This is just the fallacy. Political groups are coalitions not single monoliths.
I’ve seen a tremendous amount of content about AI water usage, mostly from pro AI sources. The most common type is comparing AI to particularly water intensive agriculture. The result is that now I think water usage…
Responding to tone but not to content is what a dog does.
Why would we expect John Deere to have a low AI adoption curve? It's main product line is just as computerized as Tesla's.
Geologically speaking it's just one really cool layer.
Code quality is a tactical concern and products live or die on strategy. I wouldn't recommend neglecting tactics if your strategy doesn't put you on the good side of a generational bubble though.
There's a reason we had a few years of heavy anti police protest across the US.
Safety and freedom is incompatible with direct political control. Respect for truth is a false value if what truth is is to be put to a vote or changed to match the whims of whoever is in power.
The decline of technic sets is such a shame. There's so little support for anything but representative models of specific cars, despite the platform being able to support a ton of mechanical creativity.
To be fair that's more than a little bit present in most superhero media.
Kernighan's Lever - https://linusakesson.net/programming/kernighans-lever/index.... This article is perennially posted here and is probably the best breakdown of this quote.
You aren't renting walking distance to a butcher baker and candlestick maker for less than $3K for a studio. That's an aspirational lifestyle for a few neighborhoods.
Deeply hate this. Just add a small fee. It's just a couple bucks. What are you, cheap? Open Source Software underwrites everything. It makes the largest human endeavors work. It makes silly ephemeral games little notes…
Folding drying racks come in several shapes and are very affordable.
The article does go into this and gives lip service to the idea that a secure third party could expose age without exposing identity. Ultimately, there's still the problem that even if point of verification can be done…
There are several humans who need to make decisions between bad training data and life or death decisions coming from an LLM.
Games are a zero marginal cost industry driven by hits. The cap is pretty high. The floor is what you should be worried about.
Unions are useful because they are a counterparty to negotiations with management. They have leverage because they are able to represent labor as a single entity. If they are only able to represent labor on one axis,…
Having a relational database in a gui was great. The problem with access was that it tried to support network applications as a backend but supported a punishingly low number of connections. Having an application that…
It's a myth in the most literal way. Fleming published and promoted his results despite a lack of reproducibility. By the time he won the Nobel Prize, he had backformed or misremembered a folksy story about an open…
So many other good details that get to how impossibly multivariate biology research is, like the need to have several days at the exact temperature. It's not uncommon for results in biology to have this kind of snag in…
Chatbots enable self destructive manipulation of others at scale.
I like your angle, but most applications is a big difference from most companies. Serverless comes after deciding whether or not to break up the monolith, and after breaking up engineering into separate teams. It's a…
It sounds like it's a B2B SaaS product that's gone through multiple pivots with very weak guidance on product on every step. Not that I'm disagreeing with you, but it's a very common way for things to go wrong.
Tiles aren't just about data selection, they're also about caching. By turning a continuous domain (any part of the world at any scale) into a series of discrete requests (a grid of tiles at several fixed scales), maps…
This is just the fallacy. Political groups are coalitions not single monoliths.
I’ve seen a tremendous amount of content about AI water usage, mostly from pro AI sources. The most common type is comparing AI to particularly water intensive agriculture. The result is that now I think water usage…
Responding to tone but not to content is what a dog does.
Why would we expect John Deere to have a low AI adoption curve? It's main product line is just as computerized as Tesla's.
Geologically speaking it's just one really cool layer.
Code quality is a tactical concern and products live or die on strategy. I wouldn't recommend neglecting tactics if your strategy doesn't put you on the good side of a generational bubble though.
There's a reason we had a few years of heavy anti police protest across the US.
Safety and freedom is incompatible with direct political control. Respect for truth is a false value if what truth is is to be put to a vote or changed to match the whims of whoever is in power.
The decline of technic sets is such a shame. There's so little support for anything but representative models of specific cars, despite the platform being able to support a ton of mechanical creativity.
To be fair that's more than a little bit present in most superhero media.
Kernighan's Lever - https://linusakesson.net/programming/kernighans-lever/index.... This article is perennially posted here and is probably the best breakdown of this quote.
You aren't renting walking distance to a butcher baker and candlestick maker for less than $3K for a studio. That's an aspirational lifestyle for a few neighborhoods.
Deeply hate this. Just add a small fee. It's just a couple bucks. What are you, cheap? Open Source Software underwrites everything. It makes the largest human endeavors work. It makes silly ephemeral games little notes…
Folding drying racks come in several shapes and are very affordable.
The article does go into this and gives lip service to the idea that a secure third party could expose age without exposing identity. Ultimately, there's still the problem that even if point of verification can be done…
There are several humans who need to make decisions between bad training data and life or death decisions coming from an LLM.
Games are a zero marginal cost industry driven by hits. The cap is pretty high. The floor is what you should be worried about.
Unions are useful because they are a counterparty to negotiations with management. They have leverage because they are able to represent labor as a single entity. If they are only able to represent labor on one axis,…
Having a relational database in a gui was great. The problem with access was that it tried to support network applications as a backend but supported a punishingly low number of connections. Having an application that…
It's a myth in the most literal way. Fleming published and promoted his results despite a lack of reproducibility. By the time he won the Nobel Prize, he had backformed or misremembered a folksy story about an open…
So many other good details that get to how impossibly multivariate biology research is, like the need to have several days at the exact temperature. It's not uncommon for results in biology to have this kind of snag in…
Chatbots enable self destructive manipulation of others at scale.
I like your angle, but most applications is a big difference from most companies. Serverless comes after deciding whether or not to break up the monolith, and after breaking up engineering into separate teams. It's a…
It sounds like it's a B2B SaaS product that's gone through multiple pivots with very weak guidance on product on every step. Not that I'm disagreeing with you, but it's a very common way for things to go wrong.
Tiles aren't just about data selection, they're also about caching. By turning a continuous domain (any part of the world at any scale) into a series of discrete requests (a grid of tiles at several fixed scales), maps…