Take this as a sign that you're out of the loop and your bubble is smaller than you thought. niri is the current hot tiling compositor, and I've switched my laptop over to it recently - away from Plasma - because it's so incredibly slick. It's gathered enough mindshare to have several desktop environments explicitly target it (Dank Material Shell, Noctalia).
In fact there's a whole new cultural wave within open source - tiling Wayland compositors, shockingly featureful DEs based on QuickShell, brand new TUI tools with no CLI or GUI equivalents, and most of it written in Rust.
I think this is a kind of nerd chauvanism. What I see is that the general public are deeply skeptical of "AI" in all its forms. Software "engineers" are especially vulnerable to believing that LLMs are smart generally, because LLMs are good at writing code, and skill at writing software is how the software engineer measures the superiority of their own intelligence. But a poet is in no danger of over-anthromorphising an LLM.
If I were sitting on a big pile of valuable data I was legally forbidden from selling - perhaps to a rogue state willing to pay big bux for it - I might be tempted to engineer a "breach" for plausible deniability. Oops! These things happen!
>According to market research firm Mordor Intelligence, nearly 1 trillion liters of water were consumed by AI data centers in 2025
I'm sorry, what? "Palantir" wasn't bad enough?
Anyway this is silly propaganda as usual. USA gets through over 300B gallons daily. Irrigation alone is over 100B of that. Most of that goes to corn for animal feed. You're not allowed to get all high and mighty about AI water use if you still eat meat.
Describing life on Earth as "a cruder version of humanity" is uh a choice. Your parrot snark is hilarious because that actually happened with Alex the African Gray - and indeed it took people a long time to accept. Your comment amounts to an anthropocentrism practically biblical in its hubris.
Curious logic. Does Google want you to use it or not? Do they want to be paid for tokens or not? why segregate open and closed?
It's not parameter size - there is apparently such a thing as "Gemini Nano", which famously is downloaded automatically by Chrome. How similar is it to Gemma E4B? And how strange - you have the weights, but you don't "have" them?
In fact there's a whole new cultural wave within open source - tiling Wayland compositors, shockingly featureful DEs based on QuickShell, brand new TUI tools with no CLI or GUI equivalents, and most of it written in Rust.
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