Does this support using only private LLM instances? Does it integrate with Amazon Bedrock?
"Whistleblowing" requires something illegal to have occurred. It doesn't appear any of the disclosures being made about Facebook allege anything illegal. They are just disparaging insider information. Anyone who has…
This is essentially just MTG limited -- draft or maybe team draft. Draft is my favorite part. Though I don't necessarily agree with the "things that make magic fun". Mill/Discard/Land Destro decks are fun, janky decks…
All innovation is theft. It builds directly on top of what came before. "Good artists copy, great artists steal." It's always been true. AI just makes it available to more people faster.
Anthropic didn't lose because they scraped (read) copyrighted works. They lost because they distributed copyrighted works directly via torrents. Those aren't the same.
The controlling case is Wickard v Filburn (1942). A farmer was told he could only grow X acres of feed on his own land; feed that he had no intention of selling and was being fed entirely to his own livestock on the…
Because those changes might depend on those other changes. Git merges aren't linear. They're branched. And PR reviews are meant to just examine the merge of 1 branch back into master. They're not really meant to review…
NASA hasn't had a proper goal or mission for decades. That's their problem. And the spaceflight goal that everyone wants -- making things cheaper -- is not something that government agencies are particularly good at…
Well, in the sense that it's possible to be eating zero calories in the time between meals. You still need the meals. If you're just looking at brief snapshots, it doesn't tell you much.
People get doctorates in these fields and post studies in journals that get picked up by thinktanks and media outlets. It's "science" for all intents and purposes; they're used as a source of authority based on data and…
I think part of the problem is that what is often referred to as "science" these days is very different from the hard sciences of yesteryear. There are a lot of "soft" sciences that get increasingly softer every year.…
Germany and other EU countries that offer free tuition begin segregating students into vocational and university tracks starting around age 10. Only about 30% of students qualify for university. The rest stop school…
Ok, but forgiving student loans doesn't do that. It signals to borrowers that they don't have to repay high loans if their career can't support it. It tells borrowers that they can make risky loans without a chance of…
3d from moving 2d images has been a thing for decades.
I'm always surprised how even the people I consider incredibly intelligent get pulled into bad ideas.
There will always be value in doing work that other people don't want to do themselves or that requires expertise and skill that isn't conveyed all that well through books or pictures. The economy used to be full of…
I think it's a stretch to call having to make a living in a career other than your preferred job "suffering". Even before AI, there were surely millions of people who grew up wanting to be an artist, or an astronaut, or…
License plate holders that obscure the license plate on private property.
Look at any hobby and there are lots of beginners and casuals and far fewer people who are very skilled at it. The Maker hobby is no different. It's certainly not a problem of the microcontrollers available. Arduino is…
Wow, I can't believe this is still around! I'm glad to see artifacts from the past like this are still out there on the internet. Makes me miss Google CodeJam though.
Sounds more like people need to de-UK. It's going to be a problem with any company or technology.
I agree with you, but that only works if people value it and are willing to pay for it. Look at email. It’s technically open, but in reality there are a few large players who control the majority of it. The only way…
They were, but the actual cuts needed (to entitlements) are politically impossible to make.
That's basically compilers these days. It used to be that you could try and optimize your code, inline things here and there, but these days, you're not going to beat the compiler optimization.
Ah, the so-called benevolent dictator. The magical philosopher king to deliver us all from tyranny.
Does this support using only private LLM instances? Does it integrate with Amazon Bedrock?
"Whistleblowing" requires something illegal to have occurred. It doesn't appear any of the disclosures being made about Facebook allege anything illegal. They are just disparaging insider information. Anyone who has…
This is essentially just MTG limited -- draft or maybe team draft. Draft is my favorite part. Though I don't necessarily agree with the "things that make magic fun". Mill/Discard/Land Destro decks are fun, janky decks…
All innovation is theft. It builds directly on top of what came before. "Good artists copy, great artists steal." It's always been true. AI just makes it available to more people faster.
Anthropic didn't lose because they scraped (read) copyrighted works. They lost because they distributed copyrighted works directly via torrents. Those aren't the same.
The controlling case is Wickard v Filburn (1942). A farmer was told he could only grow X acres of feed on his own land; feed that he had no intention of selling and was being fed entirely to his own livestock on the…
Because those changes might depend on those other changes. Git merges aren't linear. They're branched. And PR reviews are meant to just examine the merge of 1 branch back into master. They're not really meant to review…
NASA hasn't had a proper goal or mission for decades. That's their problem. And the spaceflight goal that everyone wants -- making things cheaper -- is not something that government agencies are particularly good at…
Well, in the sense that it's possible to be eating zero calories in the time between meals. You still need the meals. If you're just looking at brief snapshots, it doesn't tell you much.
People get doctorates in these fields and post studies in journals that get picked up by thinktanks and media outlets. It's "science" for all intents and purposes; they're used as a source of authority based on data and…
I think part of the problem is that what is often referred to as "science" these days is very different from the hard sciences of yesteryear. There are a lot of "soft" sciences that get increasingly softer every year.…
Germany and other EU countries that offer free tuition begin segregating students into vocational and university tracks starting around age 10. Only about 30% of students qualify for university. The rest stop school…
Ok, but forgiving student loans doesn't do that. It signals to borrowers that they don't have to repay high loans if their career can't support it. It tells borrowers that they can make risky loans without a chance of…
3d from moving 2d images has been a thing for decades.
I'm always surprised how even the people I consider incredibly intelligent get pulled into bad ideas.
There will always be value in doing work that other people don't want to do themselves or that requires expertise and skill that isn't conveyed all that well through books or pictures. The economy used to be full of…
I think it's a stretch to call having to make a living in a career other than your preferred job "suffering". Even before AI, there were surely millions of people who grew up wanting to be an artist, or an astronaut, or…
License plate holders that obscure the license plate on private property.
Look at any hobby and there are lots of beginners and casuals and far fewer people who are very skilled at it. The Maker hobby is no different. It's certainly not a problem of the microcontrollers available. Arduino is…
Wow, I can't believe this is still around! I'm glad to see artifacts from the past like this are still out there on the internet. Makes me miss Google CodeJam though.
Sounds more like people need to de-UK. It's going to be a problem with any company or technology.
I agree with you, but that only works if people value it and are willing to pay for it. Look at email. It’s technically open, but in reality there are a few large players who control the majority of it. The only way…
They were, but the actual cuts needed (to entitlements) are politically impossible to make.
That's basically compilers these days. It used to be that you could try and optimize your code, inline things here and there, but these days, you're not going to beat the compiler optimization.
Ah, the so-called benevolent dictator. The magical philosopher king to deliver us all from tyranny.