Email or username:

Password:

Forgot your password?
9 posts total
Alyssa Rosenzweig 💜

Wikipedia is teaching me that if you repeat something often enough it becomes true.

Alyssa Rosenzweig 💜

Trusting LLMs threatens your credibility.

I read a bogus claim about GPU instruction sets, cited to GPT-4 and an anonymous "expert". This is my area of expertise, I know the claim is demonstrably false. And now I know the author is relying on bullshit generators. Now I doubt every other claim the author makes, because with egregious errors in the parts I know about, how could I trust the parts I don't?

(Edit: narrowed the scope of the lead.)

Show previous comments
DrYak

@alyssa Yes! That!

Trusting what boils down to an "autocomplete on steroids" for answering you accurate informations is completely asinine.

At best, use it to reformulate nicely information that you know and you're feeding to it.

Or don't use it in scientific context at all.

Sigma

@alyssa@social.treehouse.systems
I sort of agree.
The issue is that some people think of LLMs as a knowledge systems, which they aren't.
But I don't think this means that they're just for entertainment either. There are legitimate use cases for making sense of garbled data for example. There is also emergent behavior, like problem solving, that will be really useful in the future, I think.

Alyssa Rosenzweig 💜

When I was 10, I came out as transgender. I was a girl and I knew it.

I was one of the lucky ones.

After four painful years, I was fortunate enough to access gender-affirming health care. First testosterone blockers. Later estrogen, the stuff my peers soaked in for years while I threw myself into software development to distract from pain.

Despite being old enough to go through the wrong puberty and suffer its permanent changes, it took four years to access the medical fix. Four years of gender therapy, hard talks with doctors, and a lot of determination.

There’s a vicious myth that kids just walk into clinics and leave with hormones. Quite the opposite.

I was lucky: my parents supported me, and by then we lived near San Francisco, where a gender clinic was willing to take me as patient.

I’m 21 now. I’ll be blunt: if not for gender-affirming care, I don’t know if I would be around. If there would be FOSS graphics drivers for Mali-T860 or the Apple M1.

If I were a few years younger, lived in the wrong part of the US, that may well be the reality, because gender-affirming care is banned for minors in conservative areas across the United States. Texas, for example, would threaten to take me from my loving parents under Greg Abbott’s directive.

Even now, I’m lucky I don’t live in the wrong place: the medication I’m prescribed is banned for adults in several American states.

I fear the 2024 election. How long until there’s a ban nationwide?

In high school, I knew this day might come. I applied to Canadian universities. Canada isn’t perfect, far from it. But stripping trans rights isn’t on the ballot yet.

Growing up, we liked visiting Florida.

Now there are travel advisories against it.

One recent Florida law threatens jail time if a trans person uses the bathroom - any bathroom - in a public space. I remember in high school, arguing back against “bathroom bills” designed to marginalize trans people. They seem tame next to the vile attacks on trans people championed by Ron DeSantis.

What’s next?

Does anybody remember the Nuremberg laws?

I was raised Jewish. Growing up, we were haunted by the spectre of the Holocaust. I knew queer Germans were in the cross-hairs alongside Jews. I didn’t know that Berlin was a queer centre before Hitler came to power.

In high school, I understood if fascists came to power in the United States, I might be first to go. Nazis had a special symbol for people like me: a pink triangle superimposed on a yellow triangle. I was 16 when I wondered if one day I would be forced to wear it.

In 2020, Donald Trump used the Nazi’s symbol for political prisoners – forced to be worn in camps – to threaten leftists in a campaign ad.

Subtle.

You don’t need to like Democrats, but I need you to understand that if you vote Republican in 2024, you vote erasure. You vote oppression. You vote fascism.

Maybe you “just have some concerns” about trans kids.

I was a trans kid, and I want you to know that DeSantis, Abbott, and Trump were my nightmares. Their policies will lead to the deaths of transgender Americans. With hundreds of GOP-sponsored anti-trans bills and laws simultaneously sweeping the United States, it’s hard to believe this isn’t by design.

It doesn’t have to be that way.

The trans experience isn’t inherently defined by suffering. Not for trans kids, not for trans adults.

When treated with respect, allowed to transition, when we can access the medication we know we need, life can be great.

Personally, I have felt virtually no gender-related discomfort in years now.

I once recoiled at my reflection. Now I look in the mirror and smile at the cute woman smiling back at me. I’m surrounded by lovely friends, and we support each other. Laugh together. Cry together. Text endless stickers of cartoon sharks together. Past the shared struggle, there is immense trans joy.

When we are made to suffer – by banning our medication, arresting us for peeing, legislating our identities out of existence on the road to establishing a theocratic state – that is a policy choice.

We’re not asking for much. We don’t want special treatment. We just want respect. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Right now I want legislators to get the fuck out of our doctors’ office.

I’m on the board overseeing Linux graphics. Half of us are trans. If all you care about is Linux, resist the attacks on trans people.

If you have any decency, fight back.

It’s your choice.

rosenzweig.io/blog/growing-up-

When I was 10, I came out as transgender. I was a girl and I knew it.

I was one of the lucky ones.

After four painful years, I was fortunate enough to access gender-affirming health care. First testosterone blockers. Later estrogen, the stuff my peers soaked in for years while I threw myself into software development to distract from pain.

Show previous comments
Momo

@alyssa
I'm from germany. One time my grandfather told me what it was like being a teenager in Nazi Germany. Especially being a teenager with a father who was a politician in the social democrats party when Hitler came to power. A father, my great-grandfather, who one day got arrested and deported to the Dachau concentration camp. Because he voted against the NSDAP.

Thanks for sharing, for me it was a gut punch. Because it's happening again. You have my keyboard!
@vaurora

@alyssa
I'm from germany. One time my grandfather told me what it was like being a teenager in Nazi Germany. Especially being a teenager with a father who was a politician in the social democrats party when Hitler came to power. A father, my great-grandfather, who one day got arrested and deported to the Dachau concentration camp. Because he voted against the NSDAP.

Sören

@alyssa 🩷🩵

Thank you for sharing, and your work on Asahi is very cool. (I’m German, so I can only look at the political developments in the US in horror.)

🐙🐇🐝Pointed Sarah🐞🐡🐧

@alyssa what makes me even more terrified about this is that relatively few people seem to understand how bad things currently. children are effectively being legally mandated to be tortured to death through dysphoria and nobody seems to care

Alyssa Rosenzweig 💜

sometimes i use x11. sometimes i use wayland. i don't care what you choose as long as you pick up the pieces when it breaks. the zen of display servers.

Alyssa Rosenzweig 💜

i think these days i'm running sway everywhere. so i guess wayland now. but it wasn't like i thought to myself "I should switch to x11/wayland/pineapples/whatever". i have computer problems and nowadays sway is the best tool for me 🤷‍♀️

though it probably helps that i'm a linux graphics dev and have stared into the x11 void.

(it stared back 🙀 )

...honestly x11 doesn't even start for me on half my machines (it's handling of split display/render hardware, including virtually all arm devices, is broken beyond repair so it is literally a coin toss where x11 + opengl will work on an arm device without piling on the hacks).

i think these days i'm running sway everywhere. so i guess wayland now. but it wasn't like i thought to myself "I should switch to x11/wayland/pineapples/whatever". i have computer problems and nowadays sway is the best tool for me 🤷‍♀️

though it probably helps that i'm a linux graphics dev and have stared into the x11 void.

Jasper Vinkenvleugel

@alyssa I once accidentally clicked the Wayland option on Fedora about 9 years ago and as far as I know it’s still on.

Fauzruk

@alyssa Like any wise developer would say: "To test is to doubt". 😁

Gareth Lewin

@alyssa How can there be bugs if code is never run?

Alex Schroeder

@alyssa I've used a similar line at the office 😆 "If you don't want to find any bugs, just stop testing already!"

Alyssa Rosenzweig 💜

I know GPU timeouts aren't good but with dmesg output this cute, I kind of look forward to them ^.^

Loving @lina's kernel driver so much. And the fault recovery is amazingly stable!

Ava :dognose: :transverified: :verified:

@alyssa @lina imagine a world where this gets accepted upstream, I'm living for that thought 😭​

Alyssa Rosenzweig 💜

Kodi on the Apple M1 GPU on Linux, open drivers as always 🔥​

Alyssa Rosenzweig 💜

Note that this is using the GPU to scale the video and convert colour spaces. The actual decompression of the video codec is still in software, that's not handled by the GPU but by a different block (the Apple Video Decoder, unrelated to the GPU).

Also, GNOME crashed due to out-of-memory since there miiiiight still be a memory leak or two 😅​

Dylan Van Assche

@alyssa Amazing work! I really like all the #ReverseEngineering work going around the #Apple hardware for #Linux. I don't have Apple hardware but I find it amazing what the #FOSS community can achieve by reverse engineering #proprietary blobs!

Alyssa Rosenzweig 💜

3D games on the Apple GPU on Linux, playable at 4K!

Mesa (OpenGL) driver by me, and the GPU kernel driver is by @lina. The shader compiler (part of Mesa) owes to the excellent instruction set reverse-engineering by @dougall.

Go Up