

Yeah exactly! Any recommendations?


Yeah exactly! Any recommendations?


I just bought 2x 8gb ddr3 for €25 so I can play games from 10+ years ago.


I did not know this. That really sucks.


I’m not a US teacher but Europe. University. A lot of teachers work in the field part time and part time teacher. We need to have a regulated outcome for our students. How we teach is up to the teacher. If I see that students can just get an A by using AI, then I’m not doing my job. So yeah, I’m not only expected to change how I teach, I’m required.


Regulate? Who is talking about regulating? I’m talking about teaching and the way we grade students. As a teacher myself I know that a lot of students (and people in the workforce) use AI. AI itself is just a tool. You can set it to full auto but that only leads to you being not needed anymore. What I teach my students is to use it responsible and that the AI is being used so it adds value to you. And not let it replace you.
In my opinion the AI is better at some tasks than humans are. Some tasks the human is better. Make yourself useful in the spot that AI is underperforming.
Edit: like some other comment was saying, “you can’t chatgpt through a whole semester”. And if you could, you are on the road of being replaced. If you can’t, congratulations. You learn something the machine can’t do.


Shouldn’t the education system change then? If it is easy to get an A with a machine, should we then not focus on learning something that can’t be done by a machine. I mean, it has value to know things and know what to do insituations where AI is not available.
I have an Odroid c2 as server with a chromecast (with Google TV) as viewer with Kodi. For videos it is stable. It can play 1080p x264 and x265.
The odroid c2 server runs DietPi (based on Debian).
For games I have no idea… If your interested in odroid, do not pick up the c2 but the successor the c4.


I have no idea about Nim but have you checked Go (Golang)? It does the things that you need: single binary, cross compile, easy to learn (except methods on an object are a bit weird at first).
Next to that it is also stable, not dying soon and lots of dependencies to extend the language.
Anyway, if you like Nim, go for it.
Thanks! Good tips. I will save this comment for later reference.