My experience with AI tools is the opposite. The biggest energy thieves for me are configuration issues, library quirks, or trivial mistakes that are hard to spot. With AI I can often just bulldoze past those things and…
A mobile keyboard—limited as it is—has no trouble producing an em-dash, requiring little more than a long press on the - button.
It makes no sense to go looking to the past for the ultimate health diet, ancient people had life expectancies of like 40.
I’ll admit that I struggle to read their Byzantine pricing tables but that is $15 per 1k searches, right?
What is your preferred alternative?
Brave does not permit you to store search results unless you opt for the $26/mo plan. I emailed them about it and that policy applies to storing any data derived from search results as well.
Those old homes are usually used as storage for things that don't fit into their new, urban homes. The market value and taxes are low, so there's no point in selling. Then eventually, without realizing, you have gone…
I had the same idea, but now I a Postgres database that has very high latency for simple queries because the CPU is busy building large HNSW indexes. My impression is that it might be best to do vector index…
I built a service that turns entire websites into structured output: https://sitewideai.com You enter a starting URL, describe the data you want in a prompt, the AI suggests columns for the output spreadsheet which you…
As a long-time Audible subscriber, I’d estimate that I skip 1 in 3 books because of the narrator’s voice or bad recording setup.
Why not just feed that information back into the algorithm itself?
I read it before on Twitter, it’s probably adapted to fit into the 280-character limit.
Job switching should be less of a problem with a 12% unemployment rate, though.
Greek workers have the option to work in any of the 27 EU countries, and a few non-EU countries like Switzerland and Norway. Given that there is a shortage of skilled workers prompting this policy, it makes little sense…
Now that people are training AI models for video this might actually be worth something as training data.
I live in a country where software engineers often have engineering degrees. What that means in practice is that they study math and physics for the first 2-3 years of their degree, instead of computer science or…
This is the first I'm hearing of LLMOps, please elaborate a bit on what it entails. How does it provide guardrails?
This is on brand for him, he's been voicing his skepticism of LLMs for a long while now.
This is the first time I’m reading of this, why?
>I’d rather have a lower priced item That’s what every customer wants. But game companies that sell at $3.99 don’t tend to release many high-quality sequels.
Chrome has good reason to use multiple processes, but criticism of Chrome doesn’t necessarily apply to Electron apps.
The complaint that Chrome eats all your RAM is because it starts a new process for each tab, with all the overhead that entails. You’re not using multiple tabs in an Electron app.
I was one of the last people in my class to get a phone, which taught me that not having the cool new thing was not nearly as bad as I had thought.
Credentialism has certainly gone too far in many fields, but I’d still like my doctors, lawyers, and engineers to have more than 30 days of training in their field.
Well, yes, but the system filters definitions based on part of speech. For example, you don't want to show "to guide or conduct" (lead, verb) for a sentence talking about the metal lead (lead, noun). In this case,…
My experience with AI tools is the opposite. The biggest energy thieves for me are configuration issues, library quirks, or trivial mistakes that are hard to spot. With AI I can often just bulldoze past those things and…
A mobile keyboard—limited as it is—has no trouble producing an em-dash, requiring little more than a long press on the - button.
It makes no sense to go looking to the past for the ultimate health diet, ancient people had life expectancies of like 40.
I’ll admit that I struggle to read their Byzantine pricing tables but that is $15 per 1k searches, right?
What is your preferred alternative?
Brave does not permit you to store search results unless you opt for the $26/mo plan. I emailed them about it and that policy applies to storing any data derived from search results as well.
Those old homes are usually used as storage for things that don't fit into their new, urban homes. The market value and taxes are low, so there's no point in selling. Then eventually, without realizing, you have gone…
I had the same idea, but now I a Postgres database that has very high latency for simple queries because the CPU is busy building large HNSW indexes. My impression is that it might be best to do vector index…
I built a service that turns entire websites into structured output: https://sitewideai.com You enter a starting URL, describe the data you want in a prompt, the AI suggests columns for the output spreadsheet which you…
As a long-time Audible subscriber, I’d estimate that I skip 1 in 3 books because of the narrator’s voice or bad recording setup.
Why not just feed that information back into the algorithm itself?
I read it before on Twitter, it’s probably adapted to fit into the 280-character limit.
Job switching should be less of a problem with a 12% unemployment rate, though.
Greek workers have the option to work in any of the 27 EU countries, and a few non-EU countries like Switzerland and Norway. Given that there is a shortage of skilled workers prompting this policy, it makes little sense…
Now that people are training AI models for video this might actually be worth something as training data.
I live in a country where software engineers often have engineering degrees. What that means in practice is that they study math and physics for the first 2-3 years of their degree, instead of computer science or…
This is the first I'm hearing of LLMOps, please elaborate a bit on what it entails. How does it provide guardrails?
This is on brand for him, he's been voicing his skepticism of LLMs for a long while now.
This is the first time I’m reading of this, why?
>I’d rather have a lower priced item That’s what every customer wants. But game companies that sell at $3.99 don’t tend to release many high-quality sequels.
Chrome has good reason to use multiple processes, but criticism of Chrome doesn’t necessarily apply to Electron apps.
The complaint that Chrome eats all your RAM is because it starts a new process for each tab, with all the overhead that entails. You’re not using multiple tabs in an Electron app.
I was one of the last people in my class to get a phone, which taught me that not having the cool new thing was not nearly as bad as I had thought.
Credentialism has certainly gone too far in many fields, but I’d still like my doctors, lawyers, and engineers to have more than 30 days of training in their field.
Well, yes, but the system filters definitions based on part of speech. For example, you don't want to show "to guide or conduct" (lead, verb) for a sentence talking about the metal lead (lead, noun). In this case,…