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875

The average person sees no value in it and has no real interest. They just see something that costs more that they don't understand.

Archive: https://archive.today/rGYjR

From the post:

>Intel has tried to position itself at the forefront of the AI PC revolution, but based on the company's latest financial report, it looks like that revolution isn't happening yet. Despite offering dozens of AI-enabled PCs packing a Meteor Lake, Lunar Lake, or even more recently, Arrow Lake, CPU, Intel says that its older generations are seeing "much greater demand," as reported by Tom's Hardware.

The average person sees no value in it and has no real interest. They just see something that costs more that they don't understand. Archive: https://archive.today/rGYjR From the post: >>Intel has tried to position itself at the forefront of the AI PC revolution, but based on the company's latest financial report, it looks like that revolution isn't happening yet. Despite offering dozens of AI-enabled PCs packing a Meteor Lake, Lunar Lake, or even more recently, Arrow Lake, CPU, Intel says that its older generations are seeing "much greater demand," as reported by Tom's Hardware.

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

We were afraid of computers turning evil, turning against us, trying to kill us, eliminate us, or to begin believing they are also human, but we never thought that their biggest problem would be the hallucinations on a constant acid trip.

The one thing we all took for granted was the exactness of ones and zeroes. Go figure they now exhibit bi-polar disorder with pathological tendencies.