"The battle royale answers one question cleanly" smells ChatGPT-generated. But that was the only thing I tripped on. I enjoyed reading the article in general.
To me, "autocompletion" means a pure lookup function input->output. That's a lot different from "general purpose processor which can act based on program logic, stored data, and input data".
Sure, we agree there. But it seems to me that if the LLM can effectively "execute" the instruction of how to take an input IP packet and generate a response IP packet based on a set or rules, then that's effectively a…
What do you mean that the "harness ran the commands"? It looks to me like the LLM "executed" the logic in pure output tokens, not by using any kind of external tool calls?
Do some people still claim "LLMs are just dumb auto completers"? Because this seems to disprove that claim pretty convincingly?
Opus 4.6 is already very good at troubleshooting all kinds of network problems if it has access to the command line tshark tool and the pcap files.
From the video: https://youtu.be/OoJsPvmFixU?t=1942 32:22 It's time to be honest. As engineers, we are not known to be effective communicators. That's just not a strong suit of an engineer. 32:29 It is time to lay out…
> Could you elaborate? How is this illegal if you declare taxes? As someone else mentioned, the taxes are different. Namely: Salary is taxed lower than dividends. So the German tax authorities checks very carefully that…
Sure, it's not malicious. But it is very eager to get things done, and surprisingly inventive and knowledgeable in all kinds of workarounds.
> As somebody from Germany, establishing a company is a bit tedious and bureaucratic. I'm fairly sure the German tax authority will claim that you have a local German branch office since you live and work there. That…
Thanks, I agree 100% with that.
You've never seen project managers basically propose the equivalent of getting a baby delivered in 1 month instead of 9 months by adding more people to the project? But yeah, if the recruiters start asking for "10 years…
> I think the older AI users are even held back because they might be doing things that are not neccessary any more As the same age as Linus Torvalds, I'd say that it can be the opposite. We are so used to "leaky…
> I assume it's some kind of AI translation, but who knows. Maybe the translator is just stupid. AI does a much better job of translating than the stuff I see on TV. I get the impression that it's done by a lowly paid…
Congratulations! For the first time since 1783, there are now "Hessians" (German state troops) in North America with their guns pointed at the United States.
> If I wanted to convince NATO to take arctic security seriously without having to deploy troops and resources of my own, this is how I'd do it. Sure, you can convince a close friend of yours to take his home security…
> What LLMs will NOT do however, is write or invent SOMETHING KNEW. Counterpoint: ChatGPT came up with the new expression "The confetti has left the cannon" a few years ago. So, your claim is not obviously true. Can you…
Thanks, I remember it being much louder when I used it in the 80's. Made me jump out of the chair the first time I heard it.
More like the VT-05. The VT-52 came a few years later. But yeah, the VT-420 is way later. Fun fact: The VT-52 didn't have a loudspeaker for the bell sound. Instead, it had a electromechanical relay which was set up to…
> Current AI systems can give best guess statistical answer from dataset the've been fed. Counterpoint: ChatGPT came up with the new idiom "The confetti has left the cannon"
> "something that can discover new areas of mathematics". How many software engineers with a good math education can do this?
>> ChatGPT 3.5 is already a general AI based on the old definition > It's not. It's a query-retrieval system that can parse human language. And humans aren't general AI either. They're just DNA replicators. It is very…
> You can't survive in a near peer combat environment without it. How well will the european countries survive with it if the US cuts off access to spare parts, SW maintenance links etc?
> It is impossible for a simulink model to accidentally type `i > 0` when they meant `i >= 0` The Simulink Coder tool is a piece of software. It is designed and implemented by humans. It will have bugs. Autogenerated…
> you guidance inevitably falls out of the context window Yes, for a pure LLM session. But using GitHub Copilot, the agent server picks out what it thinks is your most important rules, and inserts them as part of the…
"The battle royale answers one question cleanly" smells ChatGPT-generated. But that was the only thing I tripped on. I enjoyed reading the article in general.
To me, "autocompletion" means a pure lookup function input->output. That's a lot different from "general purpose processor which can act based on program logic, stored data, and input data".
Sure, we agree there. But it seems to me that if the LLM can effectively "execute" the instruction of how to take an input IP packet and generate a response IP packet based on a set or rules, then that's effectively a…
What do you mean that the "harness ran the commands"? It looks to me like the LLM "executed" the logic in pure output tokens, not by using any kind of external tool calls?
Do some people still claim "LLMs are just dumb auto completers"? Because this seems to disprove that claim pretty convincingly?
Opus 4.6 is already very good at troubleshooting all kinds of network problems if it has access to the command line tshark tool and the pcap files.
From the video: https://youtu.be/OoJsPvmFixU?t=1942 32:22 It's time to be honest. As engineers, we are not known to be effective communicators. That's just not a strong suit of an engineer. 32:29 It is time to lay out…
> Could you elaborate? How is this illegal if you declare taxes? As someone else mentioned, the taxes are different. Namely: Salary is taxed lower than dividends. So the German tax authorities checks very carefully that…
Sure, it's not malicious. But it is very eager to get things done, and surprisingly inventive and knowledgeable in all kinds of workarounds.
> As somebody from Germany, establishing a company is a bit tedious and bureaucratic. I'm fairly sure the German tax authority will claim that you have a local German branch office since you live and work there. That…
Thanks, I agree 100% with that.
You've never seen project managers basically propose the equivalent of getting a baby delivered in 1 month instead of 9 months by adding more people to the project? But yeah, if the recruiters start asking for "10 years…
> I think the older AI users are even held back because they might be doing things that are not neccessary any more As the same age as Linus Torvalds, I'd say that it can be the opposite. We are so used to "leaky…
> I assume it's some kind of AI translation, but who knows. Maybe the translator is just stupid. AI does a much better job of translating than the stuff I see on TV. I get the impression that it's done by a lowly paid…
Congratulations! For the first time since 1783, there are now "Hessians" (German state troops) in North America with their guns pointed at the United States.
> If I wanted to convince NATO to take arctic security seriously without having to deploy troops and resources of my own, this is how I'd do it. Sure, you can convince a close friend of yours to take his home security…
> What LLMs will NOT do however, is write or invent SOMETHING KNEW. Counterpoint: ChatGPT came up with the new expression "The confetti has left the cannon" a few years ago. So, your claim is not obviously true. Can you…
Thanks, I remember it being much louder when I used it in the 80's. Made me jump out of the chair the first time I heard it.
More like the VT-05. The VT-52 came a few years later. But yeah, the VT-420 is way later. Fun fact: The VT-52 didn't have a loudspeaker for the bell sound. Instead, it had a electromechanical relay which was set up to…
> Current AI systems can give best guess statistical answer from dataset the've been fed. Counterpoint: ChatGPT came up with the new idiom "The confetti has left the cannon"
> "something that can discover new areas of mathematics". How many software engineers with a good math education can do this?
>> ChatGPT 3.5 is already a general AI based on the old definition > It's not. It's a query-retrieval system that can parse human language. And humans aren't general AI either. They're just DNA replicators. It is very…
> You can't survive in a near peer combat environment without it. How well will the european countries survive with it if the US cuts off access to spare parts, SW maintenance links etc?
> It is impossible for a simulink model to accidentally type `i > 0` when they meant `i >= 0` The Simulink Coder tool is a piece of software. It is designed and implemented by humans. It will have bugs. Autogenerated…
> you guidance inevitably falls out of the context window Yes, for a pure LLM session. But using GitHub Copilot, the agent server picks out what it thinks is your most important rules, and inserts them as part of the…