My point in that second question was: Is the human challenge of getting a lot of inexperienced engineers to fully understand the LLM output actually worth the time, effort and money to solve vs sticking to solving the…
I think they're saying typically the kernel one of the last places you'd expect the bug, so it shows that it is battle tested? I don't think they're being snarky.
Does that work as well with non-strangers who are your coworker? I'm not sure. Also if you're organizationally changing the culture to force people to put more effort in writing the code, why are you even…
> /tmp A directory made available for applications that need a place to create temporary files. Applications shall be allowed to create files in this directory, but shall not assume that such files are preserved between…
That book was written with 40% of the engineers compared to when I left a couple years ago (not sure how many now with the layoffs now). I'm guessing those hires haven't read it yet. So yeah, reads like standards…
My take away with the final statement of rolling it yourself if it sounds fun is to pick whatever technology that gets your pen on the paper so to speak. If unity gets you making the thing or making the engine gets you…
Yeah I'm on the maintainers side with the whole > Do your job Which is a volunteer based job lol. Even if it was said in a heated argument, the bug reporter never really apologizes from what I read. Maybe that's a…
Rewriting hundreds of thousands of lines of code just isn't really feasible honestly. Maybe you just mean the actually bottle neck can use C bindings or whatever. Or, maybe you can migrate some microservices and hope it…
Corporations don't just blip into existence overnight. Startups use a prototyping language fixing the problems and then suddenly you realize you need types and rewriting is a waste of time, money, and a risk to the…
What's the ML in HTML stand for? I think that's probably the crux of the argument. Are we gonna evolve it past its name?
Accomplishing things for me feels a lot like solving a good puzzle. Like a crossword. I tried using an LLM to help with a small hardware project and ended up throwing out all the code halfway down the line and doing it…
I'm not sure that's necessarily true. People still do embroidering even though there's crazy embroidery machines (though the cost barrier there is probably related). Maybe LLMs will be too cost prohibitive in the future…
I took it to mean that people (clients) would give the project fake data for fun. But there's no statement about how those people might find the project (basically not necessarily people from hackernews). You both are…
I could've sworn it was removed from the handbook like 2018/2019
I'm a little confused on how this helped your design doc? It seems like you picked the design that the LLM could best implement? I was really curious about how it helped you iron out the problems but couldn't figure it…
Well my most trusted assistant would be the kernel by that definition
Not all jobs are created equal. I know the quality control for software written for Web is very very different than the software written for cloud. You're arguing that the standards for medical device firmware should be…
Who catches breaks more than men?
You wouldn't get an answer from a tiger. Sorry, my lack of empathy for you is making me woefully obtuse.
There are other societies than the American one and I recommend you look at them before you make such sweeping statements
Well you can talk to people every day and still be lonely. It's a bit too surface level to take it that literally.
I bought my minis 3d printed off Etsy, I bought some random wet erase map and markers, and I bought a non-d&d licensed 5e module. I thought this was the whole license debacle which got walked back? I already owned a 5e…
Why buy the cow when you get the milk for free tho?
My point in that second question was: Is the human challenge of getting a lot of inexperienced engineers to fully understand the LLM output actually worth the time, effort and money to solve vs sticking to solving the…
I think they're saying typically the kernel one of the last places you'd expect the bug, so it shows that it is battle tested? I don't think they're being snarky.
Does that work as well with non-strangers who are your coworker? I'm not sure. Also if you're organizationally changing the culture to force people to put more effort in writing the code, why are you even…
> /tmp A directory made available for applications that need a place to create temporary files. Applications shall be allowed to create files in this directory, but shall not assume that such files are preserved between…
That book was written with 40% of the engineers compared to when I left a couple years ago (not sure how many now with the layoffs now). I'm guessing those hires haven't read it yet. So yeah, reads like standards…
My take away with the final statement of rolling it yourself if it sounds fun is to pick whatever technology that gets your pen on the paper so to speak. If unity gets you making the thing or making the engine gets you…
Yeah I'm on the maintainers side with the whole > Do your job Which is a volunteer based job lol. Even if it was said in a heated argument, the bug reporter never really apologizes from what I read. Maybe that's a…
Rewriting hundreds of thousands of lines of code just isn't really feasible honestly. Maybe you just mean the actually bottle neck can use C bindings or whatever. Or, maybe you can migrate some microservices and hope it…
Corporations don't just blip into existence overnight. Startups use a prototyping language fixing the problems and then suddenly you realize you need types and rewriting is a waste of time, money, and a risk to the…
What's the ML in HTML stand for? I think that's probably the crux of the argument. Are we gonna evolve it past its name?
Accomplishing things for me feels a lot like solving a good puzzle. Like a crossword. I tried using an LLM to help with a small hardware project and ended up throwing out all the code halfway down the line and doing it…
I'm not sure that's necessarily true. People still do embroidering even though there's crazy embroidery machines (though the cost barrier there is probably related). Maybe LLMs will be too cost prohibitive in the future…
I took it to mean that people (clients) would give the project fake data for fun. But there's no statement about how those people might find the project (basically not necessarily people from hackernews). You both are…
I could've sworn it was removed from the handbook like 2018/2019
I'm a little confused on how this helped your design doc? It seems like you picked the design that the LLM could best implement? I was really curious about how it helped you iron out the problems but couldn't figure it…
Well my most trusted assistant would be the kernel by that definition
Not all jobs are created equal. I know the quality control for software written for Web is very very different than the software written for cloud. You're arguing that the standards for medical device firmware should be…
Who catches breaks more than men?
You wouldn't get an answer from a tiger. Sorry, my lack of empathy for you is making me woefully obtuse.
There are other societies than the American one and I recommend you look at them before you make such sweeping statements
Well you can talk to people every day and still be lonely. It's a bit too surface level to take it that literally.
I bought my minis 3d printed off Etsy, I bought some random wet erase map and markers, and I bought a non-d&d licensed 5e module. I thought this was the whole license debacle which got walked back? I already owned a 5e…
Why buy the cow when you get the milk for free tho?