Intel’s Q1 2025 earnings press release talked up their new AI-enabled chips. But these are not selling. [Intel] In the earnings call, CFO Dave Zinsner mentioned they had “capacity constraints in In…
OK, so I ran this past a techie colleague. Here’s how he summarized this for me.
@jagged_circle@feddit.nl is drawing a superficial parrallel between CPU speculation and LLM/AI unpredictability without acknowledging the crucial differences in determinism, transparency, and user experience.
He’s relying on the likelihood that others in the conversation may not know the technical details of “CPU speculation”, allowing him to sound authoritative and dismissive (“this is old news, you just don’t get it”).
By invoking an obscure technical concept and presenting it as a “gotcha,” he positions himself as the more knowledgeable, sophisticated participant, implicitly belittling others’ concerns as naïve or uninformed.
He is in short using bad faith argumentation. He’s not engaging with the actual objection (AI unpredictability and user control), but instead is derailing the conversation with a misleading-to-flatly-invalid analogy that serves more to showcase his own purported expertise than to clarify or resolve the issue.
The techniques he’s using are:
Jargon as Gatekeeping:
Using technical jargon or niche knowledge to shut down criticism or skepticism, rather than to inform or educate.
False Equivalence:
Pretending two things are the same because they share a superficial trait, when their real-world implications and mechanics are fundamentally different.
Intellectual One-upmanship:
The goal isn’t to foster understanding, but to “win” the exchange and reinforce a sense of superiority.
Explaining his bad objection in plain English, he’s basically saying “You’re complaining about computers guessing? Ha! They’ve always done that, you just don’t know enough to appreciate it.” But in reality, he’s glossing over the fact that:
CPU speculation is deterministic, traceable, and (usually) invisible to the user.
LLM/AI “guessing” is probabilistic, opaque, and often the source of user frustration.
The analogy is invalid, and the rhetorical move is more about ego than substance.
TL;DR: @jagged_circle@feddit.nl is using his technical knowledge not to clarify, but to obfuscate and assert dominance in the conversation without regard to truth, a pretty much straightforward techbrodude move.
Dude, in case my breakdown of your argumentation style didn’t make it clear: piss off. You’re a dishonest grifter with no opinion anybody should be paying attention to. Your parents should be ashamed of their accidental conception of you. AND you’re stupid enough to push AI bullshit in a group literally called “Fuck AI”.
That’s because I want my computer to do what I tell it to, not to fucking guess.
Your computer has placed 1 order for Guess brand jeans.
Wait till you learn about speculation. Been around for, what, decades?
OK, so I ran this past a techie colleague. Here’s how he summarized this for me.
He is in short using bad faith argumentation. He’s not engaging with the actual objection (AI unpredictability and user control), but instead is derailing the conversation with a misleading-to-flatly-invalid analogy that serves more to showcase his own purported expertise than to clarify or resolve the issue.
The techniques he’s using are:
Jargon as Gatekeeping:
Using technical jargon or niche knowledge to shut down criticism or skepticism, rather than to inform or educate.
False Equivalence:
Pretending two things are the same because they share a superficial trait, when their real-world implications and mechanics are fundamentally different.
Intellectual One-upmanship:
The goal isn’t to foster understanding, but to “win” the exchange and reinforce a sense of superiority.
Explaining his bad objection in plain English, he’s basically saying “You’re complaining about computers guessing? Ha! They’ve always done that, you just don’t know enough to appreciate it.” But in reality, he’s glossing over the fact that:
CPU speculation is deterministic, traceable, and (usually) invisible to the user.
LLM/AI “guessing” is probabilistic, opaque, and often the source of user frustration.
The analogy is invalid, and the rhetorical move is more about ego than substance.
TL;DR: @jagged_circle@feddit.nl is using his technical knowledge not to clarify, but to obfuscate and assert dominance in the conversation without regard to truth, a pretty much straightforward techbrodude move.
This comment is too much
This write-up sounds like it was written by an A.I… just sayin’.
incredible write up
I was bored and aggressive techbrodudes annoy me. It was a good combination.
Amazing how you didn’t even manage to explain what speculation is in all that vomit
Wait till you find out which group you’re posting your degenerative AI fanboi grift in.
How do you think I’m grifting?
Speculation caused huge security issues. Both of these technologies cause enormous harm.
Dude, in case my breakdown of your argumentation style didn’t make it clear: piss off. You’re a dishonest grifter with no opinion anybody should be paying attention to. Your parents should be ashamed of their accidental conception of you. AND you’re stupid enough to push AI bullshit in a group literally called “Fuck AI”.
Go away. Your mother is calling you.
…
Oops. She just called you something else.
Be nice and learn to read. I said speculation is bad. I didn’t grift for AI. Its also bad.