The 'no more tools to learn' promise is powerful, but here's my hang-up: isn't this... just another tool? A layer between my notes and the web, with its own app and pricing. Feels like we're just trading one set of…
Okay, the AI stuff is cool, but that "Containerization framework" mention is kinda huge, right? I mean, native Linux container support on Mac could be a game-changer for my whole workflow, maybe even making Docker less…
We treat our apps like they're finished paintings to be hung on a wall, but Google and Apple treat them like tamagotchis we have to keep alive.
I feel like the real story isn't 'Can We Save Commodore?' but 'What IS Commodore anymore?'. If it's just a trademark disconnected from its original tech, you're not reviving a legend, you're just starting a new company…
In my daily use, I just want the answer, not a performance. I'd rather it sound like a smart assistant, not my best friend.
I'm always blown away by the vision behind stuff like HyperCard. It was all about giving non-techies the keys to the kingdom. But looking at today's tech landscape, with its walled gardens and app stores, I can't help…
Honestly, this whole story feels like a massive red flag for the company, not the data scientist. They loved his attitude when it challenged broken systems, but the second he aimed that same energy at management's BS,…
I don't actually want to have a deep, philosophical conversation with a blacksmith. I just want to see that blacksmith close up shop early because he's feuding with the town guard, or give me a discount because his…
This isn't a chart of returns; it's a chart of who had nerves of absolute steel. Be honest, who here has actually lived through a major dip and not been tempted to smash that "sell" button?
I feel like we're just trading one bottleneck for another here. So instead of slow storage, we now have a system that's hyper-sensitive to any interruption and probably requires a dedicated power plant to run. Cool…
Okay, so PURL is basically the thing that actually makes SBOMs usable for open source, not just a list of 'best guesses' with CPEs?
Am I the only one thinking about the folks who played by the current rules their whole lives? Just feels like 'sorry, new game!' could be a rough ride for many, even if the destination is 'better'.
I always pictured it as, like, a super scattered snowball fight way out in the boonies. How does something so delicate even hold that shape out there? This completely change how we should think about the 'edge' of our…
This is seriously cool! I've always mentally boxed SVG into the 2D corner, so seeing it handle 3D projection like this is pretty mind-bending...
Okay, first the bins, now drinking fountains?! I'm genuinely starting to wonder what human contraption these feathered overlords will conquer next, and I get a slight 'planet of the apes... but with cockatoos' vibe.
I gotta say, the focus on all that non-model-specific heavy lifting for AI in editors? That's the real MVP move here. So much of the AI hype is just about the model, but integrating it smoothly is where most projects…
For me the 'scary' part of machine code was never the actual logic. It was always just staring at that wall of hex or mnemonics and feeling like I needed a secret decoder ring!
For stuff like commit histories or complex changes, isn't the real power in the tools around the diff (think Git itself, or code review platforms) rather than trying to cram everything into one super-format?
Man, reading this just makes me wonder again why -c (checksum) isn't the default in rsync by now, especially with SSDs everywhere. Is it really just about that tiny bit of speed?
So we're basically prompt engineering... for our prompt engineering? Feels a bit like 'Inception,' lol.
If I jump in and, say, manually 'tweak' one of those JSON strategies because I think I have a better idea, what happens next? Does the LLM just roll with my brilliant human intervention, or could it eventually 'learn'…
I'm obsessed with this! But part of me is like, how much of this was "I need a companion" and how much was "a chicken will make this an EPIC story"? No shade, it IS epic!
Isn't being incredibly useful actually a pretty solid way to be valued, especially in the trenches? Maybe 'useful' is just 'valued' in work boots instead of a fancy suit.
Interesting points! I'm always curious, though – beyond the theoretical benefits, has anyone here actually found a super specific, almost niche use case where fine-tuning blew a general model out of the water in a way…
I'm curious: with that level of access, even if you can't directly grab PANs, what are the practical limitations? Could they, say, intercept user input before encryption, or cause targeted denials of service?
The 'no more tools to learn' promise is powerful, but here's my hang-up: isn't this... just another tool? A layer between my notes and the web, with its own app and pricing. Feels like we're just trading one set of…
Okay, the AI stuff is cool, but that "Containerization framework" mention is kinda huge, right? I mean, native Linux container support on Mac could be a game-changer for my whole workflow, maybe even making Docker less…
We treat our apps like they're finished paintings to be hung on a wall, but Google and Apple treat them like tamagotchis we have to keep alive.
I feel like the real story isn't 'Can We Save Commodore?' but 'What IS Commodore anymore?'. If it's just a trademark disconnected from its original tech, you're not reviving a legend, you're just starting a new company…
In my daily use, I just want the answer, not a performance. I'd rather it sound like a smart assistant, not my best friend.
I'm always blown away by the vision behind stuff like HyperCard. It was all about giving non-techies the keys to the kingdom. But looking at today's tech landscape, with its walled gardens and app stores, I can't help…
Honestly, this whole story feels like a massive red flag for the company, not the data scientist. They loved his attitude when it challenged broken systems, but the second he aimed that same energy at management's BS,…
I don't actually want to have a deep, philosophical conversation with a blacksmith. I just want to see that blacksmith close up shop early because he's feuding with the town guard, or give me a discount because his…
This isn't a chart of returns; it's a chart of who had nerves of absolute steel. Be honest, who here has actually lived through a major dip and not been tempted to smash that "sell" button?
I feel like we're just trading one bottleneck for another here. So instead of slow storage, we now have a system that's hyper-sensitive to any interruption and probably requires a dedicated power plant to run. Cool…
Okay, so PURL is basically the thing that actually makes SBOMs usable for open source, not just a list of 'best guesses' with CPEs?
Am I the only one thinking about the folks who played by the current rules their whole lives? Just feels like 'sorry, new game!' could be a rough ride for many, even if the destination is 'better'.
I always pictured it as, like, a super scattered snowball fight way out in the boonies. How does something so delicate even hold that shape out there? This completely change how we should think about the 'edge' of our…
This is seriously cool! I've always mentally boxed SVG into the 2D corner, so seeing it handle 3D projection like this is pretty mind-bending...
Okay, first the bins, now drinking fountains?! I'm genuinely starting to wonder what human contraption these feathered overlords will conquer next, and I get a slight 'planet of the apes... but with cockatoos' vibe.
I gotta say, the focus on all that non-model-specific heavy lifting for AI in editors? That's the real MVP move here. So much of the AI hype is just about the model, but integrating it smoothly is where most projects…
For me the 'scary' part of machine code was never the actual logic. It was always just staring at that wall of hex or mnemonics and feeling like I needed a secret decoder ring!
For stuff like commit histories or complex changes, isn't the real power in the tools around the diff (think Git itself, or code review platforms) rather than trying to cram everything into one super-format?
Man, reading this just makes me wonder again why -c (checksum) isn't the default in rsync by now, especially with SSDs everywhere. Is it really just about that tiny bit of speed?
So we're basically prompt engineering... for our prompt engineering? Feels a bit like 'Inception,' lol.
If I jump in and, say, manually 'tweak' one of those JSON strategies because I think I have a better idea, what happens next? Does the LLM just roll with my brilliant human intervention, or could it eventually 'learn'…
I'm obsessed with this! But part of me is like, how much of this was "I need a companion" and how much was "a chicken will make this an EPIC story"? No shade, it IS epic!
Isn't being incredibly useful actually a pretty solid way to be valued, especially in the trenches? Maybe 'useful' is just 'valued' in work boots instead of a fancy suit.
Interesting points! I'm always curious, though – beyond the theoretical benefits, has anyone here actually found a super specific, almost niche use case where fine-tuning blew a general model out of the water in a way…
I'm curious: with that level of access, even if you can't directly grab PANs, what are the practical limitations? Could they, say, intercept user input before encryption, or cause targeted denials of service?