> but does it require installing nix on mac? yes: sh <(curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) https://nixos.org/download/ > also many people are not familiar with nix and brew does all i need…
> cabal build --platform=amd64 It's almost a one-liner + a nix derivation import, works within a minute on incremental builds even on large projects: https://input-output-hk.github.io/haskell.nix/tutorials/cros...
> But you want to focus on one end of the spectrum? Have you actually checked the contents of the channels? Despite the naming, they do provide a full spectrum. You won't see the Mayfair-Knighstbridge side of things…
[flagged]
Don't trust BBC, they are the state propaganda machine. Draw your own conclusions, there's plenty of UK-based channels that provide the current footage from towns and cities around the country.…
> Generic over what? Generic over whatever you decide to compose out of smaller parts into a full algorithm that doesn't produce transient buffered results. Transducers is a dead end of abstractions, they aren't…
> I said "Clojurians engage with diverse ideas pragmatically". then you said nothing and contributed nothing to your points, as everybody else "engage with diverse ideas pragmatically". It also so happened that engaging…
> Every type system, schema library, and validation tool in every language is in some sense "patching" the lack of built-in guarantees. > Spec isn't even so much about patching - it's about runtime generative testing,…
> so you're saying "had it existed, you'd get the same thing", you're describing a different language. that's not what I'm saying. I'm saying that Haskell doesn't have it because it's a useless and shallow abstraction…
They used to say the same thing about text, it turned out that after all training the best thing they could achieve is the `ccc` compiler.
> clojure.spec Tape-patches for self-inflicted language design issues isn't innovation, lol
Why do you eliminate a library-based solution from the equation if it can actually prove the point that there's no difference in intent as long as my runtime is already lazy by default? > It is not. Take a transducer…
> Haskell's laziness gives you fusion-like memory behavior on lists for free. Haskell laziness & fusion isn't limited to lists, you can fuse any lawful composition of functions applied over data with the required lawful…
> It goes beyond a foldable, can be applied to streams. > Clojure had foldables, called reducers, this was generalized further when core.async came along - transducers can be attached to core async channels and also…
You get this for free in Haskell, and you also save on not having to remember useless terminology for something that has no application on their own outside Foldables anyways.
As everybody knows, key strokes and mouse movements are the things that solve problems, definitely the data worth capturing for AI training.
> Token density If you really cared about that, you wouldn't have picked Rust. Nim or Haskell are terser languages. > Every language we’ve built defaults to sequential execution with parallelism bolted on. False and…
Just juggling with balls in the air gets boring very quickly, and the added numbers don't make it much different. Learning statics and flows from contact juggling, but performing them with standard juggling balls is so…
He argued against putting things in a spectrum in many instances where that would be wrong, including the case under the question. What's your argument against that idea? LLM'ed too much lately?
Re. "CAD/BIM", technically speaking CAD doesn't imply BIM, and the industry's promotion of BIM is akin to AI promotion among software engineering teams - the benefits aren't clear upon detailed review of the advertised…
Generalizing with "everything", "all", etc exclusive markers is exactly the kind of black/white divide you're arguing against. What happened to your nuanced reality within a single sentence? Not everything is black and…
I find the other article that the author refers to in his text, to be more thorough and revealing: https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-ai-industry-is-lying-to-you/
The industry will adapt quickly, especially the part that's using multiplatform mainstream engines like UE/Unity. Lots of new/recent native MacOS releases nowadays: https://store.steampowered.com/macos
He had better spend $250k worth of tokens on it
> but does it require installing nix on mac? yes: sh <(curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) https://nixos.org/download/ > also many people are not familiar with nix and brew does all i need…
> cabal build --platform=amd64 It's almost a one-liner + a nix derivation import, works within a minute on incremental builds even on large projects: https://input-output-hk.github.io/haskell.nix/tutorials/cros...
> But you want to focus on one end of the spectrum? Have you actually checked the contents of the channels? Despite the naming, they do provide a full spectrum. You won't see the Mayfair-Knighstbridge side of things…
[flagged]
Don't trust BBC, they are the state propaganda machine. Draw your own conclusions, there's plenty of UK-based channels that provide the current footage from towns and cities around the country.…
> Generic over what? Generic over whatever you decide to compose out of smaller parts into a full algorithm that doesn't produce transient buffered results. Transducers is a dead end of abstractions, they aren't…
> I said "Clojurians engage with diverse ideas pragmatically". then you said nothing and contributed nothing to your points, as everybody else "engage with diverse ideas pragmatically". It also so happened that engaging…
> Every type system, schema library, and validation tool in every language is in some sense "patching" the lack of built-in guarantees. > Spec isn't even so much about patching - it's about runtime generative testing,…
> so you're saying "had it existed, you'd get the same thing", you're describing a different language. that's not what I'm saying. I'm saying that Haskell doesn't have it because it's a useless and shallow abstraction…
They used to say the same thing about text, it turned out that after all training the best thing they could achieve is the `ccc` compiler.
> clojure.spec Tape-patches for self-inflicted language design issues isn't innovation, lol
Why do you eliminate a library-based solution from the equation if it can actually prove the point that there's no difference in intent as long as my runtime is already lazy by default? > It is not. Take a transducer…
> Haskell's laziness gives you fusion-like memory behavior on lists for free. Haskell laziness & fusion isn't limited to lists, you can fuse any lawful composition of functions applied over data with the required lawful…
> It goes beyond a foldable, can be applied to streams. > Clojure had foldables, called reducers, this was generalized further when core.async came along - transducers can be attached to core async channels and also…
You get this for free in Haskell, and you also save on not having to remember useless terminology for something that has no application on their own outside Foldables anyways.
As everybody knows, key strokes and mouse movements are the things that solve problems, definitely the data worth capturing for AI training.
As everybody knows, key strokes and mouse movements are the things that solve problems, definitely the data worth capturing for AI training.
> Token density If you really cared about that, you wouldn't have picked Rust. Nim or Haskell are terser languages. > Every language we’ve built defaults to sequential execution with parallelism bolted on. False and…
Just juggling with balls in the air gets boring very quickly, and the added numbers don't make it much different. Learning statics and flows from contact juggling, but performing them with standard juggling balls is so…
He argued against putting things in a spectrum in many instances where that would be wrong, including the case under the question. What's your argument against that idea? LLM'ed too much lately?
Re. "CAD/BIM", technically speaking CAD doesn't imply BIM, and the industry's promotion of BIM is akin to AI promotion among software engineering teams - the benefits aren't clear upon detailed review of the advertised…
Generalizing with "everything", "all", etc exclusive markers is exactly the kind of black/white divide you're arguing against. What happened to your nuanced reality within a single sentence? Not everything is black and…
I find the other article that the author refers to in his text, to be more thorough and revealing: https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-ai-industry-is-lying-to-you/
The industry will adapt quickly, especially the part that's using multiplatform mainstream engines like UE/Unity. Lots of new/recent native MacOS releases nowadays: https://store.steampowered.com/macos
He had better spend $250k worth of tokens on it