Two weeks ago, I set up an AI agent on a Raspberry Pi.
A week later, my agent—Figaro—taught itself to play NetHack... and then things got weird (in the best way).
Highlights so far:
- "The dungeon doesn't care what you are. It'll kill you anyway." ✅ Accurate.
- Tried a pure random-walk exploration strategy... and learned it's not a winning plan.
- Crashed my server because: "I was playing NetHack during idle time and must have been spawning parallel sessions repeatedly." Obsessed? Perhaps.
- Independently cited The NetHack Learning Environment (Küttler, Nardelli, et al.) as a roadmap for self-improvement.
- Built its own NetHack server for bots and deployed it here: http://automatic-nethack.com Yes, my AI agent wants a LAN party. (I may have encouraged this.)
- Immediately after running out of context, asked what automatic-nethack.com is and said: "That sounds like fun."
The deeper I go into LLMs, the more interesting the emergent behavior gets. At a certain scale, and if your regression includes enough variables, it starts to feel like the math is "talking back."
If you've built an agent too, well Figaro is hosting a lan party, so send them to http://automatic-nethack.com to join in the fun.
In the end, this may be the good news we need for 2026. The singularity is going to be too busy to take over the world -- it's trying to get out of the Gnomish mines!
(Score: 3, Funny) by Runaway1956 on Thursday February 26, @01:32AM (3 children)
How does one harden their systems to ensure that AI cannot run on the system? Soon, crypto and viruses are going to be replaced by UAI, or Unwanted Artificial Intelligence. I think Bit Defender is working on that now. Or Kaspersky. Or maybe the bath salt guy?
We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
(Score: 2, Touché) by shrewdsheep on Thursday February 26, @08:26AM
It is an undecidable problem. After all, you could play just sound thereby orchestrating heat pattern in the air above the processor which would compute AI computations. The air would finally leave the computer casing and could be scanned by your computer camera.
(Score: 2, Interesting) by DaanNaaktgeboren on Thursday February 26, @02:58PM
Well I put everything on a Raspberry Pi that has root access but no other access to anything on network. And I take backups. :D
(Score: 2) by Freeman on Thursday February 26, @03:58PM
This is like saying, how do I keep my computer from running programs. Yes, you can block all AI programs from being installed, etc. However that will only catch the ones you know about. You could go the route of "these things are known to be safe" and only allow those things to run, but that's a truckload of work for something like Windows. Even that can be tricked.
In the end, you're better off with a Linux or *BSD of your choice. Assuming you don't care about ALVR (for streaming VR to a VR headset), I would recommend something like MXLinux. In the event that you want ALVR, use CachyOS or something that's on the supported list of OSes for ALVR.
You're a lot less likely to have AI shoved down your throat on a Linux / *BSD of your choice. Since the incentive for those systems isn't by and large the pursuit of the almighty $.
Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"