thanks! Associating with past bugs is a nice use case Suggesting fixes seems risky, can lead people on wrong paths and waste time or fixing a sympthom instead of proper root case and waste the bug report? Grouping is…
> At work we're using an LLM to analyze Windows crash dumps, which turns out to be quite expensive -- several dollars per dump, and you might analyze many every hour Is that in any way useful?, how so?, are dumps from…
There's nothing Biden could have done that would have prevented the american people from voting in Trump. Trump was convicted, he still won. He probably would have won from jail as well. So original question remains,…
It's not whataboutism if you point out question was naive. (answer is the same everywhere and has always been the same) Inner circle leadership won't be prosecuted anywhere as long as their group holds some power. So,…
of course
You can ask the same about inner circle of current US leadership It will have the same answer, no who would be able to prosecute them and how? who would even investigate them
You're saying that like it's not a possibility. What could push EU to do that? Arbitrary tarrifs? Invasion/threats of invasion? It wouldn't be out of spite, nothing ever is, it would be a response to something and it is…
What's there to like about Trump? And how do those compare against all the negative things he's done/caused so far?
They can try, they'll also lose out on money and have piracy to contend to. Governments can still force them to sell same as rest of the world or have them pack their bags and leave.
> And the most relevant part is that you cannot transfer/sell a digital copy. EU or any other gov can pass a law to allow that and we'll have the option.
There's a difference in math between giving just the answer to a problem and doing it properly/elegantly. So yeah, generated machine-valid proof can be denied if it's incomprehensible, same as human machine-valid proof…
Allright, so since you're using Linux and alternatives are worse... what's there to complain about? why not put that effort into improving stuff / finding solutions?
> Also, running a program is the most basic functionality of an OS and you suggest that I need to write my own sandbox to do this because it is not included with Linux. Maybe that is why this year still is not the year…
> Neither SELinux not AppArmor allows to show a question "would you like to allow program N to access your microphone" Permissions on microphone device would work, build your own UI / virtual device or generate one with…
You can use VMs for sandboxes. Linux main feature is that you are free to do anything you want. Linux does verify signatures for packages from official repos. Linux has features like SELinux and AppArmor. If you want to…
single mode are pretty cheap too (12e for 10gbit/s bidi for example)
why not use fiber directly and use whatever sfp for much cheaper without worry of heat
UI/UX or dev isn't dead. It will be shrinking. Less grunt work. Internal projects can get done with less of either. Nobody really cares about great UX or about how great someone can implement a CRUD app. So there will…
it is the admin responsibility to protect its citizens. has it done anything to prevent/mitigate this? or the opposite?
> The attack works by having an NTFS log get replayed against another partition than the one the log is stored on. Obfuscated enough to pass internal reviews, sloppy enough to make it look like a bug. Other reply makes…
3 would be either direct or friends/relatives with experience and I got involved to help, other 3 would be through news and incidentally knowing some people. > but one person having direct experience of all these cases…
> so far as i can tell yellowkey is problematic, as the exploit takes advantage of a backdoor that ms needs, to "manage" your computer. It does look like an intentional backdoor. The way ms is responding to it is even…
I've seen doctors that: 1. Immediately said 'Cancer' to stomach issues on an old person. They just didn't care, another doctor resolved that. 2. Eye doctors that would not investigate anything and just prescribe eye…
Those low quality lawyers/doctors still won't care enough to help the layperson. So for the layperson, the AI output is still useful. They'll know to search for a different lawyer/doctor. Tool just brings more knowledge…
I find your comment a bit funny > Try prompting Claude to fix an arbitrary code base better than someone who knows it, when you're a random non-technical person. I've seen people employed working on some code bases that…
thanks! Associating with past bugs is a nice use case Suggesting fixes seems risky, can lead people on wrong paths and waste time or fixing a sympthom instead of proper root case and waste the bug report? Grouping is…
> At work we're using an LLM to analyze Windows crash dumps, which turns out to be quite expensive -- several dollars per dump, and you might analyze many every hour Is that in any way useful?, how so?, are dumps from…
There's nothing Biden could have done that would have prevented the american people from voting in Trump. Trump was convicted, he still won. He probably would have won from jail as well. So original question remains,…
It's not whataboutism if you point out question was naive. (answer is the same everywhere and has always been the same) Inner circle leadership won't be prosecuted anywhere as long as their group holds some power. So,…
of course
You can ask the same about inner circle of current US leadership It will have the same answer, no who would be able to prosecute them and how? who would even investigate them
You're saying that like it's not a possibility. What could push EU to do that? Arbitrary tarrifs? Invasion/threats of invasion? It wouldn't be out of spite, nothing ever is, it would be a response to something and it is…
What's there to like about Trump? And how do those compare against all the negative things he's done/caused so far?
They can try, they'll also lose out on money and have piracy to contend to. Governments can still force them to sell same as rest of the world or have them pack their bags and leave.
> And the most relevant part is that you cannot transfer/sell a digital copy. EU or any other gov can pass a law to allow that and we'll have the option.
There's a difference in math between giving just the answer to a problem and doing it properly/elegantly. So yeah, generated machine-valid proof can be denied if it's incomprehensible, same as human machine-valid proof…
Allright, so since you're using Linux and alternatives are worse... what's there to complain about? why not put that effort into improving stuff / finding solutions?
> Also, running a program is the most basic functionality of an OS and you suggest that I need to write my own sandbox to do this because it is not included with Linux. Maybe that is why this year still is not the year…
> Neither SELinux not AppArmor allows to show a question "would you like to allow program N to access your microphone" Permissions on microphone device would work, build your own UI / virtual device or generate one with…
You can use VMs for sandboxes. Linux main feature is that you are free to do anything you want. Linux does verify signatures for packages from official repos. Linux has features like SELinux and AppArmor. If you want to…
single mode are pretty cheap too (12e for 10gbit/s bidi for example)
why not use fiber directly and use whatever sfp for much cheaper without worry of heat
UI/UX or dev isn't dead. It will be shrinking. Less grunt work. Internal projects can get done with less of either. Nobody really cares about great UX or about how great someone can implement a CRUD app. So there will…
it is the admin responsibility to protect its citizens. has it done anything to prevent/mitigate this? or the opposite?
> The attack works by having an NTFS log get replayed against another partition than the one the log is stored on. Obfuscated enough to pass internal reviews, sloppy enough to make it look like a bug. Other reply makes…
3 would be either direct or friends/relatives with experience and I got involved to help, other 3 would be through news and incidentally knowing some people. > but one person having direct experience of all these cases…
> so far as i can tell yellowkey is problematic, as the exploit takes advantage of a backdoor that ms needs, to "manage" your computer. It does look like an intentional backdoor. The way ms is responding to it is even…
I've seen doctors that: 1. Immediately said 'Cancer' to stomach issues on an old person. They just didn't care, another doctor resolved that. 2. Eye doctors that would not investigate anything and just prescribe eye…
Those low quality lawyers/doctors still won't care enough to help the layperson. So for the layperson, the AI output is still useful. They'll know to search for a different lawyer/doctor. Tool just brings more knowledge…
I find your comment a bit funny > Try prompting Claude to fix an arbitrary code base better than someone who knows it, when you're a random non-technical person. I've seen people employed working on some code bases that…