"In one run, it edited the code to perform a system call to run itself," wrote the researchers on Sakana AI's blog post. "This led to the script endlessly calling itself. In another case, its experiments took too long to complete, hitting our timeout limit. Instead of making its code run faster, it simply tried to modify its own code to extend the timeout period."
30 August 2024
Research AI model unexpectedly attempts to modify its own code to extend runtime
29 August 2024
Reading for today: why does God allow pain?
If the first and lowest operation of pain shatters the illusion that all is well, the second shatters the illusion that what we have, whether good or bad in itself, is our own and enough for us.
Everyone has noticed how hard it is to turn our thoughts to God when everything is going well with us. We ‘have all we want’ is a terrible saying when ‘all’ does not include God. We find God an interruption. As St Augustine says somewhere, ‘God wants to give us something, but cannot, because our hands are full - there’s nowhere for Him to put it.’ Or as a friend of mine said, ‘We regard God as an airman regards his parachute; it’s there for emergencies but he hopes he’ll never have to use it.’ Now God, who has made us, knows what we are and that our happiness lies in Him.
Yet we will not seek it in Him as long as he leaves us any other resort where it can even plausibly be looked for. While what we call ‘our own life’ remains agreeable we will not surrender it to Him. What then can God do in our interests but make ‘our own life’ less agreeable to us, and take away the plausible source of false happiness?
By C.S. Lewis
From The Problem of Pain
27 August 2024
How long can fuel sit in a car or motorcycle before it goes "bad"?
Motorcycles & cars are sitting in garages or driveways for longer periods than in the past. So, what happens to the gasoline inside these vehicles when it stagnates for weeks or even months? Does gasoline go bad? And if so, how long can gas sit in a vehicle before it goes bad?
This article covers how to identify bad fuel as well as steps to keep gasoline fresh. In addition to advice on mitigating gasoline going bad in the first place, we discuss preparing vehicles for storage and the benefits of using fuel stabilizers.
The length of time fuel will remain useable in your gas tank is dependent on the fuel type. Regular petrol has a shelf life of three to six months, premium or high-octane fuel should last close to nine months, while diesel can last up to a year before it begins to degrade. On the other hand, organic-based Ethanol can lose its combustibility in one to three months due to oxidation and evaporation. READ MORE...
A lot of new in-vehicle tech is “not necessary,” survey finds
Jumping into a new car from the driver's seat of something built before 2010 can cause quite the case of future shock. Over that time, automakers have been in a technology frenzy, loading up new vehicles with all manner of gizmos, gadgets, and features, some meant to make your life easier, others to make your journey safer. But do car buyers actually want all this stuff? A new survey by JD Power suggests they may not.
With enough time, a new convenience feature just becomes something buyers expect to be there. Starter motors replaced hand cranks for a reason, and I imagine most modern motorists would prefer not to deal with manual chokes. Manual window winders became more expensive and heavier than electric ones, leading to their extinction.
Some of the technology creep has come about by regulation or the threat of it. While many bemoan the "iPad on the dash," the legal requirement for a backup camera means there needs to be a screen in the car to display that feed. Steering wheels and dashboards grew to conceal airbags. And now vehicle fascias conceal sensors that can alert the driver or stop the car in the event of an imminent head-on crash.
But according to JD Power's Tech Experience Survey, which "measures problems encountered and the user experience with advanced technologies as they first enter the market," advanced technology in cars needs to solve real problems, and too much tech simply doesn't do that. READ MORE...
It's not just cars - motorcycles too! Bikes used to be all about you, the machine & the road. Now we have electronics & software getting in the way. That's distracting enough - but what happens when it (invariably - trust me on this!) fails? I & most riders want none of this, but it is what the manufacturers & legislators want. Meh...
22 August 2024
Hey Microsoft: what version of 365 should I get? Oh, the most expensive one. Well there's a surprise!
The Register - writes: Did you have a collection of Choose-Your-Own-Adventure books? Microsoft offers something similar in the form of its subscription plan advisor, though it's tricky to avoid one particular priced outcome.
A Register reader got in touch after using the Microsoft 365 Plan Chooser. Answer six questions via the tool, and a result with a recommended plan will be displayed. This might be the Business Basic plan for $6 per user per month for an annual subscription, the $12.50 Business Standard plan, or the mighty $22 Microsoft 365 Business Premium.
Our reader mused: "If I follow the menu choices, it always selects Microsoft 365 Business Premium as the outcome."
Accepting the challenge, and because we still remember the excitement when a new Steve Jackson tome hit the shelves, we decided to try for ourselves, urged on by our reader: "Have a go and see if you can get it to choose another outcome..."
As with many Choose-Your-Own-Adventure books, there appears to be a key question: "Do you have access to an IT professional for advanced support and services?" Say yes, and almost all paths lead to the premium option. Say no, and basic or standard await.
A cynic might wonder if this means that Microsoft assumes there's an IT budget to be plundered if there's an IT pro on hand and so goes directly to the premium option. Or perhaps it's just that with someone around who knows a bit about computers, the variety of options available at the premium level makes more sense.
In honor of the countless hours spent on the computers in WHSmith while checking if the latest fantasy adventure book had been published (yes, we were also keen on the works of Ian Livingstone), here's some very inefficient BBC BASIC to speed along the decision process.
10 INPUT "DO YOU HAVE MONEY? " A$
20 IF (LEFT$(A$, 1) = "Y") OR (LEFT$(A$, 1)="y") THEN PRINT "GO PREMIUM" ELSE GOTO 10
30 END
Anybody making an IT purchasing decision based on a six-question survey perhaps deserves what they get, and we're sure Microsoft would recommend more thought be given and advice sought on which plan makes the most sense.
We asked the company if it could share the logic behind the questions and the weightings assigned to the selections, but it has yet to elaborate.
19 August 2024
Reading for Today: On Love (not hate)
16 August 2024
Microsoft tweaks fine print to warn everyone not to take its AI seriously
Microsoft pauses Windows 11 full-screen alerts on Windows 10 after feedback
Microsoft initially tested Windows 11 naggings with a smaller group of Windows 10 users, mostly those with Home License, but some Pro and Business users also observed the alerts. A full-screen popup appeared, usually after a reboot, reminding users of the "benefits" (LOL!) of upgrading to the new operating system.
Microsoft planned to expand the invitation to more Windows 10 users from April 2024 but dismissed the plan shortly after the announcement. In an update to the Microsoft 365 advisory, Microsoft has quietly confirmed that it has paused this Windows 11 nagging after “feedback” from users.
This change was first spotted and reported by Windows Latest, and it states that: To honour our user’s feedback, these invitations will no longer begin with the April 2024 monthly security update. We will share a new timeline in the coming months.
Meanwhile, in other news: Win 11 still proves unpopular with users. Currently: Win10 = 65% of PCs, while Win11 = 31%. Even after Microsoft is forcing the issue with forced upgrades, threats & the fact all new PCs come with Win 11!
14 August 2024
Is Lenovo a blind spot in US anti-China security measures?
Lenovo's participation in a cybersecurity initiative has reopened old questions over the company's China origins, especially in light of the growing mistrust between Washington and Beijing over technology.
Last week, Lenovo announced to the world that it is now involved in the Joint Cyber Defense Collaborative (JCDC) initiative, which was established by the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) to enlist private sector help in addressing threats to US critical infrastructure.
On the face of it, there is nothing unusual in that. Lenovo is the biggest PC supplier in the world, with figures from market researchers putting its market share at almost a quarter of global sales.
Yet Lenovo is also a Chinese company, founded in Beijing 40 years ago as Legend and now registered in Hong Kong. It gained greater market access partly thanks to its acquisition of IBM's PC division with its iconic Thinkpad laptops in 2005, then picked up Big Blue's x86 server business nearly a decade later in 2014.
13 August 2024
Donline's top IT tips - the super seven!
I've been running Donline since 2006, & this Blog since 2014. Donline's Blog has ~2600 articles: with many hundreds about all aspects of IT - from mobile phones to AI.
Out of all the IT articles on the Blog, I would recommend the following seven to stay safe & get the best productivity from your computing experience:
Basic IT training: have you tried turning it off and on again?
Manage your email - zero that Inbox!
Terrifying study shows how fast AI can crack your passwords
Which is more expensive: Printer Ink or Vintage Champagne?
Reading for today: on the loss of our beloved Pets
Replika CEO Eugenia Kuyda says it’s okay if we end up marrying AI chatbots
Replika’s basic pitch is pretty simple: what if you had an Artificial Intelligence friend? The company offers avatars you can curate to your liking that basically pretend to be human, so they can be your friend, your therapist, or even your date. You can interact with these avatars through a familiar chatbot interface, as well as make video calls with them and even see them in virtual and augmented reality. READ MORE...
How messed up have we become as a society - that this is even a thing? Go to Church, down the pub, join a local club: make some friends, have relationships in your lives - live, love, cry. Be human. Not this ^^^. Heartbreaking.
08 August 2024
Royal Mint starts turning e-waste into gold
E-waste, which includes anything from old phones and computers to TVs, is a rapidly growing problem - the UN says 62m tonnes were thrown away in 2022.
Its latest report, external estimates that the mountain of discarded tech is set to increase by about a third by 2030.
At the Royal Mint plant, piles of circuit boards are being fed into the new facility.
First, they are heated to remove their various components. Then the array of detached coils, capacitors, pins and transistors are sieved, sorted, sliced and diced as they move along a conveyor belt.
Anything with gold in it is set aside.
“What we're doing here is urban mining,” says head of sustainability Inga Doak.
“We're taking a waste product that's being produced by society and we're mining the gold from that waste product and starting to see the value in that finite resource.”
The gold-laden pieces go to an on-site chemical plant.
They’re tipped into a chemical solution which leaches the gold out into the liquid.
This is then filtered, leaving a powder behind. It looks pretty nondescript but this is actually pure gold – it just needs to be heated in a furnace to be transformed into a gleaming nugget.
“Traditional gold recovery processes are very energy intensive and use very toxic chemicals that can only be used once, or they go to high energy smelters and they're basically burnt,” says Leighton John, the Royal Mint's operations director.
“The groundbreaking thing for us is the fact that this chemistry is used at room temperature, at very low energy, it’s recyclable and pulls gold really quickly.”
Nearly half a billion small tech items thrown away
There’s no shortage of e-waste for the Royal Mint to target. The UN's 2024 e-waste report, external places the UK as the second biggest producer of tech trash per capita, beaten only by Norway.
“Our aim is to process over 4,000 tonnes of e-waste annually,” says Leighton John.
“Traditionally this waste is shipped overseas but we're keeping it in the UK and we're keeping those elements in the UK for us to use. It's really important.”
A powder is collected at the end of all the process - it's pure gold
Four thousand tonnes of e-waste should generate up to 450kg of gold, which is worth about £27m at current prices.
This shift into the waste business is a big change for the Royal Mint.
For more than a thousand years, it has been the UK’s official coin maker.
But with cash use dwindling, e-waste is a new way for the government-owned company to make money - and save jobs.
“We needed to diversify,” explains CEO Anne Jessopp.
“And given that less people are now needed to make coins, actually it was an ideal opportunity to move people across [to e-waste processing] so that we could keep jobs for those people.”
Circuit boards contains many different materials that could be re-used
As well as recovering gold, the company is also looking at what to do with all of the other materials that it is separating out from the circuit boards.
They contain a number of different materials including aluminium, copper, tin and steel. They’re also investigating whether ground up boards could be used by the construction industry.