People more often do the same thing and act like llm’s.
Exactly. Who you blame depends on if it was introduced in beta 1 or RC.
Years ago API’s and apps that used them were expected to do some work offline and on slow networks. Then, suddenly, everyone was expected to have stable Internet to do anything. The reason, I think, is the few apps that…
Vision Pro, different kind of device but same idea
Times is taking a risk. The costs of all this will fall on them, if they don’t get the judgement they sought at the end of the day. Plus OpenAI controls those costs and could drive them up. Plus any future litigation by…
Some of each
If you ask, just show me the prompts, you will invariable just get llm generated sets of prompts.
Your right, the “own identity” part is the problem. You can act on your own agency or you act as an agent for someone else. AI today is only the second. We tell it what we want, it acts by our impetus, but what it does…
So we’re back to programming?
True, it’s all machine language in the end. But could you imagine brute forcing UI elements and all, every single time? Maybe eventually.
Agree with you on the watch and AirPods. For other services no. They either do provide some API, like for payments, iCloud files or Auth, or can’t do so safely, AirDrop and iMessage. And for those alternatives do exist.…
There’s a difference. Microsoft competed unfairly because it sold software like Word that apparently internally used secret system calls only Microsoft devs knew about. They gave their other software divisions a big…
The notch was a big reason I was reluctant to upgrade from my M1 Air. But I hardly notice it. Only when it splits the menu bar items.
Exactly. Why use the headnotes at all? I always thought they were obviously were copyrightable. Plus they’re not close to perfect either.
Most posted job positions in the US, that I see, explicitly state they will not sponser candidates. But how receptive are they to TN visa candidates and do you see that attitude changing in the near future?
Likely project manager or architect.
Absolutely correct, just making laws themselves have little effect over anything. Enforcement is the key. For most laws that step is an afterthought. But there are creative ways to do it.
The compilers were fine, even if not producing maximally optimized code. Intel’s decision to add x86 compatibility circuitry to the die was probably the fatal one, it slowed everything down; made for terrible…
Itanium was not stupid. Some genuine effort behind it could have changed this whole story.
AppClip would be best
Absolutely
So true
Sounds just like the Itanium/amd64 story.
Couldn't agree more
People more often do the same thing and act like llm’s.
Exactly. Who you blame depends on if it was introduced in beta 1 or RC.
Years ago API’s and apps that used them were expected to do some work offline and on slow networks. Then, suddenly, everyone was expected to have stable Internet to do anything. The reason, I think, is the few apps that…
Vision Pro, different kind of device but same idea
Times is taking a risk. The costs of all this will fall on them, if they don’t get the judgement they sought at the end of the day. Plus OpenAI controls those costs and could drive them up. Plus any future litigation by…
Some of each
If you ask, just show me the prompts, you will invariable just get llm generated sets of prompts.
Your right, the “own identity” part is the problem. You can act on your own agency or you act as an agent for someone else. AI today is only the second. We tell it what we want, it acts by our impetus, but what it does…
So we’re back to programming?
True, it’s all machine language in the end. But could you imagine brute forcing UI elements and all, every single time? Maybe eventually.
Agree with you on the watch and AirPods. For other services no. They either do provide some API, like for payments, iCloud files or Auth, or can’t do so safely, AirDrop and iMessage. And for those alternatives do exist.…
There’s a difference. Microsoft competed unfairly because it sold software like Word that apparently internally used secret system calls only Microsoft devs knew about. They gave their other software divisions a big…
The notch was a big reason I was reluctant to upgrade from my M1 Air. But I hardly notice it. Only when it splits the menu bar items.
Exactly. Why use the headnotes at all? I always thought they were obviously were copyrightable. Plus they’re not close to perfect either.
Most posted job positions in the US, that I see, explicitly state they will not sponser candidates. But how receptive are they to TN visa candidates and do you see that attitude changing in the near future?
Likely project manager or architect.
Absolutely correct, just making laws themselves have little effect over anything. Enforcement is the key. For most laws that step is an afterthought. But there are creative ways to do it.
The compilers were fine, even if not producing maximally optimized code. Intel’s decision to add x86 compatibility circuitry to the die was probably the fatal one, it slowed everything down; made for terrible…
Itanium was not stupid. Some genuine effort behind it could have changed this whole story.
AppClip would be best
Absolutely
So true
Sounds just like the Itanium/amd64 story.
Couldn't agree more