI model (including image generation) for just €10 is incredible value.My default for Mammouth looks like this. You can sort them in your favourite order; whatever is leftmost is your default one. The two models I use most are Mistral Medium 3.1 and Flux 2 Pro or Fast. For simple coding tasks, I also use Mistral, but when playing around with a larger codebase, I have to admit I’m using Claude Code.For research, Mistral does its job. But if it becomes complex, I often find Gemini’s results to be the best.At last, Flux for images is fantastic. Yet, in my opinion, it comes with a major downside: You have to give a lot of good instructions. Where a Nano Banana seems more creative, even from short, simple inputs, Flux needs precise orders.Search: My default is Ecosia. It works well, and planting trees while searching adds a nice layer of purpose to mindless scrolling. Yet, every now and then I have to use Google :/Translation: I’ve been using DeepL forever. In my opinion, it is still miles ahead of Google Translate in terms of nuance and quality.Spell Check: … Haven’t found a good alternative, so I stay with Grammarly. Hoping for them to return to Europe with their Superhuman Platform.For my website and domains, I moved everything to Scaleway.If you are technical, you will appreciate this switch. It is lean, simple, and provides everything you need as a cloud provider without the bloat of AWS or Azure. Plus, it’s cheaper.Canva… what shall I say. Thanks to the initial discussion I had on LinkedIn (original post), I found Superlist, to which I transitioned from Todoist. I also had a mini stop at MeisterTask, but that was a complete waste of time. MeisterTaks feels like a kindergarten playground, too much colorful design and too little actual functionality. It is 100% not user-intuitive for any workflow.So, I’m now on Superlist, and very happy with it.The Economics: Privacy is Actually CheaperWe often assume that “boutique” privacy tools cost a premium. Surprisingly, my migration proved the opposite. Initially, I wrote only about a small saving, but I missed the costs of Notion, Todoist, 1 Password, Claude and Canva as I focused on the “Office” suite.My Old Stack cost ca. 83€ per monthMy New EU Stack cost ca. 39€ per monthI’m saving over 528 € a year while owning most of my data.Where There is Light, There is ShadowI want to be transparent: you cannot escape everything, and some things are just harder to use.The “Guilty Pleasure”: As a techie, I have too much fun playing with Claude Code. It’s a luxury I treat myself to, so I frequently turn the subscription on. Yet, if you don’t have that use case → Mistral, LumoThe Social Web: You simply can’t get around LinkedIn, GitHub, YouTube, Medium, Substack and so on if you want to stay connected.Convenience: I miss a good Google SSO. It is everywhere, and losing that “one-click login” friction does make life slightly more annoying. I migrated every Login to Proton Pass using MFA and Passkey wherever possible.Office Suite: I am struggling to get used to LibreOffice and Collabora Online. They feel similar to MS Office, but “not quite.” Since I don’t create documents or spreadsheets every day for personal use, the learning curve feels steeper than it should. Screw that → Proton Docs and Sheets are doing it. Worst case for slides, I’m going for Canva, I’m paying for it anyhow.Blogging, Newsletter & Co.: Well, as you can see, I’m writing on Substack. There are no alternatives except to host it entirely yourself, but that doesn’t make sense to me right now.I also found a couple of positive side effects. The Proton platform itself has everything you need for your day-to-day life.In addition, I migrated to a Duo plan with my wife. Together we have 2TB on storage for Mails, Files etc. Before we had 30GB on Gmail, which cost a little more.Proton Pass creates anonymous email addresses in case you don’t want to use your real email address. This plays entirely on Proton’s privacy aspect. Superlist is free for the same features Todoist provided me for a little subscription. Lastly, I’m always fighting with note-taking. I tested everything and started building something complex on Notion. I’m glad that I could delete it and just use Standard Notes from Proton. In simple terms, it is like notes from Apple, yet E2E encrypted and you can back them up offline. However, most helpful for me is that I finally found a way to work effectively with notes, keep it clean, lean and functional. With Proton, Scaleway, Mammouth, Vivaldi, Superlist and DeepL, I have built a useful toolset that, in my opinion, surpasses what I used before.The apps are cleaner, the UI is often more user-friendly, and the migration was surprisingly simple. Best of all, I can do more with my tech stack for less money.If you’ve been on the fence about migrating to EU-hosted solutions, take the leap. It’s worth it.
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Read the original on www.zeitgeistofbytes.com »
Nicolas Guillou, a French judge at the International Criminal Court (ICC), was sanctioned by the United States under a decision made by Donald Trump on August 20. The US Treasury Department justified the action, stating that “Guillou is being designated for ruling to authorize the ICC’s issuance of arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant.” Both men are indicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity for their roles in the destruction of the Gaza Strip.
In total, six judges and three prosecutors from the ICC, including Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan, have been sanctioned by the US. In an interview with Le Monde, the judge explained the impact of these measures on his work and daily life. Without commenting on ongoing cases, he called on European authorities to activate a mechanism that could limit the impact of US restrictions.
Initially, it was created to address human rights violations, counter terrorism and combat drug trafficking. Today, nearly 15,000 individuals are on the US sanctions list, mostly members of Al-Qaeda, the Islamic State group (IS), mafia organizations and the leaders of authoritarian regimes. Among this long list are nine ICC judges.
You have 81.05% of this article left to read. The rest is for subscribers only.
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The news is out, and it’s big: Manus is joining Meta. This announcement is more than just a headline—it’s validation of our pioneering work with General AI Agents.Since the launch, Manus has focused on building a general-purpose AI agent designed to help users tackle research, automation, and complex tasks. Through continuous product iteration, we’ve been working hard to make these capabilities more reliable and useful across a growing range of real-world use cases. In just a few months, our agent has processed more than 147 Trillion tokens and powered the creation of over 80 Million virtual computers.We believe in the potential of autonomous agents, and this development reinforces Manus’s role as an execution layer — turning advanced AI capabilities into scalable, reliable systems that can carry out end-to-end work in real-world settings.Our top priority is ensuring that this change won’t be disruptive for our customers. We will continue to sell and operate our product subscription service through our app and website. The company will continue to operate from Singapore.Our solution is driving value for millions of users worldwide today. With time, we hope to expand this subscription to the millions of businesses and billions of people on Meta’s platforms.“Joining Meta allows us to build on a stronger, more sustainable foundation without changing how Manus works or how decisions are made,” said Xiao Hong, CEO of Manus. “We’re excited about what the future holds with Meta and Manus working together and we will continue to iterate the product and serve users that have defined Manus from the beginning.”To read more, please visit
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Read the original on manus.im »
Hi, I’m Non-Zero-Sum James, your companion on this exploration of win-win games and how they are essential for a better future. Each week we’ll explore a new aspect of game theory, moral philosophy, ethical economics and artificial intelligence—looking to solve the complex problems we face in our world together.
… or my leadership style as opposed to Stuart’s
All the posts are connected through the lens of non-zero-sum games, but they fall into a few broad categories. You can start your journey with whatever appeals to you:
a new section especially for newcomers
the only thing I’m actually qualified to write about
Thanks for visiting—If you enjoyed yourself and know someone who would enjoy this site, please share. Sharing good ideas is a win-win.
Your thoughts and contributions are welcome. Share, debate, and co-create in the comments.
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Read the original on nonzerosum.games »
This page gives you direct access to all 1,038 delisted Steam titles on the site. Below each title are the companies it relates to. An * in the title denotes a placeholder page that contains basic details.
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Read the original on delistedgames.com »
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