Thanks for the reply. Sounds exciting, looking forward to the future of Modular!
Since Chris is lurking: will Mojo on GPUs be more like using Jax (relying on compiler), Triton (more control, but abstracted), or more like CUDA (close to maximal control)? Combination? Nvidia and AMD support out of box?
Can you name three things an average child knows which GPT-4 doesn't?
Saving you the scroll: weaker than GPT-4 and Claude 2
Fascinating. Saw a paper pop up on one of my Semantic Scholar feeds just the other day with the title "Symmetry and simplicity spontaneously emerge from the algorithmic nature of evolution". Here's the link…
Cf Feynman method and writing. Also, https://twitter.com/slatestarcodex/status/147679666646424781...
I still think I prefer Wikiwand https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikiwand but I like that yours doesn't redirect from Wikipedia (and presumably track you). If you could steal some design elements from Wikiwand I would…
This is an exciting idea, but the style of the paper is off-putting. It's written in the style of an academic paper, while clearly eschewing associated norms like not giving blatant opinion or waxing philosophical. "The…
> Something else to think about would be looking at the ratio of clicks to completions instead of just the sum of completions alone. Good idea. In addition to better metadata for boring titles, penalizing articles which…
> The only reason is because I'm the only developer and simply haven't had time to build it yet! I see you're using React on the frontend. And, you only have an iOS app but not (yet) an Android app. Are you not using…
Ok, cool. Why is there no tagging or other organization (besides per author)? Skimming through the frontpage I either have no idea what an article is about or it appears to be some lowest-common-denominator politics…
I've also had the idea of creating a site which restricts users to having read the article. So, I'm excited about your project. Couple questions 1) You mention a paywall, but your video says that users who sign-up…
This sounds pretty cool, but, two thoughts 1) Echoing the other comments in this thread about uneasiness with feature creep 2) Wouldn't have been a breaking change if the language didn't have nil from the beginning
Thanks, I intend to give it a fair try
Thanks for the honest reply. Nim interests me but this nil business seems questionable to me. Just found this comment from the language creator, https://github.com/nim-lang/Nim/issues/6638#issuecomment-487... "We need…
Oh, thought you were same poster. Well, that other person mentioned it in a context which doesn't appear to be related to systems programming. Just checked Github for some of the top Nim projects. Forum software:…
Likewise unsafe Rust has null pointers, but I've never needed it or seen it used. (Same with Haskell). You just mentioned using "nil" in a simple example which doesn't appear to be related to systems programming.
2/12 of those are dead links
Why does Nim have "nil"?
This would seem to be the hyper-individualist response. Our environment/context influences our behavior. Saying, "well, technically any given person could ignore their environment/context and act however is optimal!"…
What's impressing to me is that in the most "IO-bottlenecked" benchmarks: 'Multiple queries' and 'Data updates' (on Cloud) Drogon is smoking the next best frameworks. What's up with that?
> When you speak of emergent tendencies, I find the idea compelling, but I wonder if this compatible with a constantly changing set of editors. Crowds, for example, behave similarly even if you shuffle around who is in…
Something doesn't need to be a 'well defined entity' to speak about it meaningfully. "Most Wikipedia articles are less than 20k words". Is that not a meaningful statement? "But, anyone can edit articles" What does that…
I understand what you mean. In fact, I think we should more frequently do the opposite: we should publicly shame slow websites (cough new Reddit). Anyway, for fast SPAs, here is a useful comparison: the "RealWorld app"…
> Maybe that's just confirmation bias and I just don't notice it as much on sites that do it well This seems to me to be the key phrase. I sympathize with all the "JS has gone too far" people in this thread. I also hate…
Thanks for the reply. Sounds exciting, looking forward to the future of Modular!
Since Chris is lurking: will Mojo on GPUs be more like using Jax (relying on compiler), Triton (more control, but abstracted), or more like CUDA (close to maximal control)? Combination? Nvidia and AMD support out of box?
Can you name three things an average child knows which GPT-4 doesn't?
Saving you the scroll: weaker than GPT-4 and Claude 2
Fascinating. Saw a paper pop up on one of my Semantic Scholar feeds just the other day with the title "Symmetry and simplicity spontaneously emerge from the algorithmic nature of evolution". Here's the link…
Cf Feynman method and writing. Also, https://twitter.com/slatestarcodex/status/147679666646424781...
I still think I prefer Wikiwand https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikiwand but I like that yours doesn't redirect from Wikipedia (and presumably track you). If you could steal some design elements from Wikiwand I would…
This is an exciting idea, but the style of the paper is off-putting. It's written in the style of an academic paper, while clearly eschewing associated norms like not giving blatant opinion or waxing philosophical. "The…
> Something else to think about would be looking at the ratio of clicks to completions instead of just the sum of completions alone. Good idea. In addition to better metadata for boring titles, penalizing articles which…
> The only reason is because I'm the only developer and simply haven't had time to build it yet! I see you're using React on the frontend. And, you only have an iOS app but not (yet) an Android app. Are you not using…
Ok, cool. Why is there no tagging or other organization (besides per author)? Skimming through the frontpage I either have no idea what an article is about or it appears to be some lowest-common-denominator politics…
I've also had the idea of creating a site which restricts users to having read the article. So, I'm excited about your project. Couple questions 1) You mention a paywall, but your video says that users who sign-up…
This sounds pretty cool, but, two thoughts 1) Echoing the other comments in this thread about uneasiness with feature creep 2) Wouldn't have been a breaking change if the language didn't have nil from the beginning
Thanks, I intend to give it a fair try
Thanks for the honest reply. Nim interests me but this nil business seems questionable to me. Just found this comment from the language creator, https://github.com/nim-lang/Nim/issues/6638#issuecomment-487... "We need…
Oh, thought you were same poster. Well, that other person mentioned it in a context which doesn't appear to be related to systems programming. Just checked Github for some of the top Nim projects. Forum software:…
Likewise unsafe Rust has null pointers, but I've never needed it or seen it used. (Same with Haskell). You just mentioned using "nil" in a simple example which doesn't appear to be related to systems programming.
2/12 of those are dead links
Why does Nim have "nil"?
This would seem to be the hyper-individualist response. Our environment/context influences our behavior. Saying, "well, technically any given person could ignore their environment/context and act however is optimal!"…
What's impressing to me is that in the most "IO-bottlenecked" benchmarks: 'Multiple queries' and 'Data updates' (on Cloud) Drogon is smoking the next best frameworks. What's up with that?
> When you speak of emergent tendencies, I find the idea compelling, but I wonder if this compatible with a constantly changing set of editors. Crowds, for example, behave similarly even if you shuffle around who is in…
Something doesn't need to be a 'well defined entity' to speak about it meaningfully. "Most Wikipedia articles are less than 20k words". Is that not a meaningful statement? "But, anyone can edit articles" What does that…
I understand what you mean. In fact, I think we should more frequently do the opposite: we should publicly shame slow websites (cough new Reddit). Anyway, for fast SPAs, here is a useful comparison: the "RealWorld app"…
> Maybe that's just confirmation bias and I just don't notice it as much on sites that do it well This seems to me to be the key phrase. I sympathize with all the "JS has gone too far" people in this thread. I also hate…