Recommended Posts

That 'bigotry' wouldn't exist without the bible. It's clearly known that before Rome or japan was influenced by Christianity that homosexuality was accepted. Clearly we're dealing with religious principles here stemming from the Jewish tradition and spread to Christians and Muslims

 

That bigotry also wouldn't exist without people like you who don't think that a man and woman of two different races can truly be in love and involved in a deeply committed relationship.

 

It's funny how you use the Bible as both an excuse for bigotry and a validation of it... Of course, it's not like you're a person of free will who is capable of coming to their own conclusions without the Bible telling you what to think.

seriously. This is the equivalent of state performed baptisms. Clearly not a proper government function

If marriages didn't come with 1,138 federal rights, protections and responsibilities, like baptisms, you might be right. But, they do, and you're not.

The fact you felt the need to add the second line is also incredibly telling symptom of ingrained prejudice.

 

I advise you to research what constitutes discrimination (specifically homophobia in this case) and ingrained bias/prejudice, there are plenty of academic studies on the topic.

 

Personally, I don't have any black friends.

 

I also don't have any red friends, yellow friends, pink friends, green friends, blue friends or even any ultramarine with orange spots friends!

 

What I DO have, is a whole bunch of friends who may or may not have the same colour skin as me; I've never really bothered to take any notice, tbh.

  • Like 3

He doesn't like city folk... it looks at them funny and calls them names...

 

I don't think he'd take kindly to a homosexual, even if they were wearing an adorable camo top... :p

He said, and I quote:

"The first thing you see coming out of them is gross sexual immorality. They will dishonor their bodies with one another. Degrade each other... ...Women with women, men with men, they committed indecent acts with one another. And they received in themselves the penalty for their perversion. They are full of murder, envy, strife, hatred. They are insolent, arrogant God-haters. They are heartless, they are faithless, they are senseless, they are ruthless. They invent ways of doing evil."

- Phil Robertson

 

So basically, he's an even bigger bunghole than I thought and just dislikes anyone who doesn't suck up to his particular invisible sky friend.

let me rephrase that. no one could validly oppose interracial marriage from a religious morality... quite unlike homosexual acts which the bible calls an abomination.

 

 

my solution is to get rid of all legal marriage. why is the government even administering something so personal? what truly valid reason does the government have to know who you regularly sleep with?

 

I say the same applies to religion as well. What business is it of a bunch of priests who you regularly sleep with?

 

The only thing that matters really is that two people are in love and wish to commit their lives to each other. The Christian religion instructs its followers to love their fellow man :p, so what's the damned problem?

  • Like 2

People seem to forget that KingCracker.. that he didn't really force his opinion on anyone - people are calling this man a homophobe when he isn't ..he simply doesn't agree with the homosexual lifestyle..and he's allowed to feel that way, it doesn't make him a homophobe

 

Bigots often use rationalisations like that to make themselves feel better. If you're not a bigot the only answer you really should give is "what 2 consenting adults do in the privacy of their home isn't any of my business". They're not exactly trying to turn him gay so really he has no beef with them.

 

 

Not really. That has been my position all along. I defended it and I don't care what you think. You and a lot of people are to sensitive these days. 

 

You mean the same anger and sensitivity you display when the topic of gun control comes up? I do like that you display your hypocrisy so openly (Y). Trying to force gay people to accept christian theocractic laws is just as unconstitutional as banning guns, yet 1 gets you irrationally angry and one doesn't. Like all hypocrites you only love free speech when it's used in defence of a viewpoint you agree with.

Bigots often use rationalisations like that to make themselves feel better. If you're not a bigot the only answer you really should give is "what 2 consenting adults do in the privacy of their home isn't any of my business". They're not exactly trying to turn him gay so really he has no beef with them.

 

 

So basically no one should believe in anything? As long as it's out of sight go for it? Not very societal of you.

Bigots often use rationalisations like that to make themselves feel better. If you're not a bigot the only answer you really should give is "what 2 consenting adults do in the privacy of their home isn't any of my business". They're not exactly trying to turn him gay so really he has no beef with them.

 

If this thread is any indication , more people have indulged in  holier than thou pontifications to make themselves feel better than "bigots"

I stand by what I said end of story. If you get butt hurt by someones opinion that doesn't make them a homophobe.

 

Obviously you don't, since you keep trying to act like you didn't spend the last 2-3 pages trying to argue a man with clearly homophobic viewpoints is not homophobic.

 

If anyone is "butt hurt" here, it is you trying to rationalise away your prejudices.

 

Personally, I don't have any black friends.

 

I also don't have any red friends, yellow friends, pink friends, green friends, blue friends or even any ultramarine with orange spots friends!

 

What I DO have, is a whole bunch of friends who may or may not have the same colour skin as me; I've never really bothered to take any notice, tbh.

 

Well said.

Which would also be a violation of his freedom of speech as well. Many have come out as gay, but are they fired/suspended from their career? Nope.

 

 

 

He is voicing his opinion on homo marriage.

 

The only think his employer can violate is his employment contract and any clauses therein.

:laugh:, well a birth detect wouldn't relegate the issue to only the human species so your argument is sound on that level. But, a genetic basis doesn't necessarily imply that something needs to be passed down in a conventional sense from parent to offspring (like eye color). A biological basis could simply be that it is inherit in all members of a species and that it occurs because there are evolutionary benefits for a species that exhibit homosexuality:

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn13674-evolution-myths-natural-selection-cannot-explain-homosexuality.html#.Urfjb_RDu38

the only thing evolution rewards are traits that cause a person to have more/stronger viable offspring that also have offspring. A gay gene wouldn't be passed on.

If this thread is any indication , more people have indulged in  holier than thou pontifications to make themselves feel better than "bigots"

 

That's generally an easier thing to do. It's very easy to attack people as a group when there are more of you and less of them voicing their opinion. I think a lot of times that sanity and thoughtfulness are drowned out in the process. Why should we consider what people are actually saying or treat them rationally when it is easier to just name-call and say others are bigoted/racist/homophobic? At the end of the day, for controversial topics, it just tends to be that the winners dirty their hands just as much as the losers in the debate. Well... no-one really wins in the end.

 

I'm for 100% for LBGTQ marriage and rights, but in this thread I've called people on both sides of the spectrum because people are simply putting forth bad arguments all around and doing what you say -- making holier than thou pontifications. And that is simply not how one should have a debate or treat other people. If you are arguing in bad faith, then you shouldn't be arguing at all.

 

Ah, but I digress from the topic...

the only thing evolution rewards are traits that cause a person to have more/stronger viable offspring that also have offspring. A gay gene wouldn't be passed on.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recessive_trait
  • Like 1

the only thing evolution rewards are traits that cause a person to have more/stronger viable offspring that also have offspring. A gay gene wouldn't be passed on.

 

Evolution rewards a species survival, viableness, and fitness not an individuals only. There's an important distinction between the two. The former can and does encompass the latter, but the latter alone is not a viable means for continued existence. Survival of the fitness gets you no-where if you've managed to doom the existence of the species except for yourself and a select few. This is the entire reason why societal evolution exists in the animal kingdom because creating societies helped species survive. If homosexual tendencies indirectly increases the reproductive chances for success in some manner then yes it could be inherit in the evolution of the species...

That's generally an easier thing to do. It's very easy to attack people as a group when there are more of you and less of them voicing their opinion. I think a lot of times that sanity and thoughtfulness are drowned out in the process. Why should we consider what people are actually saying or treat them rationally when it is easier to just name-call and say others are bigoted/racist/homophobic? At the end of the day, for controversial topics, it just tends to be that the winners dirty their hands just as much as the losers in the debate. Well... no-one really wins in the end.

 

I'm for 100% for LBGTQ marriage and rights, but in this thread I've called people on both sides of the spectrum because people are simply putting forth bad arguments all around and doing what you say -- making holier than thou pontifications. And that is simply not how one should have a debate or treat other people. If you are arguing in bad faith, then you shouldn't be arguing at all.

 

Ah, but I digress from the topic...

 

Excellent and thoughtful post. I'm also for gay marriage and rights from a legal standpoint. I think if two law abiding people want to live together and partner, they should be given the same legal and financial rights as a heterosexual couple doing the same. Though I would prefer those rights be given to civil unions as I do believe marriage is or should be between a man and a woman. For that I am considered homophobic. So be it.

  • Like 2

Evolution rewards a species survival, viableness, and fitness not an individuals only. There's an important distinction between the two. The former can and does encompass the latter, but the latter alone is not a viable means for continued existence. Survival of the fitness gets you no-where if you've managed to doom the existence of the species except for yourself and a select few. This is the entire reason why societal evolution exists in the animal kingdom because creating societies helped species survive. If homosexual tendencies indirectly increases the reproductive chances for success in some manner then yes it could be inherit in the evolution of the species...

 

Yes. We are not animals. We are sentient beings something evolution does not address.

 

If you're at home with your family having a peaceful night, everyone blissfully asleep, and a couple armed home invaders come in and you and your family are staring down the barrel of a shotgun, based on survival of the fittest, they have all rights to blow you away, take your stuff, and move on to the weaklings sleeping next door. When we apprehend them, they shouldn't be punished and face justice for their dastardly deeds, we should exalt them for being more "fit" for life than the family they snuffed out.

That's generally an easier thing to do. It's very easy to attack people as a group when there are more of you and less of them voicing their opinion. I think a lot of times that sanity and thoughtfulness are drowned out in the process. Why should we consider what people are actually saying or treat them rationally when it is easier to just name-call and say others are bigoted/racist/homophobic? At the end of the day, for controversial topics, it just tends to be that the winners dirty their hands just as much as the losers in the debate. Well... no-one really wins in the end.

 

I'm for 100% for LBGTQ marriage and rights, but in this thread I've called people on both sides of the spectrum because people are simply putting forth bad arguments all around and doing what you say -- making holier than thou pontifications. And that is simply not how one should have a debate or treat other people. If you are arguing in bad faith, then you shouldn't be arguing at all.

 

Ah, but I digress from the topic...

 

This is a tone argument.

 

I can appreciate your position here, but prejudice is still prejudice at the end of the day - no matter how nicely you wrap it up or sugarcoat it.

Cracker Barrel, after outcry, resumes selling 'Duck Dynasty' products
 
 

 

Cracker Barrel has heeded to an old adage: The customer is always right.

Late Sunday, the Tennessee-based restaurant chain, which has 625 locations in 42 states, reversed course and said it would resume selling "Duck Dynasty" merchandise.
Customer outcry, the company said, forced it to reevaluate its decision to stop carrying merchandise from the popular reality TV show after controversial comments made by the show's star in a recent magazine interview.
"You told us we made a mistake," the company said on its Facebook page. "And, you weren't shy about it. You wrote, you called and you took to social media to express your thoughts and feelings. You flat out told us we were wrong. We listened. Today, we are putting all our Duck Dynasty products back in our stores."
 

 

  • Like 1

Yes. We are not animals. We are sentient beings something evolution does not address.

 

If you're at home with your family having a peaceful night, everyone blissfully asleep, and a couple armed home invaders come in and you and your family are staring down the barrel of a shotgun, based on survival of the fittest, they have all rights to blow you away, take your stuff, and move on to the weaklings sleeping next door. When we apprehend them, they shouldn't be punished and face justice for their dastardly deeds, we should exalt them for being more "fit" for life than the family they snuffed out.

 

Except we are animals, and we aren't the only sentient species on the planet.

This is a tone argument.

 

I can appreciate your position here, but prejudice is still prejudice at the end of the day - no matter how nicely you wrap it up or sugarcoat it.

 

:rolleyes: You are misrepresenting the concept of a tonal argument. In short, it is making the argument that X person would be more like to listen to an argument if Y person changed tones. I am not making this argument. I'm saying that the majority of the people in his thread have simply been throwing ad hominems and other logical fallacies around in place of an actual argument because it is easier to do than actually have a rational discussion.

 

As you well know, I've made it very explicit where people were committing logical fallacies on both sides. Name calling and personal attacks are not valid or rational arguments.

 

Or are you making the argument that repeatedly calling someone a homophobe and bigot isn't a ad hominem; isn't name calling; and isn't a logical fallacy?

Except we are animals, and we aren't the only sentient species on the planet.

 

1) It depends on whose definition of animal you subscribe to. Some describe animal as any living thing that is not a human or plant. 2) By definition we are not the only sentient species.

 

What we are are mammals. The only ones with no inherent protection from the elements like most animals.

 

None of which create an exception to the scenario presented.

:rolleyes: You are misrepresenting the concept of a tonal argument. In short, it is making the argument that X person would be more like to listen to an argument if Y person changed tones. I am not making this argument. I'm saying that the majority of the people in his thread have simply been throwing ad hominems and other logical fallacies around in place of an actual argument because it is easier to do than actually have a rational discussion.

 

As you well know, I've made it very explicit where people were committing logical fallacies on both sides. Name calling and personal attacks are not valid or rational arguments.

 

Or are you making the argument that repeatedly calling someone a homophobe and bigot isn't a ad hominem; isn't name calling; and isn't a logical fallacy?

 

No, calling someone who is homophobic a homophobe is absolutely not ad hominem, it's a valid descriptor of what that person is.

 

This is why I linked the article about tone arguments, while you might not be making that exact form of tone argument set out in the article - the end result is the same, you're drawing attention to the tone rather than the content.

 

While there are people in this thread confusing prejudice with bigotry, this thread is still full of both. And quite honestly, that is a far bigger issue than the use of some fallacies.

No, calling someone who is homophobic a homophobe is absolutely not ad hominem, it's a valid descriptor of what that person is.

 

This is why I linked the article about tone arguments, while you might not be making that exact form of tone argument set out in the article - the end result is the same, you're drawing attention to the tone rather than the content.

 

While there are people in this thread confusing prejudice with bigotry, this thread is still full of both. And quite honestly, that is a far bigger issue than the use of some fallacies.

 

Fill in the blank:

No, calling someone who is ______ a ______ is absolutely not ad hominem, it's a valid descriptor of what that person is. See how that works with all pejoratives?

 

 

Use of homophobiahomophobic, and homophobe has been criticized as pejorative against LGBT rights opponentsBehavioral scientists William O'Donohue and Christine Caselles state that "as [homophobia] is usually used, makes an illegitimately pejorative evaluation of certain open and debatable value positions, much like the former disease construct of homosexuality" itself, arguing that the term may be used as an ad hominem argument against those who advocate values or positions of which the user does not approve.[111]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homophobia

 

  • Like 1
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • When I think about a network, there are really two aspects, the hardware and the wiring. So here is what I would do for both. Wiring: Use Cat6A for the patch panel and all structured cables (cables installed in walls). Run plenty of Wireless Access Point (WAP) cables, as a general rule, assume a signal can only pass through 2-3 walls and can't pass through a floor (that is conservative, but trust me on this if you want strong WiFi)  Cat6 patch cables are fine for now if you don't plan to run 10gig, those are easy to replace later if needed. Run OS2 single-mode fiber to anywhere you think you may have a server or sub-switch. (yes, single-mode for everything on a small network, don't mess with multimode unless you have entire racks of servers and that minor module cost and power savings will matter). If you really want to future proof, also run fiber to any high density WAP locations, it is likely that WiFi 8 WAPs will push the limits of 10g. Run 6-12 pairs of single-mode fiber between your MDF and the building's MDF, even if you only need 1 or 2 pairs now, those extra pairs will pay off down the road. Hardware: (its easy to say "get all the features incase you need them", so instead of futureproofing, I am going to take approach of suggesting areas worth investing in, and areas you can save money). Don't overspend thinking you need every feature on every port. You don't need 10g on every port, you don't need PoE on every port. Don't overspend on redundancy either, unless you are ready to buy two of everything, don't waste money buying two of some things and not others. Dual power supplies are worthwhile, but probably not HA or multi-path redundancy.  Get 1 "distribution layer" switch that your router/firewall will connect to, your access layer switches. This should be a 10g switch with a combination of copper and SPF ports and should be a fully managed switch. Given that you said it is a small network, I suggest also using that distribution layer switch for servers and WAPs, meaning it will need PoE. Speaking of wireless, get good professional tri-band WAPs, and either turn on the band stirring options, or limit 2.4 to an IoT only SSID. This will provide a solid WiFi capable nearly everything but the highest of bandwidth clients...you could even consider skipping wiring workstations depending on usage. Access layer switch for workstations and printers can be cheaper switches, 2.5g is a good sweet spot between price and future proofing, but even 1g is fine for most individual clients (the kind that could probably be fine on WiFi). You can consider saving a little on access layer switches by only getting 1 PoE switch for whatever needs it (remember your WAPs are connecting to the distribution switch, not here), and non-PoE for your workstations, because desk phones are falling out of favor. You can also save money here by not buying managed switches if you don't need them--but really do some soul searching there, if you go this route, then anything that isn't on your workstation VLAN would either need to be connected to the distribution switch, or its own switch. Also, don't feel like you need a fancy fabric stacking switches for your access layer, that is the point of the higher-end distribution layer, to remove the need for things like that at this level. Home Hardware: I'm realizing the above assumed an office setting, if this if for your house and home lab then the above still applies, but you'll probably want everything managed and PoE, just because, but you probably also don't need multiple access layer switches. if your total port count is below 24, just skip separating distribution layer and access layer and just get one nice switch with the features you want. For home use, don't worry about home running every device to the main switch, there is nothing wrong with running sub-switches for your media areas and office, those essentially become your access layer, just look for sub-switches with a 10g uplink so sharing bandwidth isn't an issue.
    • Google Meet brings Gemini note-taking to AI Pro and Ultra subscribers by Karthik Mudaliar Google's Gemini-powered "Take notes for me" feature inside Google Meet is now available to Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers. The features work on Google Meet for web as well as on mobile, and Google says that subscribers can use it for meetings they host in many supported languages. As the name suggests, "Take notes for me" allows Gemini to listen to a meeting, generate a summary, identify action items, and save the notes as a Google Doc in the user’s Drive. After the meeting, the organizer receives an email recap with the summary and action items, while the notes can also be attached to the related Calendar event depending on the meeting setup and sharing settings. The feature isn't automatically turned on for everyone, though. Google says that all meeting participants are notified when note-taking is turned on, and users can start it from the pencil icon in Meet or enable it for future calls through Meet’s meeting records settings. For work or school accounts, administrators can also control whether the feature is available and may require explicit participant consent for note-taking, recording, or transcription features. The feature first launched back in 2024, when it was available just for selected Workspace users. Over the years, Google added refinements and more options, including the ability to enable it when scheduling meetings via Google Calendar. Google's support docs say that the feature currently supports English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, and Spanish, but only one language at a time. Meetings with multiple spoken languages are not currently supported, and Google recommends using the tool for meetings between 15 minutes and eight hours. The new feature makes Google Meet closer to its rivals that have AI tools already built in. Microsoft Teams has recently started offering Copilot and intelligent recap features that summarize meetings, surface highlights, and help with follow-ups, while Zoom’s AI Companion can also generate meeting summaries from desktop and mobile meetings.
    • GnuCash 5.16 by Razvan Serea GnuCash is a personal and small business finance application, freely licensed under the GNU GPL and available for GNU/Linux, BSD, Solaris, Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows. It’s designed to be easy to use, yet powerful and flexible. GnuCash allows you to track your income and expenses, reconcile bank accounts, monitor stock portfolios and manage your small business finances. It is based on professional accounting principles to ensure balanced books and accurate reports. GnuCash can keep track of your personal finances in as much detail as you prefer. If you are just starting out, use GnuCash to keep track of your checkbook. You may then decide to track cash as well as credit card purchases to better determine where your money is being spent. When you start investing, you can use GnuCash to help monitor your portfolio. Buying a vehicle or a home? GnuCash will help you plan the investment and track loan payments. If your financial records span the globe, GnuCash provides all the multiple-currency support you need. Between 5.15 and 5.16, the following bugfixes were accomplished: Bug 421610 - RFE: Include logical dates for View->Filter by "date range"The Select Range section of the Date tab of the register's Filter By dialog box is changed to provide relative, specific date, or days ago options for the start and end of the filter range. The Show number of days item label is changed to Show from days ago to better reflect what it does. Bug 436105 - esc key not working as expected in register: Enable the escape key to cancel a field edit. Bug 797384 - Gnucash doesn't handle commodity prices with big numerator/denominator properly. Bug 798004 - Next gen UI for stock transactions Bug 799314 - Add "enter now" option in scheduled transaction editor. tab to allow users to select the scheduled transactions to be included in a “Since Last Run…” window. If there are no instances of a selected transaction triggered by today’s date, the next instance is triggered. Bug 799751 - autocomplete crash Bug 799759 - Users can't Enable entries via Checkboxes on Scheduled Transactions PageAllow the Enabled box in the list of scheduled transactions to be operated instead of having to open the transaction editor dialog and change the Enabled checkbox. Also added use of the Name column as the secondary column sort for all the other columns. Bug 799762 - Poor handling of cases where hidden/placeholder accounts are used in the account register Bug 799766 - Double line preference not respected in search register Bug 799767 - POST /accounts in bindings/python/example_scripts/rest-api is broken Bug 799777 - `xaccSplitSetParent`: reparenting a committed split silently drops its KVP slots (online_id, cap-gains links) Other changes & improvements: Numeric values may now be selected to copy in the Accounts page. Add new Finance::Quote source Finnhub.io: Free API key (personal/non-professional use) available at https://finnhub.io. Set FINNHUB_API_KEY environment variable to API key to use this source. As of June 2026, free tier API limit is 60 API calls/minute. The Investment Lots report has new optional columns for Computed Annual Growth Rate. Python Bindings: Improved translation of primary object (Account, Transaction, Split, etc.) so that they can be treated as normal Python objects. This is accomplished with SWIG magic so no existing code is obsoleted. Python Bindings: Better conversion of GLists to Python lists. Python Bindings: Destroy the QofSession in the Python Session dtor to prevent leaving the database locked. [engine] Add first-class online_id accessors for Split and Account and make them available to Python bindings, removing the unused Transaction online_id property. Improve C++ implementation of QofBook. Correct the Doxygen doc for qof_instance_get/set_kvp. [gnc-log-replay.cpp] fix incorrect guid dump Add some Boost library requirements needed by libgnucash-guile to CMakeLists.txt so that missing feature will fail at configure time. Use Compile-time Regular Expressions instead of std::regex in gnc-filepath-utils.cpp and instead of boost::regex in the CSV importer, with the CTRE v3.11.1 header added to borrowed [gnc-filepath-utils.cpp] null check char* arguments Add ChartJS licenses. Removed AEX from list of commodities. euronext.com is now using JS based anti-webscraping. [report-core] always offer options summary in reports. This is useful to debug reports. The Add options summary option is removed because it's no longer optional. Remove remaining obsolete IMContext from sheet Fix blurry text in HiDPI offscreen-rendered widgets Add port field to database connection dialog: The convention of appending the port number after the host isn't obvious. When editing a split in the register treat the account as being changed only if it isn't the one selected before editing instead of if the user performed an edit Return immediately from qof_book_destroy if hash_of_collections is null. If qof_book_destroy is called on a QofBook* freshly created with qof_book_new (usually because it was used to create a session that now must be destroyed) it would try to empty the non-existent hash tables, crashing. Clean up Flathub metadata to solve warnings at flatpak build time. Be consistent in naming GncPluginPage and GncPluginPageRegister HTML: Remove unimplemented function declarations. [gnc-html.cpp] remove unused buggy string conversion functions Convert libgnc-html to C++ Apply -Wall -Werr -Wmissing-prototypes to C++ compilation on Windows and fix the resulting errors. New and Updated Translations: Arabic, Croatian, Danish, Dutch, German, Finnish, Hungarian, Korean, Norwegian-Bokmal, Spanish Download: GnuCash 5.16 | 176.0 MB (Open Source) Links: GnuCash Home page | Other Operating Systems | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Microsoft finally launches WSL Containers in public preview by David Uzondu Microsoft has announced that WSL containers, a feature that allows developers to run Linux containers natively inside Windows without the need for Docker Desktop, is now available in public preview several weeks after Microsoft previewed it at Build 2026. To use the new container feature, you first have to install the latest pre-release version of the Windows Subsystem for Linux by running a quick update command in your terminal: wsl --update --pre-release After installing, you'd get access to the new Linux container CLI (wslc.exe) and the programmable API. Microsoft said that the CLI has a "familiar format" that matches the toolsets developers already use every day. If you know standard Docker commands, your muscle memory will translate directly to wslc.exe, which even features a built-in alias called container.exe. You can quickly run a full Ubuntu KDE desktop container by exposing ports, or pass your graphics card straight into a machine learning environment to run PyTorch workloads. Passing the --gpus all flag inside the run command instantly links your hardware. Image via Microsoft As for the API, developers can now embed Linux container operations directly inside native Windows applications without exposing the command line to users. The team integrated the API directly into MSBuild and CMake, so developers can define container steps directly in project files. Apart from bringing the CLI and API into public preview, Microsoft also said that it's working on a new default file system called virtiofs to speed up file transfer rates between Windows and Linux. Microsoft also introduced an experimental networking mode named consomme, which resolves compatibility issues with corporate VPNs by routing Linux network traffic straight through Windows. One thing to note about WSL containers is that they don't run in your standard WSL distributions; instead, every application and CLI session spawns its own lightweight Hyper-V utility VM in the background. This basically reduces the chances of one app snooping on the container of another app.
    • Google reportedly limited Meta's Gemini access over limited AI compute by Karthik Mudaliar Google is reportedly limiting Meta's use of its Gemini AI models after Meta tried buying more computing capacity than even Google could supply. According to the Financial Times, Google told Meta in March that it could not provide the full Gemini capacity that Meta had requested. This shortfall even disrupted and delayed some of Meta's internal projects. Due to this, Meta even told its employees internally to use AI tokens more efficiently. Meta wasn't the only one to get hit by this sudden refusal by Google; even other customers were affected. But Meta was hit harder because of its unusually high demand for Google's models. The move from Google makes it evident that companies all over are in limited supply of both infrastructure and compute. Alphabet said in April that Google Cloud revenue grew 63% year-over-year to $20 billion in the first quarter, helped by enterprise AI infrastructure and AI solutions. In pursuit of more compute, Meta had earlier signed a multi-billion-dollar AWS agreement as well as a large AMD GPU deal for AI data centers. But the crunch would be short-lived as both Meta and Google have also ramped up infrastructure investments heavily. Meta said in November that it was committing more than $600 billion in the U.S. by 2028 for AI technology, infrastructure, and workforce expansion. In the first quarter of this year, Meta also raised its expected capital expenditure for 2026 to a range of $125 billion to $145 billion, citing higher component pricing and additional data center costs for future capacity. However, this doesn't make the company immune to the current dependence on outside suppliers. Meta has also spent many years promoting Llama as an open-weight alternative to closed models from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic. But if the reported reliance on Google's Gemini models is severe enough for internal work to get impacted, then it looks like even frontier labs and Big Tech aren't fully self-sufficient. Source: Financial Times
  • Recent Achievements

    • Reacting Well
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      BA the Curmudgeon earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      rosiecharles earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      KMilenkoski1202 earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      533
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      269
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      150
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      98
    5. 5
      macoman
      66
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!