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submitted 10 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago) by rook@lemmy.zip to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 

Did I just brick my SAS drive?

I was trying to make a pool with the other 5 drives and this one kept giving errors. As a completer beginner I turned to gpt.....

What can I do? Is that drive bricked for good?

Don't clown on me, I understand my mistake in running shell scripts from Ai...

Edit: EMPTY DRIVES NO DATA

The initial error was:

collapsed inline media

Edit: sde and SDA are the same drive, name just changed for some reason And also I know it was 100% my fault and preventable 😞

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[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 1 points 4 hours ago (2 children)

Can you blame them?

The manuals are written by experts for experts and in most cases entirely useless for complete beginners who likely won't be able to even find the right manual page (or even the right manual to begin with).

Tutoral pages are overwhelmingly AI vomit too, but AI vomit from last year's AI, so even worse than asking AI right now.

Asking for help online just gets you a "lol, RTFM, noob!"

Look at this thread right now and count how many snarky bullshit answers are there that don't even try to answer the question, how many answers like "I got no idea" are there and then how many actually helpful answers are here.

Can you really blame anyone who turns to AI, because that garbage at least sounds like it tries to help you?

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 3 points 1 hour ago (1 children)

Can you really blame anyone who turns to AI, because that garbage at least sounds like it tries to help you?

A comfortable lie is still a lie. Everything that comes out of an LLM is a lie until proven otherwise. ("Lie" is a bit misleading, though, as they don't have agency or intent: they're a variation of your phone keyboard's next-word text prediction algorithm. With added flattery and confidence.)

There's a reason experienced people stress hard to others about not using them as shortcuts to your own knowledge. This is the outcome.

Another way to look at it is "trust, but verify". If you're intent on relying on probabilistic text as an answer, instead of bothering to learn, then take what it's given you and verify what that does before doing it. You could learn to be an effective sloperator with just that common sense.

But if you're going to give an LLM root/admin access to a production environment, then expect to be laughed at, because you had plenty of opportunities to not destroy something and actively chose not to use them.

[–] squaresinger@lemmy.world 1 points 29 minutes ago (1 children)

I had a problem with Fedora 42, where the performance of my games would be fine one day and abysmal another day. Couldn't find a pattern. I googled a ton, tried to debug myself, asked on reddit, stackexchange, the fedora forum and lemmy. I only got answers like "Works fine on my machine, noob" and "I have that problem too". It only affected games running in proton on heroic, everything else was fine.

After about a year of on-and-off debugging and asking around, I swallowed my pride and asked ChatGPT.

First answer from that thing was correct: I had run dnf update without doing a flatpak update right afterwards. Turns out, flatpak has its own copy of Nvidia drivers and if the system driver is updated without the flatpak copy being updated, it falls back to software rendering. So the performance was crap until I did flatpak update the next time, and broke again when I ran dnf update.

I still haven't found that in any documentation so far.

AI is crap more often than not, but it does at least try to help and sometimes it actually does.

Look in this thread here. Is there even a single answer that tries to help OP, or is every single answer here just dumb snark?

[–] Brewchin@lemmy.world 1 points 18 minutes ago

It's true that people on the internet can be dicks. Even more so technical people (and that's not limited to online: those online dicks are usually IRL dicks when taking technical stuff). But that's a hurdle, not a barrier.

There's little anyone here can do to help OP, as they (if I understand it correctly) have already irreparably nuked their hardware. The current problem is significantly different and harder than the original problem. Asking randos on this community is unlikely to yield results. Hence the focus on variations of "Now... what did we learn? 🀨"

I'm not trying to help, as I'm not familiar enough with SAS nor the current problem. The same is likely true of others here.

[–] anyhow2503@lemmy.world 0 points 1 hour ago

Asking for help online just gets you a "lol, RTFM, noob!"

Depends heavily on what place you ask for help in. There are plenty of spaces explicitly meant for community tech support. In OPs case, I'll say the title doesn't help and asking an LLM for advice on a topic you're unfamiliar with (and not second-guessing the commands you paste into the terminal) is such a bad idea that it really can't be understated. I regularly catch some of my colleagues making AI-assisted mistakes and they're professionals who genuinely know better. This shit shouldn't ever be recommended as a learning tool for beginners without some kind of supervision or guard rails to ensure you're not being gaslit.