I see every version as a remix of the original material, each done with their own take and philosophy. They're not remakes or reboots. The only version that didn't add anything new was the Hollywood movie, which was an…
What kind of history will a totalitarian prison planet write, I wonder.
> get people using that ungodly cheap AI on Chinese servers. These open weights models are also hosted outside of the US and China. That's a very important difference.
> AI proliferation is more dangerous than nukes proliferation This statement is utter nonsense. And if you think about it, it's in exactly the same spirit as calling for a wide ban on science books or education.
It barely made the news inside the US.
Maybe legally banning minors from smartphones instead of from arbitrary websites is the better idea.
Just because you have a reason to agree with something doesn't mean there's no other intention for it. Actually, the more emotionally invested you are in it, the less likely it is for you to question the motives behind…
A lot of developers (and thereby most on HN, I guess) see Microsoft only from the perspective of a private consumer. From the perspective of a normal non-technical company though, Microsoft is this giant that has spread…
They did. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32007955
In ten years of using Macs, I have never encountered this behaviour. I've never heard this from anyone else either. Is this new in Tahoe? I haven't upgraded yet, but your link seems to be from before Tahoe was released.
There was a time when OSS was the only option and ALSA was rarely supported by software. ALSA's dmix also didn't exist from the start. Around 2000 I was only able to play sound from different apps because my soundcard…
> It's intriguing to me how there's seemingly a lot of objections in this thread to the idea that this movement was driven by lobbyists. I realize it's skirting the guidelines but the tone here comes across as some sort…
So if I don't answer your question, you use the fact I didn't answer against me and if I do answer, you use the fact I answered against me as well. It's hard to take your non constructive way of arguing serious. Have a…
It doesn't matter what you answer, slg will always try to use the way you answered to argue against you, not the substance. This person seems to be only interested in derailing the conversation.
> Who do you think is behind this? Anyone who is interested in connecting an identity with every computer on the internet, like a tamper proof license plate for computers. Just ask local law enforcement. There has been…
You're right, I edited it.
That was openly coordinated beginning with the Montreal Protocol. Those things work top to bottom with international accords in the beginning and don't suddenly pop up left and right inside of much less than a year.…
Is there a precedent where this happened organically and the same similarities were in place in that many legislations around the world inside of half a year?
If it was organic the wording and the definitions in these legislations would be wildly different, the timing would be all over the place, the age limits and the methods to provide ID as well. But they are not. edited…
Seeing how surprisingly similar the wording and definitions are in every case, in even far flung societies, can send you a shiver down the spine. It's like someone gained unfettered world wide write access to…
Looking up words on the fly by just holding your finger on them. If the book is not written in your native language or you like to read books with unusual vocabulary (e.g. historical books), it's an absolute delight. So…
If an American company, let's say a company that writes software for power stations, would use the services of a French or Chinese AI company under such enterprise licenses, how long would you think it would take until…
For actually serious work, it's a stark difference if your proprietary and security relevant code is sent abroad to a foreign, possibly future hostile country, or is sent to some data center around the corner. It…
The part about refactoring is very interesting and reassuring. I sometimes think I'm holding it wrong when I end up refactoring most of the agent's code towards our "opinionated" style, even after laying it out in md…
Clickable paths is the unique feature of iTerm2 I use the most. It's called sematic history, for some reason, and converts a UNIX environment into something like an IDE. I let it trigger a bash script that opens my…
I see every version as a remix of the original material, each done with their own take and philosophy. They're not remakes or reboots. The only version that didn't add anything new was the Hollywood movie, which was an…
What kind of history will a totalitarian prison planet write, I wonder.
> get people using that ungodly cheap AI on Chinese servers. These open weights models are also hosted outside of the US and China. That's a very important difference.
> AI proliferation is more dangerous than nukes proliferation This statement is utter nonsense. And if you think about it, it's in exactly the same spirit as calling for a wide ban on science books or education.
It barely made the news inside the US.
Maybe legally banning minors from smartphones instead of from arbitrary websites is the better idea.
Just because you have a reason to agree with something doesn't mean there's no other intention for it. Actually, the more emotionally invested you are in it, the less likely it is for you to question the motives behind…
A lot of developers (and thereby most on HN, I guess) see Microsoft only from the perspective of a private consumer. From the perspective of a normal non-technical company though, Microsoft is this giant that has spread…
They did. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32007955
In ten years of using Macs, I have never encountered this behaviour. I've never heard this from anyone else either. Is this new in Tahoe? I haven't upgraded yet, but your link seems to be from before Tahoe was released.
There was a time when OSS was the only option and ALSA was rarely supported by software. ALSA's dmix also didn't exist from the start. Around 2000 I was only able to play sound from different apps because my soundcard…
> It's intriguing to me how there's seemingly a lot of objections in this thread to the idea that this movement was driven by lobbyists. I realize it's skirting the guidelines but the tone here comes across as some sort…
So if I don't answer your question, you use the fact I didn't answer against me and if I do answer, you use the fact I answered against me as well. It's hard to take your non constructive way of arguing serious. Have a…
It doesn't matter what you answer, slg will always try to use the way you answered to argue against you, not the substance. This person seems to be only interested in derailing the conversation.
> Who do you think is behind this? Anyone who is interested in connecting an identity with every computer on the internet, like a tamper proof license plate for computers. Just ask local law enforcement. There has been…
You're right, I edited it.
That was openly coordinated beginning with the Montreal Protocol. Those things work top to bottom with international accords in the beginning and don't suddenly pop up left and right inside of much less than a year.…
Is there a precedent where this happened organically and the same similarities were in place in that many legislations around the world inside of half a year?
If it was organic the wording and the definitions in these legislations would be wildly different, the timing would be all over the place, the age limits and the methods to provide ID as well. But they are not. edited…
Seeing how surprisingly similar the wording and definitions are in every case, in even far flung societies, can send you a shiver down the spine. It's like someone gained unfettered world wide write access to…
Looking up words on the fly by just holding your finger on them. If the book is not written in your native language or you like to read books with unusual vocabulary (e.g. historical books), it's an absolute delight. So…
If an American company, let's say a company that writes software for power stations, would use the services of a French or Chinese AI company under such enterprise licenses, how long would you think it would take until…
For actually serious work, it's a stark difference if your proprietary and security relevant code is sent abroad to a foreign, possibly future hostile country, or is sent to some data center around the corner. It…
The part about refactoring is very interesting and reassuring. I sometimes think I'm holding it wrong when I end up refactoring most of the agent's code towards our "opinionated" style, even after laying it out in md…
Clickable paths is the unique feature of iTerm2 I use the most. It's called sematic history, for some reason, and converts a UNIX environment into something like an IDE. I let it trigger a bash script that opens my…