I would be mad if the syntax was constantly changing but I want the internal implementation to be moving as fast as possible while retaining success. I think that rate is higher than what humans alone can do.
Python has so many footguns for server work and the world's worst typing system. It sounds like Golang is perfect for your use-case
More gets done in the Bay Area than those places.
GLM 5.2 (open-weights) is at or near Opus 4.7 level performance already. I think it's unlikely Anthropic will be able to durably charge us much more than the CapEx depreciation cost of GPUs + the OpEx of running them…
The scary thing is the zig project prohibits LLM contributions - the world is going to move faster than them.
I would guess the cost to do this with humans would be _at least_ $1.5M in compensation alone (I'm thinking three 500k/year Bay Area engineers) so this is already an order of magnitude cheaper. Is it worth $165K? I'm…
> We haven’t committed to rewriting. There’s a very high chance all this code gets thrown out completely. God forbid an engineer express uncertainty.
Not a compiler expert - shouldn't language verbosity and binary size be, at best, very loosely related?
Anyone with knowledge of Indian regulatory culture would not take this as dispositive.
It's pareto better, all else equal (which, fair, it may not be in this case) for a company to serve businesses from $1 and up than to only serve $5M and up.
The headline is implying that AI mode is super unpopular with the very large number "28" and not the more accurate number of .16.
... DDG had .7% marketshare (https://gs.statcounter.com/search-engine-market-share). 28% more visits would take it to .84%. Assuming those all come from Google, that would mean .16% of Google users didn't love AI mode…
I meant the structural problem of the EU not having a tech industry (nor any similarly prominent 21st century industry). Yes, it would be better for America and for the EU if America acted normal but I would not advise…
It is very true that if your company is a political vehicle, having the powers that be enforce that all companies must be political vehicles is quite good for you. America certainly has its version of this in its…
I think this is more of a corporate metrics tracking than advertising. Decision makers aren't seeing these ads in commits but they certainly are seeing a report from Anthropic that "75% of your commits last quarter are…
I have a lot of issues with the Ive era and the Mac... but every iPhone he designed was a banger. I think the 12-14 era is the only era of iPhones I thought were bad and that was after him. I suppose the iPhone 6 was…
The concerning thing for the EU should be that this valuable firm had no European capital trying to buy it. The Dutch have protected their sovereignty today while decreasing the incentive for the next entrepreneur to…
You mean Chrome would have pushed it, Apple would have filibustered it by refusing to comment (via lack of investment in the WebKit team), and then gullible folks on the internet would defer to them. (I will note that…
Your point is taken but we've turned lead into gold: https://home.cern/alice-detects-conversion-lead-gold-lhc/
I'm sure he copied it from somewhere but this reminds me of Paolini's elves in Eragon singing (magicking) trees to their desired shape.
I feel like "find me the shirt from the Instagram post" (which is what's depicted in the ad) is a use case that most people will love.
The lumping together of Typescript with Python is a mistake. Typescript is much faster (mostly due to engine investment), is much saner, has more expressive types, and generally has better ergonomics for the backend…
I did and I read it previously. It has not changed my interpretation that the Zig project would decline issues mostly generated by LLMs due to their stated policy saying so. If you’re saying their philosophy is…
Quoting from https://ziglang.org/code-of-conduct/#strict-no-llm-no-ai-pol...: > Strict No LLM / No AI Policy > No LLMs for issues. > No LLMs for pull requests. > No LLMs for comments on the bug tracker, including…
Next decade seems possibly false - if Intel starts getting deals and commitments now, it takes them about half a decade to build a fab. Agree it seems unlikely though.
I would be mad if the syntax was constantly changing but I want the internal implementation to be moving as fast as possible while retaining success. I think that rate is higher than what humans alone can do.
Python has so many footguns for server work and the world's worst typing system. It sounds like Golang is perfect for your use-case
More gets done in the Bay Area than those places.
GLM 5.2 (open-weights) is at or near Opus 4.7 level performance already. I think it's unlikely Anthropic will be able to durably charge us much more than the CapEx depreciation cost of GPUs + the OpEx of running them…
The scary thing is the zig project prohibits LLM contributions - the world is going to move faster than them.
I would guess the cost to do this with humans would be _at least_ $1.5M in compensation alone (I'm thinking three 500k/year Bay Area engineers) so this is already an order of magnitude cheaper. Is it worth $165K? I'm…
> We haven’t committed to rewriting. There’s a very high chance all this code gets thrown out completely. God forbid an engineer express uncertainty.
Not a compiler expert - shouldn't language verbosity and binary size be, at best, very loosely related?
Anyone with knowledge of Indian regulatory culture would not take this as dispositive.
It's pareto better, all else equal (which, fair, it may not be in this case) for a company to serve businesses from $1 and up than to only serve $5M and up.
The headline is implying that AI mode is super unpopular with the very large number "28" and not the more accurate number of .16.
... DDG had .7% marketshare (https://gs.statcounter.com/search-engine-market-share). 28% more visits would take it to .84%. Assuming those all come from Google, that would mean .16% of Google users didn't love AI mode…
I meant the structural problem of the EU not having a tech industry (nor any similarly prominent 21st century industry). Yes, it would be better for America and for the EU if America acted normal but I would not advise…
It is very true that if your company is a political vehicle, having the powers that be enforce that all companies must be political vehicles is quite good for you. America certainly has its version of this in its…
I think this is more of a corporate metrics tracking than advertising. Decision makers aren't seeing these ads in commits but they certainly are seeing a report from Anthropic that "75% of your commits last quarter are…
I have a lot of issues with the Ive era and the Mac... but every iPhone he designed was a banger. I think the 12-14 era is the only era of iPhones I thought were bad and that was after him. I suppose the iPhone 6 was…
The concerning thing for the EU should be that this valuable firm had no European capital trying to buy it. The Dutch have protected their sovereignty today while decreasing the incentive for the next entrepreneur to…
You mean Chrome would have pushed it, Apple would have filibustered it by refusing to comment (via lack of investment in the WebKit team), and then gullible folks on the internet would defer to them. (I will note that…
Your point is taken but we've turned lead into gold: https://home.cern/alice-detects-conversion-lead-gold-lhc/
I'm sure he copied it from somewhere but this reminds me of Paolini's elves in Eragon singing (magicking) trees to their desired shape.
I feel like "find me the shirt from the Instagram post" (which is what's depicted in the ad) is a use case that most people will love.
The lumping together of Typescript with Python is a mistake. Typescript is much faster (mostly due to engine investment), is much saner, has more expressive types, and generally has better ergonomics for the backend…
I did and I read it previously. It has not changed my interpretation that the Zig project would decline issues mostly generated by LLMs due to their stated policy saying so. If you’re saying their philosophy is…
Quoting from https://ziglang.org/code-of-conduct/#strict-no-llm-no-ai-pol...: > Strict No LLM / No AI Policy > No LLMs for issues. > No LLMs for pull requests. > No LLMs for comments on the bug tracker, including…
Next decade seems possibly false - if Intel starts getting deals and commitments now, it takes them about half a decade to build a fab. Agree it seems unlikely though.