

I mean, Starfield should have been my dream game, but after that…
I dunno. All my enthusiasm for BGS has been sapped, and I adored Oblvion.
I mean, Starfield should have been my dream game, but after that…
I dunno. All my enthusiasm for BGS has been sapped, and I adored Oblvion.
Aww man, are they going to take down Skyblivion right when its done?
Well yes, it’s Nvidia.
Even at the enterprise demos, the running joke is that Nvidia is fudging claims big time.
That’s still more positive than summaries from Cohere, Qwen, Deepseek, FuseAI and Arcee 32B (the latter two being combinations of different models, it’s complicated) in my quick test.
…And I’d recommend them all, TBH. Use anything but ChatGPT for the same reasons you’d use Lemmy over Reddit.
This is just them going for regulatory capture. Again. The “tiered” country system, the controls on model weights, centralizing regulation in Washington, focus on datacenter build out (instead of on device inference), and more, it’s all just a big middle finger to open, locally runnable weights without saying it.
And they’re trying to justify it with Chinese hate more than “safety” fearmongering this time, even though this would let them run circles around the US (in time, though not without OpenAI making a healthy profit first).
They want to own your access, not let you have it.
QwQ 32B did a decent job writing that out:
OpenAI’s proposal contains elements that could inadvertently or intentionally hinder open-source/open-weights AI and smaller competitors, while also raising concerns about regulatory capture. Here’s a breakdown of key points:
OpenAI’s proposals, while framed as pro-innovation, risk entrenching its own dominance and disadvantaging smaller, open-source competitors through:
Verdict: While OpenAI positions itself as advocating for “freedom,” the proposals contain structural biases that could stifle open-source/open-weights innovation and enable regulatory capture. The focus on national competition with China overshadows neutral, inclusive frameworks, raising questions about whether the plan prioritizes U.S. corporate leadership over democratizing AI.
And it was generated on my desktop. That I own, in my house, with the PC completely disconnected from the internet atm, with some settings and features OpenAI would never let me have.
It doesn’t have to be.
That’s why pushing locally run, sanely implemented LLMs is so important, for the same reason you’d promote Lemmy instead of just telling people not to use Reddit.
This is my biggest divergence with Lemmy’s political average, probably: AI haters are going to bring this to reality, as they are just pushing out “dangerous” local LLMs in favor of crappy corporate UIs.
But they do have an interest in displacing Google’s monopoly, kinda like how they contribute to OpenStreetMaps with Apple Maps, or how Facebook finds llama.
Apple could pitch in just for the sake of sticking it to Google.
For most people, use Open Web UI (along with its many extensions) and the LLM API of your choice. There are hundreds to choose from.
You can run an endpoint for it locally if you have a big GPU, but TBH it’s not great you have at least like 10GB of vram, ideally 20GB.
Why doesn’t Mozilla just fork Chromium? Anything bad sneaks in, they rip it out. New feature? Develop it specifically without paying for the whole browser. From the user’s perspective, very little changes, but cost savings would be massive.
It would also be a good high profile tab of “bad things Chrome/Chromium is doing”
EDIT: It would also justify regulating Chromium like a monopoly, though I think that government ship has sailed.
If it integrates with the fediverse, it can be promoted on other platforms and doesn’t need critical mass.
That’s the advantage. All the platforms are trying to synergize, not steal from each other like the corporate apps.
I bet the remake will be fine, it’s just technical upgrades, no new writing or anything. Maybe not as “soulful” as Skyblivion, but fine.
What I am more worried about is “fun” writing and storytelling in new games.
EDIT: Wrong reply, but you get the idea @[email protected]