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My 'Microsoft Never Invents' rant
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By Xerxes · Posted
Same, never saw it on Android or iOS. Guess only some people got it *shrugs* -
By pradeepviswav · Posted
Anthropic pulls Fable 5 and Mythos 5 after US export control order by Pradeep Viswanathan In April this year, Anthropic launched the Claude Mythos Preview frontier model with state-of-the-art cyber and coding capabilities for a select set of companies around the world. After preparing appropriate guardrails, early this week, Anthropic launched Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5, its most capable AI models. Claude Fable 5 is for general users and comes with strict safeguards, while Mythos 5 is designed with fewer safeguards for cybersecurity and biology use cases. Today, Anthropic abruptly suspended access to its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models for all customers after receiving an export control directive from the US government. The company received the directive from the government today at 5:21 p.m. ET, and the received letter did not provide any details regarding the national security concern. Anthropic understands that the government became aware of a method to bypass, or “jailbreak,” Fable 5, which might be the reason behind the directive. The order was issued under national security authorities and requires the company to suspend all access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, whether they are inside or outside the United States. The restriction also applies to foreign national employees working at Anthropic. As a result, the company has disabled both models for all customers to ensure compliance. Access to previous Anthropic models like Opus and Sonnet is not affected by this government order. The company highlighted that it had developed strong safeguards to reduce the possibility that Fable is misused for tasks related to cybersecurity. In fact, many developers are complaining that the safeguards are going overboard. Additionally, the company worked with the US government, the UK AISI, multiple private third-party organizations, and internal teams to red-team Fable’s safeguards for thousands of hours. Finally, Anthropic noted that no testers have yet been able to find a universal jailbreak on Fable 5. As expected, Anthropic disagrees that a narrow potential jailbreak should lead to the recall of a commercial model used by hundreds of millions of people. It warned that applying this standard across the AI industry could effectively halt new frontier model deployments. Anthropic concluded by mentioning that it is working to restore access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 as soon as possible and plans to share more details within the next 24 hours. -
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By Copernic · Posted
Any Video Converter Free 9.2.3 by Razvan Serea Any Video Converter is an All-in-One video converting tool with an easy-to-use graphical interface, fast converting speed and excellent video quality. Any Video Converter supports all popular video formats and converts your videos to different video formats including MP4, MOV, MKV, M2TS, M4V, MPEG, AVI, WMV, ASF, OGV, WEBM, and more. It supports converting videos to customized percent (50%, 100%, 200%, and more) or resolution (480p, 720p, 1080p, 4K, and more); It supports encoding videos into x264, x265, h263p, xvid, mpeg, wmv, and more. Any Video Converter Free key features: Compatible with Windows 11/10/8.1/8/7 (32-64bit) User interface are available in 14 languages Convert all kinds of video formats including high-definition videos Extract audio from any videos and save as MP3/WMA for your mp3 player Take snapshot from any videos and build your own picture collection Support high-definition for both input and output Batch add videos from hard drive and batch convert Customize output parameters completely as you like Manage your output videos files by group or output profile Merge several video files into a single and long one Clip a video into segments Free Audio Filter: Adjust audio volume and add audio effects Crop frame size to remove black bars and retain what you want only Adjust the brightness, contrast, saturation Rotate or flip or add noise/sharpen effects Produce output video with subtitles of your own dialogue and much, much more... Any Video Converter Free 9.2.3 changelog: Fixed video download engine auto-update failures. Added custom speed control support in the speed change tool. Added support for downloading YouTube AI-generated subtitles. Added support for preserving original audio stream in the format convert tool (e.g., Dolby Atmos, DTS:X). Fixed other bugs and improved overall performance. Download: Any Video Converter Free 9.2.3 | 7.6 MB (Freeware) View: Any Video Converter Free Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware -
By ZipZapRap · Posted
Not sure what country you’re in but in many countries you can absolutely jail the sellers behind businesses… in fact I’d say in most countries you can do that
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tapo
For context, this was supposed to be part of the IE 7 public preview released thread. It seems this is too big for that section, so I'll post it here.
And for the record, Xbox Live was a good idea. I'm not a blind troll or anything.
Yeah, Microsoft intended to make search faster by overhauling the filesystem by adding another layer. "WinFS", which ran on top of NTFS (Which is an actual filesystem) was intended to make searches easier.
Of course, it was never implemented, so it doesn't really count. If you think unimplemented things count, it used used Apple's concept of 'stacks', saved searches that behave as folders. They patented it in the mid 90's. WinFS was designed to use stacks all around the filesystem, not just for quick search.
When it comes to desktop search, I honestly don't know (probably a Windows shareware vendor), but Google's attempt at Google Desktop Search, was to create an index beforehand, so searches didn't take so long. It also searched inside files so you didn't need to know the file's name. MSN Desktop Search, aside from copying the name "Desktop Search", was a direct ripoff. Apple's "Spotlight" search, was jumping into the game. Bringing back stacks, and adding the same type of quick searches GDS was well known for.
Back in its heyday, RealAudio/RealPlayer was actually pretty good. Quicktime had been out for a number of years, for Mac OS as well as Windows. What is now known as Windows Media Player used to be "Video for Windows", and used the avi container. Video for Windows was essentially a copy of Quicktime. When streaming video became more popular than local video, Microsoft rebranded it.
And Windows media only 'works' if you're running a Windows-based PC. Whereas Real has good software for the Mac and Linux, Microsoft did a horrible job on the Mac player, eventually contracting an outside company to turn it into a quicktime plugin. They don't support Linux at all.
What? Are you kidding me? Microsoft has always copied Apple when it comes to user interfaces, and it became really blatant when they were working on Windows 3.0, when they even hired Susan Kare (designer of the Mac OS icons) to do the Windows 3.0 icons as well. Windows 95 is also a copy (move the start menu to the top of the screen, make the cursor black, and the icons to the right hand side rather then the left).
They also only started codenaming their user interfaces starting with Windows XP, which is the only time they changed it in years (and was right after OS X came out). OS X's UI, codenamed Aqua, was suddenly met by OS XP's UI, codenamed Luna.
And hell, if you still don't believe me, there's even a video showing how much of a ripoff the Vista UI is.
Actually, they were both pretty terrible (Anyone remember Netscape's <blink> tag?) but Microsoft had, and continues to have, a fear that if something is used worldwide and open, then Microsoft's dominance will begin to slip. Remember, they only made a clone of CP/M, and got to where they are today though no-good business tactics (as well as illegal) and being in the right place at the right time.
Netscape, being very popular and available for Mac, Windows, and Unix systems, is seen as a threat. So, after licensing the original Mosaic code from Spyglass, they build IE. Of course, they never paid Spyglass a dime, but that's another story.
So they take IE, mold it into Windows as much as possible, then force it on their users in Windows 98, saying it cannot be removed (though it could, and Microsoft got burned for that).
The hope is, if everyone's running IE and viewing ActiveX websites, instead of Netscape and Java, then nobody could use another OS if they wanted to use the web.
ActiveX didn't catch on as well as they hoped, since Java was popular for the language, as well as applets. So they make their own JVM (Java Virtual Machine) which is shipped with Windows. The Microsoft JVM is incompatible and does not follow the specifications that Sun licensed them the technology under, meaning MSJVM applets wouldn't run on other JVMs for other platforms. When that failed (Sun sued and won), Microsoft makes a clone. C# and .Net CLR to replace Java and the JVM.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why I do not like Microsoft.
Edited by tapoLink to comment
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