> Both OpenAI and Anthropic were founded by people who sincerely believed in the risk of out-of-control superintelligence. Ironic then, that both companies are in an out-of-control race to create a superintelligence.
We may need a sankey.
I'm pretty sure watermarking is (or soon will be) a requirement for AI generated images in software used in the EU, as part of their regulations for AI transparency.
Picture a space station where there's an error when trying to seal the door and they proceed anyway and it explodes from the pressure differential as all the air escapes out to space.
The article mentions that was proposed and no one wanted to do it. Also, alerts are terrible UX. At least put some effort into your example.
I wasn't making an argument against growing your own fruit, I was just helping explain why a lot of people don't do it. Personally, I am trying to grow blueberries.
Local deer everywhere agree: this is the solution
It's definitely science, and it definitely doesn't work that way for most people. Also, "a few years" is a long time between deciding you want fruit and getting to eat it.
Oh no, poor shareholders, they must have blindsided. When did Mark gain majority voting power?
It's actually very common to link a file hosted in the cloud to a coworker or partner and it requires login.
UBI feels like a natural solution to what I assume is a ubiquitous problem in the workforce: A certain percentage of people are absolutely worthless in their job, and everyone would be better off if we just paid those…
> See also: South Korean current birth rates. For anyone wondering, the South Korean birth rate is currently ~0.7: https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/children-born-per-woman?c...
Right after this break, we'll find out: Is hemorrhaging in public a crime?
I see what you're saying but I don't think that's the answer for everything, because people also pay for conveniences, like a Ring subscription so that Amazon stores footage in their cloud for you. The problem is…
> A typical debugging session illustrates the pattern: I describe the bug by voice (Wispr Flow), Claude searches memory (claude-mem) for prior context on that area of the code, creates a task in Beads, and spawns a…
This is really cool, I had no idea this existed. Thanks for sharing!
> What exactly is wrong with a world where software is borderline disposable? One problem is that people don't like learning new software interfaces, and another is that communities help support software, but…
This may be an unpopular opinion but I like the effect where the cursor turns into the button hover state when you hover over them, like the pause icon button on the video.
Nice, I do this often enough that I created a bookmarklet to download an HTML file from clipboard after copying ChatGPT's code block. I've also been using LLMs to create and maintain a "work assist" Chrome extension…
You're implying that the article has no value because its purpose is to attract readers to ultimately make a purchase. But if you're trying to attract readers, arguably the best way to do that is to provide something of…
That's good that they "buried the lede", isn't it? Better than the product being mentioned early and often throughout the article.
What kinds of problems in Excel are you trying to solve? Just curious as I'm also building an AI Excel addin, as a side project. :)
You may already be aware but Microsoft recently released a COPILOT() function that does this: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/copilot-function-...
What do you mean, what is copilot in excel doing exactly?
Not OpenAI, though, because they already gave $14M to an AI Excel add-in startup (Endex)
> Both OpenAI and Anthropic were founded by people who sincerely believed in the risk of out-of-control superintelligence. Ironic then, that both companies are in an out-of-control race to create a superintelligence.
We may need a sankey.
I'm pretty sure watermarking is (or soon will be) a requirement for AI generated images in software used in the EU, as part of their regulations for AI transparency.
Picture a space station where there's an error when trying to seal the door and they proceed anyway and it explodes from the pressure differential as all the air escapes out to space.
The article mentions that was proposed and no one wanted to do it. Also, alerts are terrible UX. At least put some effort into your example.
I wasn't making an argument against growing your own fruit, I was just helping explain why a lot of people don't do it. Personally, I am trying to grow blueberries.
Local deer everywhere agree: this is the solution
It's definitely science, and it definitely doesn't work that way for most people. Also, "a few years" is a long time between deciding you want fruit and getting to eat it.
Oh no, poor shareholders, they must have blindsided. When did Mark gain majority voting power?
It's actually very common to link a file hosted in the cloud to a coworker or partner and it requires login.
UBI feels like a natural solution to what I assume is a ubiquitous problem in the workforce: A certain percentage of people are absolutely worthless in their job, and everyone would be better off if we just paid those…
> See also: South Korean current birth rates. For anyone wondering, the South Korean birth rate is currently ~0.7: https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/children-born-per-woman?c...
Right after this break, we'll find out: Is hemorrhaging in public a crime?
I see what you're saying but I don't think that's the answer for everything, because people also pay for conveniences, like a Ring subscription so that Amazon stores footage in their cloud for you. The problem is…
> A typical debugging session illustrates the pattern: I describe the bug by voice (Wispr Flow), Claude searches memory (claude-mem) for prior context on that area of the code, creates a task in Beads, and spawns a…
This is really cool, I had no idea this existed. Thanks for sharing!
> What exactly is wrong with a world where software is borderline disposable? One problem is that people don't like learning new software interfaces, and another is that communities help support software, but…
This may be an unpopular opinion but I like the effect where the cursor turns into the button hover state when you hover over them, like the pause icon button on the video.
Nice, I do this often enough that I created a bookmarklet to download an HTML file from clipboard after copying ChatGPT's code block. I've also been using LLMs to create and maintain a "work assist" Chrome extension…
You're implying that the article has no value because its purpose is to attract readers to ultimately make a purchase. But if you're trying to attract readers, arguably the best way to do that is to provide something of…
That's good that they "buried the lede", isn't it? Better than the product being mentioned early and often throughout the article.
What kinds of problems in Excel are you trying to solve? Just curious as I'm also building an AI Excel addin, as a side project. :)
You may already be aware but Microsoft recently released a COPILOT() function that does this: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/copilot-function-...
What do you mean, what is copilot in excel doing exactly?
Not OpenAI, though, because they already gave $14M to an AI Excel add-in startup (Endex)