I try every couple years. I even got myself to relearn the first part of calculus once. Of course I've never used it and it's gone again
Have you looked at gitlab lately? They have a ton of ai features built in. I'm not a gitlab user, just learning it, so I can't say how half baked they are or not. At a high level though it seems like a huge step forward…
My engineers write better code when we enforce types. It's easier to do this then retrain everyone on Go and rewrite all our code. New stuff is often in Go now, but prototyping quickly in Python and then enforcing types…
A reverse funnel
Weren't we promised that quantum dead reckoning was right around the corner?
Asking it why it did something will not get you usable data. It will read what it did in the context and hallucinate a reason.
Porque no los dos?
Liquid seems like a better approach from an engineering standpoint because it is non compressible. But then I imagine dealing with liquid is more of a pain than air.
Someone said GitHub is racing to the mythical "zero nines of availability" and I love it
Tl;Dr blame Gatorade marketing. The book "waterlogged" does a good takedown of the myth. Basically only you need to drink when you are thirsty.
Americans don't eat vegetables though
On a task by task basis the code Claude generates is pretty good these days. The biggest issue I see is that it wants to rearchitect the code constantly and I have no faith in my tests anymore because Claude will just…
Heh nice, I have 4 openmanet nodes on HaLow right now
Assuming you mean mesh in general: Meshtastic like projects - emergency communication - low power data transfer for sensors - low data rate data transfer for mobile groups. Air softers use it to transmit information to…
Is there a better designed mesh project like those two getting built that you know of? Reticulum?
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I try every couple years. I even got myself to relearn the first part of calculus once. Of course I've never used it and it's gone again
Have you looked at gitlab lately? They have a ton of ai features built in. I'm not a gitlab user, just learning it, so I can't say how half baked they are or not. At a high level though it seems like a huge step forward…
My engineers write better code when we enforce types. It's easier to do this then retrain everyone on Go and rewrite all our code. New stuff is often in Go now, but prototyping quickly in Python and then enforcing types…
A reverse funnel
Weren't we promised that quantum dead reckoning was right around the corner?
Asking it why it did something will not get you usable data. It will read what it did in the context and hallucinate a reason.
Porque no los dos?
Liquid seems like a better approach from an engineering standpoint because it is non compressible. But then I imagine dealing with liquid is more of a pain than air.
Someone said GitHub is racing to the mythical "zero nines of availability" and I love it
Tl;Dr blame Gatorade marketing. The book "waterlogged" does a good takedown of the myth. Basically only you need to drink when you are thirsty.
Americans don't eat vegetables though
On a task by task basis the code Claude generates is pretty good these days. The biggest issue I see is that it wants to rearchitect the code constantly and I have no faith in my tests anymore because Claude will just…
Heh nice, I have 4 openmanet nodes on HaLow right now
Assuming you mean mesh in general: Meshtastic like projects - emergency communication - low power data transfer for sensors - low data rate data transfer for mobile groups. Air softers use it to transmit information to…
Is there a better designed mesh project like those two getting built that you know of? Reticulum?
[dead]