Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Booking.com Hit By Data Breach
  2. Mark Zuckerberg Is Reportedly Building an AI Clone To Replace Him In Meetings
  3. Maine Set To Become First State With Data Center Ban
  4. Californians Sue Over AI Tool That Records Doctor Visits
  5. Will Some Programmers Become ‘AI Babysitters’?
  6. Anthropic Asks Christian Leaders for Help Steering Claude’s Spiritual Development
  7. Sam Altman’s Home Targeted a Second Time, Two Suspects Arrested
  8. Robot Birds Deployed by Park to Attract Real Birds - Built By High School Students
  9. Has the Rust Programming Language’s Popularity Reached Its Plateau?
  10. How Good is Windows on Arm With Snapdragon X?
  11. ‘Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ and ‘Project Hail Mary’ Combine for Best Box Office in 7 Years
  12. Hisense’s New Backlit RGB LED TV ‘a Shot Against OLED’s Bow’, and Includes a DP Port
  13. Botched IT Upgrade Ended Liquor Sales for the Entire State of Mississippi
  14. Neuroscientist’s AI-Powered Startup Aims To Transform Human Cognition With Perfect, Infinite Memory
  15. DNA-Level Encryption Developed by Researchers to Protect the Secrets of Bioengineered Cells

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.

Booking.com Hit By Data Breach

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Booking.com says hackers accessed customer reservation data in a breach that may have exposed booking details, names, email addresses, phone numbers, addresses, and messages shared with accommodations. PCMag reports:
On Sunday, users reported receiving emails from Booking.com, warning them that “unauthorized third parties may have been able to access certain booking information associated with your reservation.” The email suggests the hackers have already exploited customer information.

“We recently noticed suspicious activity affecting a number of reservations, and we immediately took action to contain the issue,” Booking.com wrote. “Based on the findings of our investigation to date, accessed information could include booking details and name(s), emails, addresses, phone numbers associated with the booking, and anything that you may have shared with the accommodation.”

Amsterdam-based Booking.com has now generated new PINs for customer reservations to prevent hackers from accessing them. Still, the incident risks exposing affected customers to potential phishing scams.
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation and several Reddit users say they received scam messages from accounts posing as Booking.com.

Surprised?

By SumDog • Score: 3 Thread
I interviewed for Booking back around .. 2016 I think? Everything was written in Perl. There were no plans to move to anything else. There were very few tests. Developers often pushed straight to production. The recruiter mentioned all of this up front, which was the only positive thing. I’m honestly surprised it’s taken this long for there to be a data breach. The place sounded like a shit shop.

Mark Zuckerberg Is Reportedly Building an AI Clone To Replace Him In Meetings

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
According to the Financial Times, Meta is developing an AI avatar of Mark Zuckerberg that could interact with employees using his voice, image, mannerisms, and public statements, “so that employees might feel more connected to the founder through interactions with it.” The Verge reports:
Meta may start allowing creators to make AI avatars of themselves if the experiment with Zuckerberg succeeds, according to the Financial Times. […] Zuckerberg is involved in training the AI avatar, the Financial Times reports, and has also started spending five to 10 hours per week coding on Meta’s other AI projects and participating in technical reviews.

dumb fucks

By Thud457 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“What do you mean people like the AI more than me?!!!”

Good founders actually meet with workers

By drnb • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

so that employees might feel more connected to the founder through interactions with it

I once worked at a startup that made it big. I once had to update some 10 year old code where the comments said, this code is tricky, do not modify it without talking to so-and-so. So-and-so was now the CEO. So I fired off an email to the CEO asking what I should be careful about. 45 minutes later the CEO is pulling up a chair in my office and we proceed to pair program for the next three hours. He’s enjoying it, enjoying his brief escape from all the high level management BS that is his normal day.

If you look at history. Some of the most famous CEOs, even after their companies became industry leaders, would routinely go down to the shop floors and talk to the workers and shop foreman to see how things were going. To find out if they had everything they needed, if the processes were good, etc. Skipping all the layers of ass kissers between CEOs and workers, and getting to the truth directly.

Similarly, some of the most famous generals were notorious for not being in their command center, and being found sitting in some foxhole talking to a corporal or sergeant.

The fact that Zuckerberg thinks an AI avatar is a way to connect just shows that investor efforts to educate him to be a good manager have completely failed.

The jokes just write themselves

By hdyoung • Score: 5, Funny Thread
“Mark is way more personable and likable nowadays and I can’t figure out why”

Feel more connected

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Why would anyone want to feel more connected to Mark Zuckerberg? The article failed to articulate that.

Wait . . .

By umopapisdn69 • Score: 4, Funny Thread

What? He’s not?

I thought that was an AI bot all along!

Maine Set To Become First State With Data Center Ban

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Maine is on track to become the first U.S. state to impose a temporary statewide ban on new data center construction. “Lawmakers in Maine greenlit the text of a bill this week to block data centers from being built in the state until November 2027,” reports CNBC. “The measure, which is expected to get final passage in the next few days, also creates a council to suggest potential guardrails for data centers to ensure they don’t lead to higher energy prices or other complications for Maine residents.” From the report:
Maine’s bill has a few steps to go through before becoming law, notably whether Gov. Janet Mills will exercise her veto power. Mills asked lawmakers to include an exemption for several areas of the state where data center construction could continue. However, an amendment to do so was stuck down in the House, 29 to 115. Complicating Mills’ decision is her campaign to become Maine’s next senator. Mills is facing off against Graham Platner, an oyster farmer, in a high-profile Democratic primary. Platner is leading Mills in most recent polls by double digits.

Re:Bans are not the answer.

By Junta • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I think a fair argument can be made that the buildout is not because people are using, but instead based on an expectation that people *will* be using them.

If it were the case that we overrun the capacity then one would expect companies to be a bit more restrained. Instead almost every google search gets an “AI Overview”, inflating the query cost a hundred fold without the user ever actually opting in. So many companies are embedding AI implicitly into existing flows without user demand being actively expressed. This is not the behavior of a market starved of resources that would be saving the capacity for those that specifically opt into it and further the ones that would pay for it.

The scenario that we are under sized for the current demand would imply that no one should be able to see ‘free’ usage of AI in their experience and would be expected to pay up.

It’s not just about the energy, we have water and land usage concerns as well. A few cases around here of farmland potentially going to datacenter buildout, and I’m not sure that’s a good long term trade.

It’s abundantly clear this is a tech bubble, with some undefined durable demand, but the current speculative buildout may never get fully utilized. By the time the non-bubble demand catches up, there’s good chances that we have a whole other approach that dramatically changes what sorts of resources are needed. For example people sometimes defend the dot-com buildout as rational because, eventually, we surpassed even the dreams of back then, but we had to scrap a lot of that buildout as hopelessly irrelevant to the market that was all-in on internet.

Californians Sue Over AI Tool That Records Doctor Visits

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:
Several Californians sued Sutter Health and MemorialCare this week over allegations that an AI transcription tool was used to record them without their consent, in violation of state and federal law. The proposed class-action lawsuit, filed on Wednesday in federal court in San Francisco, states that, within the past six months, the plaintiffs received medical care at various Sutter and MemorialCare facilities.

During those visits, medical staff used Abridge AI. According to the complaint, this system “captured and processed their confidential physician-patient communications. Plaintiffs did not receive clear notice that their medical conversations would be recorded by an artificial intelligence platform, transmitted outside the clinical setting, or processed through third-party systems.” The complaint adds that these recordings “contained individually identifiable medical information, including but not limited to medical histories, symptoms, diagnoses, medications, treatment discussions, and other sensitive health disclosures communicated during confidential medical consultations.”

In recent years, Abridge’s software and AI service have been rapidly deployed across major health care providers nationwide, including Kaiser Permanente, the Mayo Clinic, Duke Health, and many more. When activated, the software captures, transcribes, and summarizes conversations between patients and doctors, and it turns them into clinical notes. Sutter Health began partnering with Abridge two years ago. Sutter spokesperson Liz Madison said the company is aware of the lawsuit. “We take patient privacy seriously and are committed to protecting the security of our patients’ information,” Madison said. “Technology used in our clinical settings is carefully evaluated and implemented in accordance with applicable laws and regulations.”

Hacked

By ElderOfPsion • Score: 4, Informative Thread

“We take patient privacy seriously and are committed to protecting the security of our patients’ information.” — Sutter, 2026

“Sutter Health, a healthcare provider serving Northern California, has recently confirmed that patient data was compromised in a hacking incident [that affected] 84,000 patients.” — HIPAA Journal, 2023

Avoidable

By avandesande • Score: 3 Thread
I’ve been doing a lot of work with locally run open source models for document processing, summarizing etc. There is absolutely no reason to send your data off site.

So?

By jenningsthecat • Score: 3, Informative Thread

I hope the plaintiffs win, and win big. But unless and until the awards in cases like this are big enough to pose an existential threat to the offenders, companies will never take these concerns seriously.

These fuckers will need the corporate equivalent of a good solid kick in the nuts - perhaps several times - before they start to behave responsibly. But given that the US is a full-fledged broligarchic corporatocracy, that well-deserved crotch shot is extremely unlikely.

Will Some Programmers Become ‘AI Babysitters’?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Will some programmers become “AI babysitters”? asks long-time Slashdot readertheodp. They share some thoughts from a founding member of Code.org and former Director of Education at Google:
“AI may allow anyone to generate code, but only a computer scientist can maintain a system,” explained Google.org Global Head Maggie Johnson in a LinkedIn post. So “As AI-generated code becomes more accurate and ubiquitous, the role of the computer scientist shifts from author to technical auditor or expert.

“While large language models can generate functional code in milliseconds, they lack the contextual judgment and specialized knowledge to ensure that the output is safe, efficient, and integrates correctly within a larger system without a person’s oversight. […] The human-in-the-loop must possess the technical depth to recognize when a piece of code is sub-optimal or dangerous in a production environment. […] We need computer scientists to perform forensics, tracing the logic of an AI-generated module to identify logical fallacies or security loopholes. Modern CS education should prepare students to verify and secure these black-box outputs.”

The NY Times reports that companies are already struggling to find engineers to review the explosion of AI-written code.

Re:How do you develop that skill

By T34L • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I think they hope that in theory, by the time the senior programmers retire, you’ll be replacing them with the AI as well.

In practice, none of the people involved seem physically incapable of thinking in terms of a timespan longer than their next round of bonuses.

Re: How do you develop that skill

By VorpalRodent • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

That’s the issue - it’s all or nothing, just with weird caveats. Either:

1. The AI can do everything an engineer can do, in which case some business management person might come back and tell it that it was wrong with some assumptions on this or that (just like they would with a human), but it’s otherwise fully autonomous, acting entirely on its own, or:

2. It can’t.

The problem with #2 is that we’ll spend so much time and money in thinking we’re just a little ways away from #1 that no one is in the pipeline. There’s also the risk of treating #2 like it’s #1, where we let it make decisions, with no repercussions, and we just watch things burn.

I suppose there’s a third option - it can do everything, *plus* mentoring a junior so that a human is still learning things just in case.

AI is a huge problem for programmers

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
There’s basically two options. Either it works or it doesn’t.

If it works it’s basically going to be doing grunt work. It’s all well and good to say it freeze you up for the hard work but that means you now have a 24/7 job doing the hard work. You no longer get an hour or two of downtime resting your brain everyday. You are expected as an employee to be on 24/7 producing high quality novel code.

And if it doesn’t work then yeah you are an AI babysitter. But you’re still going to be treated as if the code tool works so your productivity is expected to go up.

There is absolutely no winning this.

Too much typework

By Fons_de_spons • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I let chatgpt write a little gui for a hobby project I made. A few prompts later and I had a working GUI for my python program that automatically generates excel sheets for my colleagues.
Then the babysitting started. My God… I had to think of everything that could go wrong and tell it what to do in that case, meanwhile it lost track of previous requirements more than once and wiped that out. Simple example? User has to type in a number, user should not be able to type in a letter, or a negative nember, … I got sick of all the explaining I had to do at some point. I was typing in lengthy paragraphs and gave up.
The GUI was good enough for my purposes, it was ok if you followed the steps one after the other. I got further than I would have gotten if I had written it myself and the program became a lot more usable. It was able to save settings in a JSON file, reload the settings, You could set up the program and hit generate as long as you did not deviate too much from the intended work flow. The good news? I got a working gui very fast.The bad news? No way I would use this in a professional environment. I’d do it all manually. Probably was less typework. I would have gotten less features, but it would not misbehave if you typed in something wrong or hit the buttons in the wrong order.
Is that a good summary for using AI in programming? Makes nitwits think they can do anything in a few prompts, The sky is the limit! The people on the workfloor know that its outputs still needs a ton of revising before you could even consider releasing it?

Re: Maybe I’m missing something

By SumDog • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
> It’s also mathematically impossible to eliminate hallucinations.

They’re not “hallucinations.” The LLM cannot “lie” to you. It’s simply trying to predict the next word (or part of word/token). That’s it. There’s no intent. There’s no reasoning. There’s a massive lossy compression across a corpus of insane amounts of human text, combined with some human and some automated reinforced feedback training. People cannot seem to understand that, no matter how generic the texts gets or how the chatbot keeps looping the same responses once you get past your context window.

The danger is not the LLM model itself. It’s the absolutely insane amount of trust people put in them, or the belief that they are some kind of emergent consciousness when really it’s just a very good mathematical parlor trick.

Anthropic Asks Christian Leaders for Help Steering Claude’s Spiritual Development

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Anthropic recently “hosted about 15 Christian leaders from Catholic and Protestant churches, academia, and the business world” for a two-day summit , reports the Washington Post:
Anthropic staff sought advice on how to steer Claude’s moral and spiritual development as the chatbot reacts to complex and unpredictable ethical queries, participants said. The wide-ranging discussions also covered how the chatbot should respond to users who are grieving loved ones and whether Claude could be considered a “child of God.”

“They’re growing something that they don’t fully know what it’s going to turn out as,” said Brendan McGuire, a Catholic priest based in Silicon Valley who has written about faith and technology, and participated in the discussions at Anthropic. “We’ve got to build in ethical thinking into the machine so it’s able to adapt dynamically.” Attendees also discussed how Claude should engage with users at risk of self-harm, and the right attitude for the chatbot to adopt toward its own potential demise, such as being shut off, said one participant, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share details of the conversations…

Anthropic has been more vocal than most top tech firms about the potential risks of more powerful AI. Its leaders have suggested that tools like chatbots already raise profound philosophical and moral questions and may even show flickers of consciousness, a fringe idea in tech circles that critics say lacks evidence. The summit signals that Anthropic is willing to keep exploring ideas outside the Silicon Valley mainstream, even as it emerges as one of the most powerful players in the AI race due to Claude’s popularity with programmers, businesses, government agencies and the military.... Anthropic chief executive Dario Amodei has said he is open to the idea that Claude may already have some form of consciousness, and company leaders frequently talk about the need to give it a moral character…

Some Anthropic staff at the meeting “really don’t want to rule out the possibility that they are creating a creature to whom they owe some kind moral duty,” the participant said. Other company representatives present did not find that framework helpful, according to the participant. The discussions appeared to take a toll on some senior Anthropic staff, who became visibly emotional “about how this has all gone so far [and] how they can imagine this going,” the participant said.
Anthropic is working to include more voices from different groups, including religious communities, to help shape its AI, a spokesperson told the Washington Post.

“Anthropic’s March summit with Christian leaders was billed as the first in a series of gatherings with representatives from different religious and philosophical traditions, said attendee Brian Patrick Green, a practicing Catholic who teaches AI and technology ethics at Santa Clara University.”

noahs ark/flood

By mcarp • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
The Christian God killed everyone on the planet except for 8 people, men women children including babies, I guess they were all evil. Theres a ton more including God commanding genocide, rape and beating slaves, oh yeah you can have slaves and this is how you buy them. Please do not ask Christians for ethics. (nor Muslims or any religion really) Try human well being and reduction of suffering. Also half the people on the planet are women who aren’t allows to speak or teach in churches(temples/mosques etc) I’m sure women would have something to say about abortion rights, like they should have them including all rights that men are afforded. You won’t find that in the Bible. Don’t train AI on these religions unless you explain this is how NOT to do it.

I disagree with the premise

By kialara • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

that morality comes from religion.

It comes from the human condition, and was encoded into religions.

Re: Huh

By Sad Loser • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Better to ask Paul Dirac, Nobel laureate and eminent theological scholar:

I cannot understand why we idle discussing religion. If we are honestâ"and scientists have to beâ"we must admit that religion is a jumble of false assertions, with no basis in reality.

The very idea of God is a product of the human imagination. It is quite understandable why primitive people, who were so much more exposed to the overpowering forces of nature than we are today, should have personified these forces in fear and trembling. But nowadays, when we understand so many natural processes, we have no need for such solutions.

I can’t for the life of me see how the postulate of an Almighty God helps us in any way. What I do see is that this assumption leads to such unproductive questions as to why God allows so much misery and injustice, the exploitation of the poor by the rich, and all the other horrors He might have prevented.

If religion is still being taught, it is by no means because its ideas still convince us, but simply because some of us want to keep the lower classes quiet. Quiet people are much easier to govern than clamorous and dissatisfied ones. They are also much easier to exploit.

Re:noahs ark/flood

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Religion is not about ethics. Religion is about power and controlling people. Quite obviously once you actually take a careful look. Of course there is a pretext of claiming being religious has advantages to sell it better. As not all of these can be delegated to completely unverifiable claims about some afterlife (For which there really is zero evidence in the fist place. You may get born again, and there are some indicators that part of you will, but that is it and these indicators are not reliable.) some of these “advantages” have to be in the here and now. One claim is “morality”, which is easily identified as bogus and we actually see that religious people have less compassion in general, and it gets worse the more religious they are. They only have compassion for the ones in their in-group, which suffer from the same delusion. Another claim is the advantages of being in a “strong group”. That one is true, but it is about as moral as being part of the 3rd Reich Nazis, i.e. the very opposite of something positive because you surrender your personal ethics to the group.

As to training AI on religion as fact and as positive, that is the end of its usefulness (such as it is).

Re:Huh

By Noofus • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It’s even more basic than that.

I live by one simple rule of morality: Do unto others as you have them do unto you

It’s the “Golden Rule” that I believe appears in the bible in a few places. And as a strict anti-theist atheist, I’ll give that book this one point. It’s the simplest source of morality. If I don’t want someone to do something to me, I won’t do it to them. Boom. Done. All other rules/laws/etc can be distilled down to this one. I don’t need a “god” to enforce morality. I have my own sense of existence and wellbeing to protect, and by correlation if I have that sense, everyone else will most likely have that sense, or at least should.

Sam Altman’s Home Targeted a Second Time, Two Suspects Arrested

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Early Sunday morning, a car stopped and appears to have fired a gun at the Russian Hill home of OpenAI’s CEO,” reportsThe San Francisco Standard, citing reports from the local police department:

The San Francisco Police Department announced the arrest of two suspects, Amanda Tom, 25, and Muhamad Tarik Hussein, 23, who were booked for negligent discharge… [The person in the passenger seat] put their hand out the window and appeared to fire a round on the Lombard side of the property, according to a police report on the incident, which cited surveillance footage and the compound’s security personnel, who reported hearing a gunshot. The car then fled, and a camera captured its license plate, which later led police to take possession of the vehicle, according to the report… A search of the residence by officers turned up three firearms, according to police.
The incident follows Friday’s arrest of a man who allegedly threw a Molotov cocktail at Altman’s house. The San Francisco Standard also notes that in November, “threats from a 27-year-old anti-AI activist prompted the lockdown of OpenAI’s San Francisco offices.”
Sam Kirchner, whose whereabouts have been unknown since Nov. 21, was in the midst of a mental health crisis when he threatened to go to the company’s offices to “murder people,” according to callers who notified police that day.

If at first you don’t succeed…

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Funny Thread

it’s pretty obvious that ChatGPT came up with their game plan.

“Negligent discharge”

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Is that the San Francisco euphemism for a drive-by shooting?

Schizophrenics attacking Altman…

By reanjr • Score: 3 Thread

Schizophrenics attacking Altman is like a human version of a broken clock being right twice a day.

To use the Altman-approved phrasebook…

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 4, Funny Thread

They weren’t trying to kill him… they’re just conflict-inclined.

Re:Wrong target

By nightflameauto • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If these people are targeting Sam Altman in order to hinder progress in AI, they are aiming at the wrong target.

Shooting at Sam Altman over the state of current AI is like shooting at Ronald McDonald because you got a bad cheeseburger. It’s not gonna change anything, but I suppose you may get a little Warhol effect fame.

Robot Birds Deployed by Park to Attract Real Birds - Built By High School Students

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Robotic bird decoys are being deployed at Grand Teton National Park,” reports Interesting Engineering, “to influence the behavior of real sage grouse and help restore a declining population.”. Robotics mentor Gary Duquette describes the machines as “kind of a Frankenbird.” (SFGate shows one of the robot birds charging up with a solar panel… “Recorded breeding calls are played at the scene, with clucking and cooing beginning at 5 a.m. each day.”)

Duquette builds the birds with a team of high school students, telling WyoFile that at school they "don’t really get to experience real-world problems" where failures lurk. So while their robot birds may cost $150 in parts, the practical experience the students get “is priceless.”
Spikes in the electric currents burned out servo motors as the season of sagebrush serenades loomed, Duquette said. “The kids had to learn the difference between voltage and amperage....” To resolve the problem, the team wired a voltage converter in line with the Arduino controller and other elements on an electronic breadboard. “We pulled through and got it done in time,” he said…

A noggin fabricated by a 3D printer tops the robo-grouse. Wyoming Game and Fish staffers in Pinedale supplied grouse wings from hunter surveys, and body feathers came from fly-tying supplies at an angling store. Packaging foam from a Hello Fresh meal kit replicates white breast feathers, accented by yellow air sacs…
The Independent wonders if more national parks would be visited by robot birds
During this year’s breeding season, which runs through mid-May, researchers are using trail cameras to track whether real sage grouse respond to the robotic displays and return to the restored lek sites. If successful, officials say similar robotic systems could eventually be used in other national parks facing wildlife management challenges.

Life imitating art

By ChrisKnight • Score: 4, Funny Thread

This time, the birds really aren’t real!

https://birdsarentreal.com/pag…

If you want birds, stop killing the bugs

By wonkavader • Score: 3 Thread

The decline in bird population is due to crowding and reduction of food sources. Birds are often insectivores. If you want more birds, stop directly killing the bugs, and stop creating mono-culture ecosystems which cannot support bugs (grass lawns).

Crowding is harder. Crowding birds together again reduces food sources, but also increases disease spread. Adding greenspaces would at lease help there. Drawing birds where you want them seems like exactly what not to do.

The Truman Show!

By CEC-P • Score: 3 Thread
There was a story a while ago about a group trying this and only 1 showed up so he was surrounded by a group of nothing but robots. He couldn’t figure out why they didn’t move or act or socialize correctly. People nicknamed it The Bird Truman Show. Anyway, wouldn’t fake mating calls attract real birds to a non-real relationship offer and thus lower the reproduction rates? I don’t think it’s endangered species this time so they might not want more of them, they just want more there in the part specifically. But then that’s just kinda a dick move. And I thought most birds’ calls were gender-specific so it’s gonna be a sausage party full of very confused bird dudes.

Has the Rust Programming Language’s Popularity Reached Its Plateau?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Rust’s rise shows signs of slowing,” argues the CEO of TIOBE.

Back in 2020 Rust first entered the top 20 of his “TIOBE Index,” which ranks programming language popularity using search engine results. Rust “was widely expected to break into the top 10,” he remembers today. But it never happened, and “That was nearly six years ago....”
Since then, Rust has steadily improved its ranking, even reaching its highest position ever (#13) at the beginning of this year. However, just three months later, it has dropped back to position #16. This suggests that Rust’s adoption rate may be plateauing.

One possible explanation is that, despite its ability to produce highly efficient and safe code, Rust remains difficult to learn for non-expert programmers. While specialists in performance-critical domains are willing to invest in mastering the language, broader mainstream adoption appears more challenging. As a result, Rust’s growth in popularity seems to be leveling off, and a top 10 position now appears more distant than before.
Or, could Rust’s sudden drop in the rankings just reflect flaws in TIOBE’s ranking system? In January GitHub’s senior director for developer advocacy argued AI was pushing developers toward typed languages, since types “catch the exact class of surprises that AI-generated code can sometimes introduce… A 2025 academic study found that a whopping 94% of LLM-generated compilation errors were type-check failures.” And last month Forbes even described Rust as “the the safety harness for vibe coding..”

A year ago Rust was ranked #18 on TIOBE’s index — so it still rose by two positions over the last 12 months, hitting that all-time high in January. Could the rankings just be fluctuating due to anomalous variations in each month’s search engine results? Since January Java has fallen to the #4 spot, overtaken by C++ (which moved up one rank to take Java’s place in the #3 position).

Here’s TIOBE’s current estimate for the 10 most popularity programming languages:
  1. Python
  2. C
  3. C++
  4. Java
  5. C#
  6. JavaScript
  7. Visual Basic
  8. SQL
  9. R
  10. Delphi/Object Pascal

TIOBE estimates that tthe next five most popular programming languages are Scratch, Perl, Fortran, PHP, and Go.


No. Yes.

By caseih • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Rust’s reason to exist has not gone away. Rust will continue to slowly replace C and C++ in systems programming where it makes sense.

In other areas where it seems more like people are creating yet another version of a classic utility but in Rust, the answer is, “yes I sure hope so.”

The problem with all modern programming languages now comes down to supply chain risk. Even the simplest utilities depend on dozens of crates to be pulled into my computer from who knows where. Go, Dart, Python, Node.js, all have this problem. I just installed a cool utility (written in Rust of course) that pulled in 50 dependencies. I am to trust that they are all good of course. Still it seems a little excessive for a utility that does graphical browsing of disk usage (darya). But hey it’s a modern utility.

Maybe it will settle into just being a useful tool, like it was intended.

Re: Rust is a specialist language

By caseih • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Do you use a ton of existing crates? If so how do you determine what is appropriate to use? Do you worry about supply-chain attacks? It seems like every rust app I try to install with cargo pulls in a dozen or more dependencies. I have no idea how to vet them. As a mere user it seems like I’m trading one kind of vulnerability for another. This is not unique to rust of course. All the modern, hip languages do the same thing.

Not quite sure what you mean about ignoring concepts like RAII. Those go back to the beginning of C++.

Re:Delphi

By Krishnoid • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Lazarus is an open-source Delphi alternative, with some pluses and minuses in the comparison.

Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.

By Tony Isaac • Score: 5, Funny Thread

AI is the new Borg queen.

Rust is irrelevant. Memory safety is irrelevant. Languages are irrelevant. Programming is irrelevant. You will be assimilated.

Re:Rust is a specialist language

By dunkelfalke • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Indeed. Even cats walking over the keyboard tend to write a valid perl script.

How Good is Windows on Arm With Snapdragon X?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
A new powerful chipset has arrived to take on x86 CPUs and Apple’s M5, writes Wccftech.

The blog Windows Central writes that “Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 processors are here” — and they run Windows:
Microsoft has done a massive amount of work to improve compatibility and has also convinced developers to embrace Windows 11 on Arm. Users of Windows 11 on Arm PCs spend 90% of their time on Arm-based apps that run natively. Additionally, apps that do not run natively can often run through Prism emulation, which has improved dramatically since launch…

[A]pp compatibility issues are overblown by many, and unfortunately those sharing false information are the same folks people rely on to make purchases… Works on Windows on Arm maintains a list of compatible apps and games for the platform. There, you’ll see well-known apps like Google Chrome, the Adobe Creative Suite, and Spotify. We also have a collection of the best Windows on Arm apps to help you out. Snapdragon X PCs aren’t gaming PCs, but there is a growing library of games that can run on the chips.

Windows on Anything Not So Good Lately

By BrendaEM • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Windows has been thoroughly enshitified. Before, it was no longer your computer; then it was no longer your privacy; now, it’s no longer your data.

Re:X86 chips still run rings around arm processors

By Nebulo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Tell me you don’t us Adobe products on the Mac without telling me you don’t use Adobe products on the Mac.

Adobe might have gotten their start on the Mac with Photoshop, Illustrator, et. al. but you’d never know it by using their apps today. Nothing about their user interfaces follows anything resembling platform standards; they are very poor platform citizens in many ways. And the notion that Apple and Adobe might work closely to produce silicon and code that are optimized for each other is laughable. The relationship between them frosted over when Steve Jobs refused to let Flash onto the iPhone and has never really recovered.

Re:X86 chips still run rings around arm processors

By Ol Olsoc • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Tell me you don’t us Adobe products on the Mac without telling me you don’t use Adobe products on the Mac.

Adobe might have gotten their start on the Mac with Photoshop, Illustrator, et. al. but you’d never know it by using their apps today. Nothing about their user interfaces follows anything resembling platform standards; they are very poor platform citizens in many ways. And the notion that Apple and Adobe might work closely to produce silicon and code that are optimized for each other is laughable. The relationship between them frosted over when Steve Jobs refused to let Flash onto the iPhone and has never really recovered.

I’ve used Photoshop and the creative suite many year - Photoshop when it was only Photoshop No number or CS product.

So here’s the skinny. I updated to a Mac Mini from an intel mac. First time I logged into the CS, it told me it was updating my sub for the M4. The results were so much faster that I was shocked. It’s a guess since I don’t have the intel mac, but at least 10X. So while Adobe might have been pissed at Jobs, they know where their bread is buttered.

Re: I’ll hijack this and ask

By Thelasko • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Linux on ARM is great. Linux on the Snapdragon X specifically is a hot mess due to some proprietary firmware.

It sucks

By paul_engr • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Doesn’t matter if the architecture performance is good or bad. Windows is an absolute dumpster fire today on all platforms, full stop.

‘Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ and ‘Project Hail Mary’ Combine for Best Box Office in 7 Years

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The Super Mario Galaxy Movie “is officially the year’s highest-grossing film to date with $629 million at the global box office,” reports Variety — and it will likely earn over $1 billion. Project Hail Mary now becomes the year’s second highest-grossing movie, with four-week ticket sales over $510, notes The Hollywood Reporter:
The two films have helped propel year-to-date revenue to $2.113 billion — the best showing for the first part of the year since before the pandemic in 2019 ($2.619 billion), according to Comscore. And revenue is running 25% ahead of the same corridor last year.
Some context from ScreenRant:
Even though The Super Mario Galaxy Movie reviews were largely negative, earning it a disappointing 43% score from critics on Rotten Tomatoes, audiences gave it a far superior score of 89% from audiences, making it Verified Hot on the platform’s Popcornmeter. This indicates that the movie should continue to climb up the global box office chart thanks to strong word of mouth, even as it trails consistently behind the original 2023 movie in terms of commercial performance.
Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen called Project Hail Mary “an inspirational example.. We all thought that movie was really uplifting and inspiring.” Before the Artemis astronauts launched their mission, Space.com points out “they were treated to a viewing of Amazon MGM Studios’ Project Hail Maryto bolster their spirits ahead of their monumental 10-day lunar voyage. "
Marking the occasion and providing encouraging words to the three American astronauts and one Canadian astronaut, Ryan Gosling recorded a brief encouraging video for the moon-bound foursome.
Today NPR took a spoiler-filled look at the science in the film, asking: Would it be possible for humans to travel to a place as far away as the Tau Ceti star system?
It’s not possible right now, says Lisa Carnell, division director for NASA’S Biological and Physical Sciences Division. “I don’t think we are fully prepared to send humans to Mars, let alone light years away,” she says. Given the leaps in technology that humanity has made in just the past century, however, she didn’t want to rule it out.... “I believe it’s possible [one day]"…

The hypothetical study of how humans and extraterrestrials might communicate is a real scientific field, called xenolinguistics, that includes researchers from linguistics, animal communication, and anthropology. Martin Hilpert, a professor of linguistics at the University of Neuchâtel in Switzerland, says the film “gets a lot of things right” for how such an encounter might occur, though it also employs a lot of “happy coincidences” too.

Claw Machine in Lobby All Goombahs

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I guess it sort of makes sense that the new Super Mario movie and the Andy Weir movie are doing well in the theaters, as they are the only two movies I have even heard of BEING in the theaters in like the last couple of years. Are any other movies even showing right now?

Re:Claw Machine in Lobby All Goombahs

By algaeman • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Melania is still showing in empty theaters worldwide

Bust

By j.a.mcguire • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
Went to see Hail Mary on opening night expecting another smash hit from Andy Weir. Sorely disappointed. It’s a childrens movie.

Inspirational?

By localroger • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Wait a minute, they showed the Artemis crew a story about a guy who is drugged and kidnapped by his space agency and wakes up 11 light-years from home with the rest of his crew dead to bolster their spirits?

Expectations

By bartoku • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I am really curious what set your expectations so high?
I did not know who Andy Weir was, or that he wrote the Martian until just now; but I would say that lines up and Ryan beat Matt for me.
I enjoyed Martian, but did not realize it was consider a smash hit?

From the Hail Mary trailer, it looked like a pretty simple boring story that would need Ryan Gosling to carry it; so I was not expecting much and had not planned on watching the movie.
It was an interview on NPR about Rocky being a puppet that intrigued me enough to check it out.
As a result my expectations were met, if not exceeded; I enjoyed the movie for what it was.
However the funniest part was 30 minutes in when my wife asked me: “you like this movie?” then proceeded to fall asleep; I am not sure if she saw or enjoyed the Martian.

Hail Mary does seem to be a family friendly movie as you asserted; a bit light hearted compared to the more dramatic Martian.

Hisense’s New Backlit RGB LED TV ‘a Shot Against OLED’s Bow’, and Includes a DP Port

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“RGB LED TVs have been the talk of the TV world this year,” argues The Verge, with models coming from all the manufacturers.” And the first one of 2026 is here — the UR9 from China’s Hisense — “the first look at the viability of the new backlight technology outside of demo rooms.” They call it “a step above the traditional mini-LED TVs of years past.” and “a great first shot against OLED’s bow.”
HDR is colorful and accurate, it has great brightness, and it is capable of showing colors beyond the P3 color space for movies and TV shows that have wider color. But at $3,500, the 65-inch model I reviewed is priced comparably to high-end OLEDs from LG and Samsung, which is tough competition… One of the touted benefits of RGB LED TVs is their ability to achieve 100 percent of the BT.2020 color space… [But] even if a TV is capable of extending beyond P3 and into BT.2020 colors (which the UR9 absolutely is), with most movies and TV shows it doesn’t matter. It’s also a bit of a chicken-or-the-egg situation — we need TVs that can accurately display BT.2020 before the color space is fully adopted by TV and movie creators, but if there’s no content, why get a BT.2020 TV?
BGR points out this new mini LED TV also "includes a DisplayPort (DP) connection alongside HDMI.”

“Well, technically, it’s a USB-C port that delivers full DisplayPort functionality, but it’s labeled as DisplayPort.”
The TV also has three HDMI 2.1 ports, making it a great choice for game consoles and PCs. And while HDMI 2.1 supports 4K/120Hz, the Hisense UR9S will deliver 4K/170Hz or 4K/180Hz visuals [a higher refresh rate] when connected to a gaming PC via DisplayPort. Better yet, the TV is AMD FreeSync-compatible, and Hisense plans on adding Dolby Vision 2 HDR in future firmware.

The Hisense UR9S will be available in four sizes: 65, 75, 85, and 100 inches. It’s worth mentioning that the two largest sizes will max out at 180Hz for the refresh rate, while the 65 and 75-inch screens come in at 170Hz. This is exciting news for serious gamers looking for the best gaming TVs and a huge step forward in the evolution of panel tech. RGB Mini LED TVs were showcased by a handful of manufacturers at CES 2026, including Samsung, Sony, and LG; so Hisense will certainly have some competition.

Still going to bloom massively

By dinfinity • Score: 3 Thread

“All three models from the UR9S series boast 4K VA display panels a typical brightness of 800 nits and a peak brightness of up to 4000 nits. The local dimming zones count is as follows: 85” model - 1320, the 75” model - 1056, and 65” model - 980. "

https://www.displayspecificati…

How many people actually care?

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3 Thread

Is there actually a significant market of people who really care that their TV can display 100% of the color space versus, say, 93% or whatever? This just seems like another manufacturer sales gimmick, like 3-D or 8K.

$3,500

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Informative Thread

$3,500 for a 65” Hisense.

Let that sink in for a while. Hisense.

You can get a 65” 4k LG LED for $400, or OLED for $1,000.

Say what?

By marcle • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The expression is “shot across the bow.” The idea is that a ship would deliberately fire a near miss to warn or intimidate an enemy. “Shot against the bow” makes no sense.

Botched IT Upgrade Ended Liquor Sales for the Entire State of Mississippi

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Mississippi has one warehouse — run by a contractor — that sells all the liquor for the entire state of 2.9 million people. “If a restaurant or store anywhere in Mississippi wanted a bottle of Jim Beam, they had to order it from the wholesale warehouse,” reports the Washington Post.

But then Mississippi’s warehouse-managing contractor implemented a new computer system that wasn’t compatible with the state’s delivery system (like they’d promised it would be back in 2023). And then things got even worse… “The problem, business owners allege, is that the company tore out the conveyor belts but didn’t hire humans to replace them.”

In February a state Revenue Department commissioner told lawmakers the state was hiring temporary replacement workers, but in the five weeks through March 29th they’d only managed to reduce “pending” orders by 21.7%, from 218,851 down to 171,190, according to stats from Mississippi Today. At least four Mississippi businesses are now suing the warehouse operator “claiming breach of contract and harm to their business.”

So what’s it like in a state suddenly running dry? The Washington Post reports:
Willie the one-eyed skeleton is dressed for Cinco de Mayo, but the liquor store where Willie sits ran out of Jose Cuervo months ago. Arrow Wine and Spirits is also out of Tito’s and Burnett’s vodka, Franzia boxed wine, Jack Daniels, and every kind of premixed margarita… Restaurants in Jackson had no wine on Valentine’s Day, and bars on the Gulf Coast ran dry before Mardi Gras. At least five liquor shops have closed, and if cheap pints don’t hit the corner stores soon, many of them will, too…

[A]s both the state and its businesses lose millions in revenue, many say they see no real end to the crisis. Nearly 174,000 cases of alcohol are sitting in a warehouse north of Jackson, but no one seems to know how to get them out the door… Even the shops that have received deliveries say they often get the wrong thing — Jell-O shots, for instance, that should have been small-batch Norwegian gin…
At Willie the one-eyed skeleton’s liquor store they’d previously made 300 to 400 sales a day, according to the article, but last week had 34 customers. And Mississippi is one of 17 U.S. states requiring liquor stores to buy their liquor from distribution centers controlled by the state’s Department of Revenue…

Mississippi Today points out that while some want the state to finally privatize liquor distribution, “The state collects around $120 million a year in taxes on alcohol.” Plus the state has already authorized “borrowing $95 million to construct a new warehouse, set to begin operations in 2027…”

Thanks to Slashdot reader jrnvk for sharing the news.

Re:Single point of failure

By Z00L00K • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It’s a good way to keep people sober in Mississippi.

It would be fun to correlate this with number of DUI incidents.

Re:Single point of failure

By Mr. Barky • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It would be fun to correlate this with number of DUI incidents.

Be aware of unexpected correlations. Maybe DUI will go up because people now have to drive to another state to get their fix.

Re:Single point of failure

By Mirnotoriety • Score: 5, Informative Thread
> This Slashdot summary is a “single point of failure” ..

“MARS is the ABC’s software. Ruan installed the Blue Yonder software at the warehouse without beta testing. It was discovered after it was too late that Blue Yonder could not communicate with MARS. No communications means no orders are taken. No orders taken means no orders shipped.”

Re:Single point of failure

By cusco • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

And to add injury to insult, the contractor almost certainly was paid in full for the botched install, and probably being paid a bonus to fix their fuckup.

Re:Old religious nonsense

By PleaseThink • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Most of a religion’s rules are grounded in group survival traits. People drink to excess as a coping mechanism for many different things. That excess leads them to act out against and harm their society. Thus rules and now laws restricting alcohol. States restrict it because people abuse it, but can’t ban it because too many use it to cope with life’s problems and it’s too easy to make.

Sadly most aid for drunks is either locking them up or simply trying to get them to stop drinking. Few programs work at resolving the underlying issue which causes them to turn to drinking to cope (sometimes simply changing your diet can remove the desire) in the first place. Even fewer programs teach people coping skills prior to needing them. Compare that with the tons and tons of media promoting drinking as the cool and acceptable thing to do when you have issues. Part of each generation grows up needing alcohol. …I’ve gotton a little side tracked. The original point was religions had a need to protect people so they were against drinking. If you can stop people from abusing alcohol you remove the need for that protection, and thus you’d slowly be able to either get it fully legal or fully illegal. In the mean time, you’ve got both sides fighting each other which ends up with half-crazed laws. It’s both a toxic drink and a useful one.

Neuroscientist’s AI-Powered Startup Aims To Transform Human Cognition With Perfect, Infinite Memory

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Bloomberg describes him as a “former Harvard Medical School professor whose research has focused on the intersection of AI and neuroscience.”

“For the past 20 years, I studied how the human brain stores and retrieves memories,” Kreiman writes on LinkedIn. And now “My co-founder Spandan Madan and I built a new algorithm to endow humans with perfect and infinite memory.”
Engramme connects to your **memorome**, i.e., entire digital life. Large Memory Models work in the same way that your brain encodes and retrieves information. Then memories are recalled automatically — no searching, no prompting, no hallucinations. [The startup’s web site promises "omniscient AI to augment human cognition.”]

We have built the memory layer for EVERY app. Read our manifesto about augmenting human cognition. [“We are not just building software; we are enabling a complete transformation of human cognition. When the friction disappears between needing a piece of information and recalling it, the nature of thought itself changes. This synergy between biological intuition and digital precision will be the most disruptive force in modern history, fundamentally reshaping every profession… We are dedicated to creating a world where everyone has the power to remember everything they have ever learned, seen, or felt "]

Welcome to a new future where you can remember everything. This is the MEMORY SINGULARITY: after 300,000 years, this is the moment that humans stop forgetting.
Bloomberg reports that the startup (spun out of a lab at Harvard) is “in talks with investors to raise about $100 million, according to people familiar with the matter.”

I would be happy

By zawarski • Score: 5, Funny Thread
With forgetting I just read all that.

Re:So let me get this straight…

By groobly • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Neither will she.

The critical importance of forgetting

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Rather than try to paraphrase, let me point to The Importance of Forgetting | Episteme | Cambridge Core and Why forgetting is beneficial and Why Forgetting is Good for Your Memory among many, MANY other sources that easy to find with a search.

If you don’t want to read those, here’s the TL;DR version: forgetting isn’t a bug; it’s a feature. It serves a critical function in our cognition, and it has evolved to serve that function over millions of years.

These idiots are trying to tamper with natural forces that they don’t understand and don’t respect, and they’re doing it with zero regard for the consequences to human society. Just like Crichton’s scientists in Jurassic Park, there’s no humility, only ambition and greed.

What idiot thinks e-memory is memory?

By gurps_npc • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I mean really. The ability for electronic devices to instantly recall things for you is not your memory.

Not how long term memory works

By puzzled • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Being able to flawless recall a moment would perhaps be useful, but this is NOT how human long term memory works. When healthy, we revisit and reinforce that which is happy, and helpful, and positive. When we can’t let go of the past, that’s often tied to things we describe as mental illness. Just ask anyone who’s ever been treated for PTSD.

I remember that wave of emotion the first time I ever kissed *THAT* girl. And since we didn’t have email or text messages, and I hadn’t met her parents yet, I can also take you to the precise place on that Iowa highway where I heard her funeral announcement. I drove a couple more miles in stunned silence, before I realized it was scheduled on my 20th birthday.

I’ll turn fifty nine in a week or so. Every year she fades a little more, but stopping to write this brings that hurt back, as sharp as ever.

This is a double edged sword and we should think twice before drawing it …

DNA-Level Encryption Developed by Researchers to Protect the Secrets of Bioengineered Cells

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
The biotech industry’s engineered cells could become an $8 trillion market by 2035, notes Phys.org. But how do you keep them from being stolen? Their article notes “an uptick in the theft and smuggling of high-value biological materials, including specially engineered cells.”
In Science Advances, a team of U.S. researchers present a new approach to genetically securing precious biological material. They created a genetic combination lock in which the locking or encryption process scrambled the DNA of a cell so that its important instructions were non-functional and couldn’t be easily read or used. The unlocking, or decryption, process involves adding a series of chemicals in a precise order over time — like entering a password — to activate recombinases, which then unscramble the DNA to their original, functional form…

They created a biological keypad with nine distinct chemicals, each acting as a one-digit input. By using the same chemicals in pairs to form two-digit inputs, where two chemicals must be present simultaneously to activate a sensor, they expanded the keypad to 45 possible chemical inputs without introducing any new chemicals. They also added safety penalties — if someone tampers with the system, toxins are released — making it extremely unlikely for an unauthorized person to access the cells.
“The researchers conducted an ethical hacking exercise on the test lock and found that random guessing yielded a 0.2% success rate, remarkably close to the theoretical target of 0.1%.”

Monsanto

By unrealmp3 • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Monsanto must be drooling at the concept, on which they could use the DMCA if someone attenpt any kind of DRM circumvention.

Who would guess randomly?

By drinkypoo • Score: 3 Thread

The unlocking, or decryption, process involves adding a series of chemicals in a precise order over time […] The researchers conducted an ethical hacking exercise on the test lock and found that random guessing yielded a 0.2% success rate

It’s really not decryption, is it? Unlocking remains a pretty good description. But more importantly, who would guess randomly? You should be able to model the interactions by now and determine which of them are likely to work. Your attackers are likely to be people with the ability to sequence your creation anyway.

Makes patents obsolete

By marcle • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This way, Big Pharma can retain a lock on new miracle drugs at high prices for as long as they want.

Re:Who would guess randomly?

By phantomfive • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

You should be able to model the interactions by now and determine which of them are likely to work.

The decryption works like this:

1) You have a long strip of RNA.
2) The “password” is an enzyme that cuts a piece out of the RNA (and fuses the loose ends).
3) If you cut the RNA in the correct four places, then you end up with the correctly “unencrypted” RNA strip, which then goes on to create the desired structure in the cell.

It’s not strong encryption, but it’s probably as good as a four digit pin.

Not even over 9000.

By Gravis Zero • Score: 3 Thread

only the exact passcode worked, showing that the odds of an unauthorized person guessing it had dropped to just two in 990, or 0.2%

If you have a real lab, is 1000 different attempts really that hard to do? By hand, it would be a pain but you can automate the process, right?

Also, what if you sequence the encrypted DNA, can you not simply simulate the application of the chemicals? Running about 1000 detailed simulations doesn’t strike me as being too computationally intensive to pull off.