text
stringlengths 0
23.7k
| label
stringclasses 4
values | dataType
stringclasses 2
values | communityName
stringclasses 4
values | datetime
stringclasses 95
values |
---|---|---|---|---|
I've used a combination of yourube music, spotify, and other apps, but nothing comes close.
Youtube music autoplays a podcast 4 years old after playing a podcats of the last game...wtf google | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
How so? AFAIK Apple Pay/Google Wallet/previous incarnation of Google Pay in US all earn commission when end user makes transaction using them. I think for Apple Pay it was 0.15% per transaction. Similarly in UPI, a cut of interchange fee is received by Google. UPI is synonymous to Credit card network in the US and rest of the world. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
They won't give a reason, but the reason is always "We aren't seeing it generate enough cash to justify its existence."
About a decade ago the mantra "more wood behind fewer arrows" became common at Google. Rather than doing 100 things, some of which might be marginally successful, the goal was to put the limited number of engineers towards the biggest, highest impact things they can do.
A peer payment app is fine, but is it a world changing app when Zelle, Venmo, Cashapp, etc all exist? Does it give them some deep leverage into some other part of the business? No? Then fuck it.
Every Google product exists as a moonshot, after which it either becomes wildly independently successful, becomes a core support for their main revenue drivers, or it dies. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
CASH APP owes me $160, refuses to pay or even discuss so good luck with that everybody! | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Every time Google kills a product I start sweating for Scholar | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
they couldn't hide enough ads or steal enough data most likely. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Amazon Payments still works for buying iptv services 😬 | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
But Google pay is all over the world, not only USA. A lot of ppl use Google pay in India for p2p. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
google ads. as everything to them is for this purpose. maps too | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
The ads themselves aren't a problem so much as the way they're implemented. In order for content creators to get their share of revenue from ads, their content has to be considered 'monetizeable.' And videos can get demonetized for all kinds of stupid and arbitrary reasons. (But Youtube will still put ads on those videos, the uploaders of said videos just don't get any of the revenue). This has lead to a loss in genuinely interesting videos like they had in the old days of youtube, as videos now have to be formulaic in order to appease the algorithm. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Why don't you use Google Scholar for the scientific papers and google (normal) for your standard searches? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
How so? GCP is blindingly fast and has a far better Kubernetes implementation than either AWS or Azure. The APIs and user permissions are also more refined. You can also estimate your monthly costs without purchasing a third party tool. lol
I trained my team on GCP in under 30min. AWS takes a good week or two or more. It feels clunky and requires a ton of tooling to avoid boilerplate. Still, all three of them haven’t prevented me from accomplishing any task. GCP has just been faster to work with… and far less expensive. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Funny reading this from india | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Google podcasts:
open it. read titles and blurb on all recent podcasts I'm subbed to, pick one I want. compact enough to show 5-6 episodes on one screen.
if I was in the middle of one, just hit play.
Spotify:
open it. click podcasts. click on individual podcasts to see what's new, organized by each podcast. only fits 3 per screen. if I don't see anything interesting, go back, select different podcast.
or. open it. click my library. click podcasts. click new episodes. now a similar layout to Google's, but it only fits 2 per screen because the top is most recently played and everything takes a ton of space.
I can never just hit play if I'm in the middle of one because I've almost certainly played music in between listening to podcasts and that's what's currently paused.
suuuuuuper minor annoyance, but I prefer my music and podcast apps separate | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I felt that way too until about a year ago. The image search in DDG is still awful, but the regular search is at least as usable as Google results these days, given how Google results are so bent to seo now. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
What? Everyone uses Gpay in India. Shopkeepers even say "Gpay" when they mean "UPI". | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Those are the silliest complaint I’ve ever heard in my life. Being upset you have to scroll through down to see more podcasts is the most anal complaint I’ve heard in a long time. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Try startpage then. it basically imports google search results via a proxy. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
sure is!
good thing that "this could be better" != upset! | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
What did Android do? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Google Search is almost unusable these days.
They haven’t killed it, but I don’t know if I’d call this living. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
If you were not paying for it, you’re the product blah blah… but the big failure for Google IMO is that they fail to create sustainable business models and alienate that product, and at some point the ads golden goose will die. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
It's the amount of them that are rediculous. I don't watch YouTube anywhere but my desktop now except for shorts. It's worse than cable ever was. 1.5min ads every 2 minutes on most videos now. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
This is too real it hurts. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
The real question is why there still arent any consequences for the incompetent ceo. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Once again, Apple shows they are better. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
> if YT started out with ads or required you to pay.
YouTube left beta at the very end of 2005. Their first iteration of video ads came in February 2006, and the only reason it wasn't sooner was because the site was still a new and unknown entity at that point. YouTube effectively never existed without ads unless you're counting the beta period. It's *always* had ads under Google's ownership. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Funny enough Google started with Wallet, killed that to move to GPay, and now has killed GPay to go back to Wallet. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Ha, loved your positive answer as I struggle too.
You aren’t the only one with brain issues, I’m going through something too. It may be an unpopular opinion but some drugs are unhealthy for mental, and effects are lasting. It’s hard for me esp since it affects my career so strongly where I’m supposed to use my brain at work and it just not cooperating like it used to with memorization. I’m just starting to see a doctor about it. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Interesting how p2p is so uncommon outside of The Netherlands. We have p2p / payment requests in every banking app, it exploded with the release of an app called Tikkie from one of the big banks in 2016. The word tikkie, means to touching someone (as in "touch you're it") and is even recognized as a word by the biggest Dutch dictionary. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I do think it would provide a lot of conversation. Might be able to finally bond with that one colleague who's so ugh, you know?
(but yeah, it wouldn't be great) | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
My bank literally just announced full zelle integration in an updated privacy statement emailed to customers end of last week. It is a small regional bank that only covers a few states. Looks like things will get easier for folks banking with smaller institutions too. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I don’t know why anyone tries google apps anymore, they last just long enough for you to fall in love then they get cancelled. It just not worth getting invested. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
It knows what it did. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Although I bank with Chase and have had Zelle for years, my wife still banks with a small regional bank in Central Illinois (even though we live in Arizona now) and her bank got Zelle last year. It’s made it way easier for us to transfer money to the point where she doesn’t even consider switching banks now. If she needs cash, she just sends me money and I take it out of a chase atm.
I feel like within 5 years max all these other smaller banks are going to have Zelle too | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
> Which is funny because Android has been ahead of iPhone with most major features for years. Remember when iPhone couldn't copy paste?
Android 1.0 was released in September 2008. The iPhone got copy/paste in iPhone OS 3.0, announced in March 2009 and released in June 2009. In April 2009, Android 1.5 added copy/paste to the web browser. We're talking about a matter of months, but we're also talking about leapfrogging as both refined the interface for it over the years. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I just use DuckDuckGo now. I haven't noticed a change in the quality of results, and I find what I'm looking for on the first page 99 out of 100 searches. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Every time I visit my family in India, I am reminded by how well Google Pay works there. Practically every transaction, be it an online purchase or in person at a fruit seller down the street. All GPay, everywhere. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
>Youtube will still put ads on those videos, the uploaders of said videos just don't get any of the revenue
Man, this shit should be outlawed. It's like a book publisher saying "If we don't like the content of your book, we can still print and sell it without giving you any proceeds." | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
and that's how Google ended up with 5 chat apps. lol | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
They're already killing search and YouTube. The reason Gmail is so resilient is because is because it's hard to enshitify something as simple as email. I have no doubt that Google will try though. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
Yeah, I get that, but for a device to be picked up on the pebblebee network, other phones need to have the pebblebee app installed, right? Or does it work a different way? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
So Google does the hard work and Apple takes the idea and makes it prettier, but still much later.
I'd rather have the functionality in some form then have to wait on it being perfect | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
I guess it depends on the podcast. If I listen to Tosh Show on YouTube, there are no ads. If I listen to the same podcast on Pocket Casts, there is a block of ads right at the beginning, at the end, and a few times in the middle. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
Why is it so hard to find what I'm looking for on google nowadays? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
Hello! **Please read this message very carefully.**
Unfortunately, since your account is less than a week old and spam from new accounts makes up a significant portion of all spam, your post was automatically, temporarily removed. **Have a tech support question?** Please head over to /r/techsupport, /r/asktechnology, or other tech-centric subreddits listed on the sidebar.
You may still contribute and earn some karma by *commenting* on other existing posts in /r/technology instead. Additionally, you may make meaningful contributions to [other subreddits](/subreddits) to increase your karma count. Tech support questions/opinions/suggestion requests, surveys, blogs, and videos will **NOT** be approved. If this is a legitimate submission that is not covered in the previously listed criteria, please message the moderators to have them manually review your post, or wait a few days and try again.
Thank you!
*I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/technology) if you have any questions or concerns.* | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Unfortunately, this post has been removed. Image and video based submissions are not allowed by /r/technology.
Please try submitting to /r/TechnologyPorn, /r/Pics, /r/Gifs, or another image-based subreddit. Make sure to read the sidebar there! For videos, please try submitting to /r/Videos, /r/Video, /r/Documentaries, or another video-based subreddit.
*I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/technology) if you have any questions or concerns.* | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
Anti propaganda law on books since 1945 was neutered in 2013, thats why so much intentional disinformation. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
If all of the govts of the world decided they wanted to go carbon neutral in 10 years, the best way to do that would be to subsidize nuclear power plants all over the world.
It would cost about $2.5-3.5T to make nuclear the backbone of the US energy grid and account for the vast majority of US power. Now, if there was real political energy around zero carbon emissions, nuclear would absolutely be the plan. But there isn't, so since the economics suck, no one is going to do it | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Repairing wind turbines is a six figure job. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Yeah and if you get 9 women together, they can make a baby in a month. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Korea regularly builds plants in less than 60 months | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I worked down a t vogtle 3 & 4. Ain't nothing small about them. We need to scale it down even more. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
They're smaller than their traditional counterparts, but only in that particular relative sense would anyone call them small. I agree, I'm curious how small they can go before we start bumping up against fundamental limits, be they economic or physical. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Aside from CO2, we don't release most coal waste into the air or water either.
Coal ash piles should be compared to tailing piles at uranium mines, where all the radium ends up. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
The EPA disagrees. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
The EPA says most coal waste is shot into the air and water?
Please don't be a lying liar who lies. The EPA's regulations are precisely why that doesn't occur. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
how is chatgpt a scam? it is really, really good though not perfect by any means and saying sam is a grifter scam artist, thereby implying the product is a scam is an extremely stupid thing to say.
it has revolutionized how I work, think and interact with information and the internet and the same for millions of others. It will go down as one of the most important moments in the history of this decade and possibly the century. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
Look at this fucking chud right here. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
It’s not worth a billion dollars or a million dollars, it’s absolutely a scam | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
Lmao I guess you know better than Tim Cook? Legit. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
I’ve mostly had Lenovo laptops for the last decade, so they must be different. They have a separate update service for firmware and Lenovo specific drivers. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
The Elitebook x360 1030 G3 was awesome. The G4 to G7 crap or middling. Not sure about the G8 and G9 and jury still out on the G10. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Slapping two piles of shit together does not make a golden nugget | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
So far every fucking CEO type for this type of AI companies look like your typical "Tech Bro" type.
As other comment mentioned, these are the type of grifters that initially pushed the NFT-Crypto agenda some years ago.
Sad thing, people is still falling into this shady guruish types. But as history has shown, give them one or max two years before their entire system collapse. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
> Academia is never behind, though. Every innovation pipeline starts with academia and research, once the technology is business viable the industry comes in and matures the technology.
That's simply not true in all cases. The groundbreaking paper that made the current AI jump possible is [Attention is All You Need](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attention_Is_All_You_Need), which was published by AI researches at *DeepMind*.
>Also, being an associate professor is nothing to scuff at. It really shows the ignorance on your side.
Compare to the army of PhDs working at DeepMind and OpenAI? No, an associate professor by itself isn't enough credibility to be a naysayer to a whole industry.
>Sry, that is just BS. Sora always seemed possible. It just a more advance version of deepfakes which have existed for years.
Sorry I mis-phrased it. People definitely thought it was possible (but it's not a more advanced version of deepfakes), but most people in academia didn't think it would have been this good this quickly. People were working on Ph.D thesis on video generation and a lot of that had to be scratched earlier this year. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
You forgot the laughing part | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
JEPA is really interesting in what could come after LLMs or something of a symbiosis of the 2. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
Computers basically did that. Advancement in tech added more specific roles.
Marketing has always been overpriced and bloated. The amount that marketing gets is absurd. They're the police departments of the corporate world in that they're given way too much power and money for a return that less would still accomplish. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
Amazon Wiretap Services | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
No, a chiplet is a different piece of silicon that is placed in the same package. Chiplets are often GPU or memory. They are made on their own, but share the same package as the die containing the CPU.
Flow uses the term "IP" and "same silicon".
IP, is intellectual property, and in this context means logic that you license from them, and put inside your own chip designs. It sits on the exact same piece of silicon as the CPU and is fabbed at the same time. It appears to be deeply integrated into the CPU data flow.
Same Silicon appears to indicate it shares the same physical die as the CPU and is manufactured at exactly the same time.
This happens all the time. Companies might design their own CPU, but license someone else's video decoder or GPU. They take the video decoder design from the source company, and integrate it into the same chip as their CPU design. It becomes one larger design. They are very tightly coupled at that point. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
It appears to be deeply integrated into the dataflow of the CPU as well as its pipeline. It appears to have deep understanding what is coming from the caches and what is being pipelined cycle-to-cycle. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
would be curious to see this added to a Snapdragon. I dont expect Intel, or AMD would get into this before someone else does - but ARM? why not? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
it's got a pretty high chance of that, since it would require one of the chip manufacturers to take the chance, license the tech, and redesign a processor with this installed on it.
I really wonder whos willing to bet on it. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
I fairly certain this is what Apple Silicon does with the SoC co-processor. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
The licensable IP is still in development, and the speedup applies only to threaded code. For insight, see this article: https://xpu.pub/2024/06/11/flow-ppu/ | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
It sounds like this can make existing, routine processes more efficient by choosing optimal processing routes? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Imagine the side effects of running sequential loops in parallel all of a sudden. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Is this luke downloadable ram ? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
Yup seems to be tailors for tasks that already have a degree of parallelism involved. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
> Flow is just now emerging from stealth, with €4 million (about $4.3 million) in pre-seed funding led by Butterfly Ventures, with participation from FOV Ventures, Sarsia, Stephen Industries, Superhero Capital and Business Finland.
That's the amount they've already raised. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
The chip will still need to be integrated into the motherboard/Soc/as a chiplet which means a new set of hardware and drivers.
So not it won't work on "existing hardware" even if the claims are verified.
They are looking to partner with other chip designers so they can license out the technology at best for new processors. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-12-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
It's my presumption that Vision Pro and Meta Quest are "help us R&D better and smaller display / eye tracking tech until it replaces your phone" more than anything else. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
Corporations don't have ethics; they have shareholders, lawyers, accountants, friendly politicians and deep pockets. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Ohhh, that explains why AI is able to produce pictures of children. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Not AI , corporations due to the dogshit privacy and consent policies of the US of fucking A. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
|
Nice while it lasted | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-11-06 |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.