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AI 资讯

Claude is the best AI, convince me otherwise.

If you ask it to create a recipe, you can click plus and minus buttons to change the amount of portions. You can connect it to other apps like canva. It hallucinates WAY less, and it explains ilvery clearly. submitted by /u/OkComputer_13 [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

Has anyone else noticed this LLM language bias?

I have been experimenting with LLMs to see how well they navigate highly cross-referenced texts like the Bible. Standard models often hallucinate verses or lose historical context. To try and fix this, I built a free app called Biblians (no ads, no paywalls). I built it specifically for people who have questions they might hesitate to ask in person, or who simply want a 1-click way to explain a verse. While testing it, I discovered a fascinating denominational bias that is still lingering and changes depending entirely on the language you use: In English: It is Protestant-leaning. It praises Luther, saying things like, "Martin Luther sought to return the Church to the truth of God's Word." In Spanish, French, or Portuguese: It is Catholic-leaning. It condemns Luther's actions, stating: "...trajo confusión..." (...brought confusion...). Has anyone else noticed how drastically the training data changes the core bias based on the language prompted? I would love for this community to test the app, look for other linguistic biases, or just try to break the AI's logic. You can experiment with it here: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.biblians.app Let me know what weird outputs you get! submitted by /u/Snorlax_lax [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

AI on an older PC with a CPU that apparently doesn't have AVX >:,(

OK.. so I've had this reasonable PC sitting under my desk for ages.. NOT working because of some reason or other. But it was my baby as is housed in a lovely Soprano DX silver brushed case. SO, I swapped out the old HDD for a couple of SSDs (a couple of mirrored OS disks and a large 2TB storage disk) I swapped out the Nvidia 780ti graphics card for a couple of OG Nvidia 1080ti's. I pulled the whole thing to bits.. repasted the northbridge chip, southbridge chip and central CPU. Upgraded the fans to push pull the CPU heatsink. Wrapped ALL cables in mesh and it's so lovely now. Installed Windows 10 Pro. Installed the Nvidia App. Installed CrystalDiskInfo and all is sweet 😄 EXCEPT... I'd like to use this old bangin box for an HG AI server... now I have read that ALL LLMs need this thing called AVX (Advanced Vector Extensions) I didn't even know that was a THING! So even though I have 22Gb worth of GPU sitting there that I was going to point everything to, because I have a lame ass QX6700 CPU sitting on a kickass D975XBX2 (BadAxe2) main board I CAN NOT fulfill my wish for this OG box to be a headless source of awesomeness sitting in it's home under my desk supplying me with a home grown AI. IS THERE ANYTHING I CAN DO?!?!?! Surely after all this time of parts getting munched by AI farms a plenty people have been using what's around to do what they will... Does anyone know of anything I can do apart from just look at it running at 25 degrees aircooled humming along so lovely... it NEEDS purpose!!! 😄 Cheers and thanks all NB submitted by /u/Independent-Sound196 [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

Roguelite MMO Beta Vibe Coded In 4 Weeks

10 year senior dev, vibe coded this in 4 weeks and counting. Something like this would have taken me a year+ before and ive always been a 10x dev. I built this along side my day job (gov contractor dev). Feel free to check it out! https://imgur.com/a/F6OINKR⁠ Game Title: Roguelite MMO Playable Link: https://roguelite-mmo.com/⁠ Platform: PC / Web Description: Roguelite MMO is a browser-based RPG/MMO project built around dungeon runs, exploration, gear progression, PvP, quests, loot, and character building. The game is still in beta and active development, with the latest update adding new side activities and progression options. Latest update: The new Casino is now live, giving players more ways to spend gold, take risks, and chase rewards between dungeon runs and exploration. Horse racing and horse taming have also been added. Players can race horses, bet on races, and work toward collecting better horses over time. Fishing is now available too, adding a more relaxed activity with its own rewards while exploring the world. The core loop is still being refined, but the current focus is making sure players understand what they earned, where important items come from, what to do next, and whether the early gameplay loop feels worth continuing after the first few minutes. Free to play submitted by /u/HeadHunterX223 [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

this just isn't sustainable.

I had a work version of GPT do a very simple spreadsheet summary task for me yesterday. It took it 5 minutes to do it. I could probably have done it myself in 30 or so minutes. The heavily subsidised token cost of that task? 10 dollars. That's with a 10x subsidy. The actual compute cost was about 100 dollars. There's something seriously wrong there. It's going to crash and crash HARD. if people think i'm lying or are just interested. The spreadsheet had 45 sheets. Each sheet had roughly 500 x 50 populated cells. Formatting was not exactly standard across all sheets. The prompt was something like "there is labelled column in each sheet, give me a simple list of all the items from all the sheets in that column and ignore duplicates." We can chose which model to use. The model I chose was one of the newer ones, I honestly can't remember which one, possibly GPT 5.5. It took 5 minutes or more to so and the stated cost for the task was 10 dollars, possibly even more. I can't recall the token amount. submitted by /u/Complete-Sea6655 [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

I got tired of Al making stuff up about my PDFs, so I built something that actually cites its sources

so i kept using chatgpt to ask questions about my pdfs and notes, and half the time i couldn't tell if it actually read the doc or just made something up that sounded right. that bugged me enough to build my own thing over the last few weeks. you upload a pdf (or word, csv, image, or just paste a link), ask whatever you want, and it answers using only what's in your file - and it shows the exact page it pulled the answer from, so you can check. if the answer isn't in the doc, it just tells you instead of guessing. stuff i actually end up using: flip on web search when i want it to look something up online instead one click to turn a doc into a summary / key points / flashcards (this is clutch for studying) resume review + cover letter help you can talk to it and it reads the answer back it's completely free, i'm not selling anything. honestly just want people to break it and tell me what's missing. link: https://athena-wisdom.vercel.app (there's a short guide on the site too if you get stuck) solo project so be gentle lol - but real feedback is what i'm after, especially what you'd want it to do next. submitted by /u/Independent_Diver352 [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

AI ‘content creators’ are getting harder to spot

This is The Stepback, a weekly newsletter breaking down one essential story from the tech world. For more on AI confusion, follow Robert Hart. The Stepback arrives in our subscribers' inboxes at 8AM ET. Opt in for The Stepback here. How it started At first, AI influencers were relatively easy to identify - and to […]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

What happened in AI in the last 24 hours

🚀 SpaceX signed a massive $920 million monthly deal with Google for 110,000 Nvidia chips — this is a huge infrastructure play ahead of their monster $1.7 trillion IPO. 🏛️ The Trump administration is discussing taking equity stakes in top AI firms — this would make the public official partners in the upside of AI-driven economic growth. 🔓 Meta's automated AI support was hacked to take over high-profile accounts — it proves that offloading critical security tasks to AI can create dangerous, easily exploited vulnerabilities. 🧠 Tech workers are trading hours of manual labor for high-level strategy thanks to AI — while tasks now take minutes, humans are still needed for crucial, complex decision-making. submitted by /u/Ok_Muffin_7347 [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

How I built an AI email agent that processes 15,000 hotel guest emails per day. full architecture breakdown

Just shipped this project and wanted to share the full technical breakdown because hotel/hospitality AI doesn't get much attention compared to the usual chatbot and SaaS use cases. The client manages 500 hotel properties. Their support team was manually handling around 15,000 guest emails per day. Same questions over and over across hundreds of hotels but each one still needed a human to read it, understand it, find the answer, and reply. Here's how the system works end to end: Layer 1: Email ingestion and question extraction This was the hardest part. Guest emails are messy. A typical one looks like: "Hi there, we're coming for our anniversary on the 20th and I was wondering if you have any room upgrades available. Also is the spa open to guests or do we need to book separately? We're driving so need to know about parking too. Last time we stayed the wifi was a bit slow in our room, has that been fixed? Thanks!" That's four separate questions plus a complaint wrapped in one email. If you just embed the whole thing and search the FAQ database you get a blended result that partially answers one or two questions and misses the rest. So I built an extraction layer that reads the full email and breaks it into individual questions. It handles directly stated questions ("is the spa open?"), implied questions ("we're driving" implies they need parking info), complaints that need acknowledgment but aren't FAQ-searchable ("wifi was slow"), and informational context that shouldn't be treated as a question at all ("coming on the 20th"). Getting this extraction reliable was probably 40% of the total development time. Layer 2: FAQ knowledge base with vector search All hotel FAQs get embedded and stored in a vector database. Different properties have different amenities, policies, and details so the search is scoped per hotel. When a guest emails the Berlin property asking about breakfast, it searches the Berlin FAQ, not the Munich one. Each extracted question from Layer 1 gets s

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

Best AI PowerPoint maker for people who already have content?

Most recommendations I’m seeing are for generating presentations from a topic, but I already HAVE the content. Problem is it’s usually: messy notes meeting transcripts random docs giant walls of text Main thing I want is help turning all of that into slides that are actually readable. Does anything handle that well right now? submitted by /u/ragsyme [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

are AI coding tools just becoming the new cloud bill problem?

idk maybe this is obvious to people already working in bigger teams, but the AI coding tool cost thing feels like early cloud all over again. Everyone keeps saying tokens are getting cheaper, which is true, but then somehow companies are still freaking out about AI bills. And I think the reason is pretty simple: people are treating these tools like normal SaaS seats when they are really more like metered infra. Like with a normal dev tool you kind of know the cost. X users, Y dollars per month, done. But with agentic coding tools one small request can quietly turn into a bunch of model calls, context loading, tool calls, retries, verification, more retries, etc. From the user side it looks like “fix this bug” or “write this function” but underneath it may have done a whole mini workflow. And then there is the other cost which I feel people don’t talk about enough: reviewing the generated code. Sometimes the code works but it adds weird duplication, misses existing abstractions, or creates stuff that someone has to clean up later. So the bill is not just tokens. It is also review time + maintenance + future tech debt. Not saying these tools are bad btw. I use them too and they are obviously useful. But it feels like the industry is moving from the fun phase of “look what this can do” to the boring phase of “who is paying for all these calls and did this actually ship anything useful?” Curious if teams are actually tracking this properly yet. Like cost per PR, cost per resolved ticket, cost per workflow etc. Or is it still mostly hidden under “AI productivity” and vibes. submitted by /u/Old_Cap4710 [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

I helped implement AI tools at my corporate job. It made me invaluable. It also got good people laid off. I have mixed feelings.

I work in IT admin for a major company. Started teaching myself AI automation tools in my own time. Applied them to my workload, my output doubled, got noticed and promoted. Became the go to person for AI integration across departments. But here’s the part that sits heavy with me. Once leadership saw what AI could do, they started looking at headcount differently. People who had been there 10, 15 years. Gone. Not because they did anything wrong. Just because a system could now do their job cheaper. I benefited from knowing AI early. Others paid the price for not knowing it yet. Is that their fault? The company’s fault? Just the way progress works? Genuinely asking because I don’t have a clean answer. submitted by /u/PickYourJawnUp [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

How accurate AI checker software

I’ve been a movie reviewer for a couple of years, and occasionally people assume my reviews are AI-generated. The thing is, I’ve spent years developing my writing through extensive reading, English classes, and a lot of practice. Because of that, my writing tends to be polished and structured, which I think may be why some AI-detection tools flag it. What I’m curious about is how accurate these AI detectors actually are. Some people have compared my work to AI-generated writing, and when I’ve run my reviews through different AI checkers, I get completely different results. One detector might say a review is 100% AI-generated, another might say 70% or 80%, and another might classify the same review as entirely human-written. Some call it AI, some call it human, and the results seem to be all over the place. None of my reviews are AI-generated. Every review I’ve published has been written entirely by me, without using AI to generate any part of the writing. I just don’t understand how the same piece of writing can receive such wildly different results depending on which detector is being used. Are these tools accurate in any way, shape, or form? submitted by /u/CheesecakePlayful240 [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

How accurate are AI checkers?

I’ve been a movie reviewer for a couple of years, and occasionally people assume my reviews are AI-generated. The thing is, I’ve spent years developing my writing through extensive reading, English classes, and a lot of practice. Because of that, my writing tends to be polished and structured, which I think may be why some AI-detection tools flag it. What I’m curious about is how accurate these AI detectors actually are. Some people have compared my work to AI-generated writing, and when I’ve run my reviews through different AI checkers, I get completely different results. One detector might say a review is 100% AI-generated, another might say 70% or 80%, and another might classify the same review as entirely human-written. Some call it AI, some call it human, and the results seem to be all over the place. None of my reviews are AI-generated. Every review I’ve published has been written entirely by me, without using AI to generate any part of the writing. I just don’t understand how the same piece of writing can receive such wildly different results depending on which detector is being used. Are these tools accurate in any way, shape, or form? submitted by /u/CheesecakePlayful240 [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

Best way to get a education in how AI works and really understand on a non mathematical level

I am really interested in learning intimately AI I don't really have good math skills but I am very good at computers in technology. I really would love to get into the intricacies and understand ai on a very deep level. But I'm better with verbal learning and being able to interact and ask questions then just with texts and reading. I've tried some in the past and gotten a little bit of an education from AI itself but I want to go deeper with somebody who really understands the tech what is the best way for me to do that. So what are the best schools for that submitted by /u/crazyhomlesswerido [link] [留言]

2026-06-07 原文 →
AI 资讯

Best IPTV service UK's will be even better for watching the 2026 World Cup after weeks of testing.

I've been chasing a reliable IPTV service for almost two years. Tried six different providers. Three of them died within a month. One had channels that buffered so bad I thought my internet was broken (it wasn't). One had zero customer support — my ticket sat unanswered for 11 days before I gave up. 👉 Visit official website - VIKINGITV so when people ask me "what's the best IPTV service provider in 2026?" — I don't give a quick answer anymore. I give them this post. What Makes an IPTV Service Actually Worth Paying For? Before I name names, let me break down what I actually tested for — because most comparison posts skip this entirely. Uptime during live events . Any IPTV can stream a Tuesday night rerun. The real test is the Super Bowl, UFC 300, Premier League matchday. Does it hold? Does it buffer? Does it die at halftime? Channel count vs. channel quality. I've seen providers brag about "50,000 channels" and half of them are dead links or SD streams that look like they're coming through a 2009 satellite dish. Numbers mean nothing without stability. Device support. I use Firestick at home and sometimes watch on my phone when I'm traveling. I need something that actually works across both without needing a computer science degree to set up. Customer support response time. This is the one most people ignore until something breaks at 9 PM on a Saturday. The IPTV Services I Tested in 2026 I won't drag this out with a fake "I tested 20 services" list. I'm talking about what I actually used long enough to form a real opinion. After everything I went through, VIKINGITV is the one I stayed with. Here's why. VIKINGITV — The One That Finally Stuck When I first heard about VIKINGITV I was skeptical. I'd been burned before. But a few things stood out after I actually got the subscription: Channel library- 65,000+ live TV channels. Not padded numbers — actual working channels. Sports, news, entertainment, regional content across USA, Canada, UK, Latin America, and Europe. I che

2026-06-07 原文 →