Why not have the LLM go straight to LLVM IR? What would a program look like when you remove all (or most) of the layers of abstraction needed by humans? Or are LLMs too contaminated by the training data to do this? I…
> When I first started, I was enamored with technology and programming and computer science. I’m over it. Wow, that is incredibly sad to hear. I'm 40+ years in, and still love all of that.
How is that "threatening"? Genuinely curious.
Looks like they just updated it. Check under the globe.
I have an experimental project where I was asking various LLMs/tools (ChatGPT, Cursor, Google, Lovable) to implement an old game for me. They all failed spectacularly in various ways. For example, when trying to debug…
As I commented in the other post, it killed mine at work, because my boss is pushing "AI" really hard on the devs. Fortunately, he's now seeing enough evidence to counteract the hype, but it's still going to be present…
I'm 62, and it's had the opposite effect on me. I've never stopped loving writing code, learning new things, trying random stuff, etc. I code all day, and spend more time playing with stuff in the evenings (the main…
"Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should." Pretty neat, though.
My Nvidia Shield Portable is sad to hear this. They updated it to Lollipop 5.1 and then killed it. Pretty much useless now.
The worst excesses of "modern" web presentation, coupled with a complete lack of actual gardening info...I'm completely baffled. 1% "here's your zone", and 99% "your zone is almost no use for gardening"
> People often don't perceive you as an actual human if you've only ever been a video square to them. I don't have a camera, so I'm just a picture of Uncle Fester. No one I work with (across 3 jobs) has seen me in…
I had (probably still have) a similar-ish problem. I have an old nVidia Shield handheld that I bought a wired ethernet adapter for. Something about that adapter would kill my network dead after a random interval. It…
It's unlikely that "regulators" had anything to do with it, given the quick resolution. I'd be more inclined to think that Epic went back to Apple hat-in-hand and begged to be let back in, probably promising to muzzle…
> And they should have been held accountable, were they? Huge stock hit (since recovered, of course), top executives lost their jobs, fines, had to give away a paid product, extra oversight, cost of fixing security,…
You told a reporter that story. The reporter, _without verifying it_, then tells his newspaper that the story you told is true and he's verified it (which is a lie). Now the newspaper publishes it. Who's responsible?
They do not publish fraudulent data. They publish data provided by the credit grantors. If the credit grantors don't do their due diligence, that's on them, not the CRA. And if credit grantors fail to due that due…
> other sources which leaked or sold it to them. Every data source (such as a bank or credit card) provides that data to CRAs because consumers granted permission to do so when entering into a business relationship.…
> Update their dependencies within two months of a critical security vulnerability being patched (Mar 10 to May 12). They thought they did, but failed. > In the event of a breach, detect it within a reasonable timeframe…
> Equifax leaked about half of all Social Security Numbers back in 2017. They weren't leaked, they were stolen. Does a bank "leak money" when it's robbed?
> The moment credit agencies started running their own monitoring services, it seemed like they were openly admitting that they were defaming people. I still do not understand why this is legal. If you're signed up for…
> They have successfully convinced the public that identity theft is a separate and distinct crime done exclusively by one person to another rather than simply fraud that they are aiding and abetting. This demonstrates…
I went round and round with AMD support between December 2022 and April 2023, explaining exactly where the issue was, sending the event logs showing the driver was being blocked because of the signature, sent…
Fun fact: Ryzen Master needs a kernel driver installed in order to function. This driver was signed with a cert that expired a while back. For years they required you to disable virtualization based security (because as…
> Is agile still appropriate today? It was never appropriate. It was created by consultants to sell consulting services. In that way, it's a huge success. As a practical development methodology, it's always been a…
Congrats to the authors for taking a potentially great article and wrecking it with insane distractions and useless web BS. Pipes was an amazing piece of software and deserves better than that.
Why not have the LLM go straight to LLVM IR? What would a program look like when you remove all (or most) of the layers of abstraction needed by humans? Or are LLMs too contaminated by the training data to do this? I…
> When I first started, I was enamored with technology and programming and computer science. I’m over it. Wow, that is incredibly sad to hear. I'm 40+ years in, and still love all of that.
How is that "threatening"? Genuinely curious.
Looks like they just updated it. Check under the globe.
I have an experimental project where I was asking various LLMs/tools (ChatGPT, Cursor, Google, Lovable) to implement an old game for me. They all failed spectacularly in various ways. For example, when trying to debug…
As I commented in the other post, it killed mine at work, because my boss is pushing "AI" really hard on the devs. Fortunately, he's now seeing enough evidence to counteract the hype, but it's still going to be present…
I'm 62, and it's had the opposite effect on me. I've never stopped loving writing code, learning new things, trying random stuff, etc. I code all day, and spend more time playing with stuff in the evenings (the main…
"Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should." Pretty neat, though.
My Nvidia Shield Portable is sad to hear this. They updated it to Lollipop 5.1 and then killed it. Pretty much useless now.
The worst excesses of "modern" web presentation, coupled with a complete lack of actual gardening info...I'm completely baffled. 1% "here's your zone", and 99% "your zone is almost no use for gardening"
> People often don't perceive you as an actual human if you've only ever been a video square to them. I don't have a camera, so I'm just a picture of Uncle Fester. No one I work with (across 3 jobs) has seen me in…
I had (probably still have) a similar-ish problem. I have an old nVidia Shield handheld that I bought a wired ethernet adapter for. Something about that adapter would kill my network dead after a random interval. It…
It's unlikely that "regulators" had anything to do with it, given the quick resolution. I'd be more inclined to think that Epic went back to Apple hat-in-hand and begged to be let back in, probably promising to muzzle…
> And they should have been held accountable, were they? Huge stock hit (since recovered, of course), top executives lost their jobs, fines, had to give away a paid product, extra oversight, cost of fixing security,…
You told a reporter that story. The reporter, _without verifying it_, then tells his newspaper that the story you told is true and he's verified it (which is a lie). Now the newspaper publishes it. Who's responsible?
They do not publish fraudulent data. They publish data provided by the credit grantors. If the credit grantors don't do their due diligence, that's on them, not the CRA. And if credit grantors fail to due that due…
> other sources which leaked or sold it to them. Every data source (such as a bank or credit card) provides that data to CRAs because consumers granted permission to do so when entering into a business relationship.…
> Update their dependencies within two months of a critical security vulnerability being patched (Mar 10 to May 12). They thought they did, but failed. > In the event of a breach, detect it within a reasonable timeframe…
> Equifax leaked about half of all Social Security Numbers back in 2017. They weren't leaked, they were stolen. Does a bank "leak money" when it's robbed?
> The moment credit agencies started running their own monitoring services, it seemed like they were openly admitting that they were defaming people. I still do not understand why this is legal. If you're signed up for…
> They have successfully convinced the public that identity theft is a separate and distinct crime done exclusively by one person to another rather than simply fraud that they are aiding and abetting. This demonstrates…
I went round and round with AMD support between December 2022 and April 2023, explaining exactly where the issue was, sending the event logs showing the driver was being blocked because of the signature, sent…
Fun fact: Ryzen Master needs a kernel driver installed in order to function. This driver was signed with a cert that expired a while back. For years they required you to disable virtualization based security (because as…
> Is agile still appropriate today? It was never appropriate. It was created by consultants to sell consulting services. In that way, it's a huge success. As a practical development methodology, it's always been a…
Congrats to the authors for taking a potentially great article and wrecking it with insane distractions and useless web BS. Pipes was an amazing piece of software and deserves better than that.