I’m here to disagree with what you said about lockdowns. The world where we didn’t have lockdowns and just let delta rip through the pre-vaccine populace is an ugly one.
This is true for a very narrow definition of debate though. At work, choosing to debate can make the difference between a software design that solves the problem vs one that doesn't. Deploying code that causes an…
If you render a number using JavaScript it has been temporarily stored as a doublr. The article was likely allowing for that common use case.
> improved spatial learning by nearly 44 per cent We care about this part
Western media has been overwhelmingly one sided regarding state led IP theft for the last three decades. China steals western IP has been the story, and it hasn't been even a little balanced until reading this.
So the degradation to Opus 4.8 from the article isn't happening in practice?
Americans are every race. How could it be racist?
Not a physicist, but I think this paper used holographic principles to predict the minimum ratio of shear viscosity to volume density of entropy in fluids https://arxiv.org/pdf/hep-th/0405231
From Wikipedia, imaginary numbers... > Originally coined in the 17th century by René Descartes[4] as a derogatory term and regarded as fictitious or useless, the concept gained wide acceptance following the work of…
> All other groups were expected to assimilate and join the melting pot. I partially agree. Counter evidence is that Little Italy, Chinatowns and the like exist and have done for many decades. Ethnic clubs like Sons of…
Imaginary numbers are purely theoretical, but they turn out very helpful in almost every engineering discipline
I certainly don't understand all you're saying through this tortured analogy, but yes an "army" of judges that issue rulings is much, much better than an army of soldiers that issue killings
That analogy doesn't work well. Their situation involved foreign powers enforcing jurisdiction and property claims over their land with a regular standing army; a completely different situation than modern immigration
> Why does ever single bleeding heart liberal globalist try and ignore the deep psychological truths about human tribalism? I'll bite. In the US, for one, every single person has an ancestor that thanked their lucky…
Korea is starting to turn things around! https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/25/south-korea-bi...
> I opposed the rule changes at S&P So you are happy with this outcome, but also so upset at the people that evangelized your preferred policy position that you think HN readers should cut them from the information…
After a couple years I realized the key part of “As an X I want Y so that Z” is the “so that Z”. When managing teams these days, the only part I keep is the “so that Z” — what beneficial change in the world does this…
> in Louisiana v. Callais, they wanted to draw racially segregated voting districts. 30 years of jurisprudence since Thornburg v. Gingles disagrees with this framing. That unanimous decision found racial districts a…
> went to the Supreme Court…racially segregated voting districts How is enforcing the two greatest anti Jim Crow laws (VRA and CRA), somehow, equivalent to returning to Jim Crow itself? > the administrative state I’m…
> Anthropic believes they are the only people who should control AI. I’ve seen this a few times in the thread. Can you or anyone provide a link that supports this claim?
The world saw Anthropic take a possibly company-killing risk wrt weaponizing their AI, and are rewarding them for holding to their values, for now at least. It’s not like anyone owes Sam Altman their business just bc…
Ah I read it as “the US was corrupt before, and that was OK because GDP was growing! So we are just returning to our roots now” Now understanding the good faith argument better, doesn’t it even further support the…
The spoils system… > contrasts with a merit system, where offices are awarded or promoted based on a measure of merit, independent of political activity. What is commendable about this? Why should anyone who isn’t close…
Don’t confuse the nature of the feedback you’re receiving here. Your comments in this thread are so obstinate and so far from this forum’s standards of good faith argument that community members can’t help but perceive…
They’re not a protected class that you can’t fire, unless the company signs a contract to that effect with the vendor selling them labor (the union)
I’m here to disagree with what you said about lockdowns. The world where we didn’t have lockdowns and just let delta rip through the pre-vaccine populace is an ugly one.
This is true for a very narrow definition of debate though. At work, choosing to debate can make the difference between a software design that solves the problem vs one that doesn't. Deploying code that causes an…
If you render a number using JavaScript it has been temporarily stored as a doublr. The article was likely allowing for that common use case.
> improved spatial learning by nearly 44 per cent We care about this part
Western media has been overwhelmingly one sided regarding state led IP theft for the last three decades. China steals western IP has been the story, and it hasn't been even a little balanced until reading this.
So the degradation to Opus 4.8 from the article isn't happening in practice?
Americans are every race. How could it be racist?
Not a physicist, but I think this paper used holographic principles to predict the minimum ratio of shear viscosity to volume density of entropy in fluids https://arxiv.org/pdf/hep-th/0405231
From Wikipedia, imaginary numbers... > Originally coined in the 17th century by René Descartes[4] as a derogatory term and regarded as fictitious or useless, the concept gained wide acceptance following the work of…
> All other groups were expected to assimilate and join the melting pot. I partially agree. Counter evidence is that Little Italy, Chinatowns and the like exist and have done for many decades. Ethnic clubs like Sons of…
Imaginary numbers are purely theoretical, but they turn out very helpful in almost every engineering discipline
I certainly don't understand all you're saying through this tortured analogy, but yes an "army" of judges that issue rulings is much, much better than an army of soldiers that issue killings
That analogy doesn't work well. Their situation involved foreign powers enforcing jurisdiction and property claims over their land with a regular standing army; a completely different situation than modern immigration
> Why does ever single bleeding heart liberal globalist try and ignore the deep psychological truths about human tribalism? I'll bite. In the US, for one, every single person has an ancestor that thanked their lucky…
Korea is starting to turn things around! https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/25/south-korea-bi...
> I opposed the rule changes at S&P So you are happy with this outcome, but also so upset at the people that evangelized your preferred policy position that you think HN readers should cut them from the information…
After a couple years I realized the key part of “As an X I want Y so that Z” is the “so that Z”. When managing teams these days, the only part I keep is the “so that Z” — what beneficial change in the world does this…
> in Louisiana v. Callais, they wanted to draw racially segregated voting districts. 30 years of jurisprudence since Thornburg v. Gingles disagrees with this framing. That unanimous decision found racial districts a…
> went to the Supreme Court…racially segregated voting districts How is enforcing the two greatest anti Jim Crow laws (VRA and CRA), somehow, equivalent to returning to Jim Crow itself? > the administrative state I’m…
> Anthropic believes they are the only people who should control AI. I’ve seen this a few times in the thread. Can you or anyone provide a link that supports this claim?
The world saw Anthropic take a possibly company-killing risk wrt weaponizing their AI, and are rewarding them for holding to their values, for now at least. It’s not like anyone owes Sam Altman their business just bc…
Ah I read it as “the US was corrupt before, and that was OK because GDP was growing! So we are just returning to our roots now” Now understanding the good faith argument better, doesn’t it even further support the…
The spoils system… > contrasts with a merit system, where offices are awarded or promoted based on a measure of merit, independent of political activity. What is commendable about this? Why should anyone who isn’t close…
Don’t confuse the nature of the feedback you’re receiving here. Your comments in this thread are so obstinate and so far from this forum’s standards of good faith argument that community members can’t help but perceive…
They’re not a protected class that you can’t fire, unless the company signs a contract to that effect with the vendor selling them labor (the union)