they don't just sell to law enforcement, they install surveillance equipment under contract to law enforcement. if they didn't get to have cameras everywhere, they wouldn't have as much to sell.
i thought my comment was pretty clear that i wasn't asking what the law should be, just what the law is.
>it’s also that company’s responsibility Is it? I mean legally. Obviously it’s dumb of Apple to have left this guys access open, but that doesn’t mean they actually had any legal responsibility to lock him out. As far…
It does. Claude has a built in review and it’s pretty good. But it doesn’t know exactly what you want. This is a way to tell it. Good way to double your token use though, if you’re concerned about that.
i mean, they're succeeding. whether it's coordinated or not the conclusion is the same. but i think "linux distributions are dangerous" is the wrong conclusion. the right one is to treat each distribution based on their…
>planning tasks though. I think that's what Fable is for. this is how i've been using it, and where i've found it really excels over anything else i've tried. get fable to write a plan, and get something cheaper to…
i'm not sure all those "installs on actual phones" in china are real - 107k installs all on the same device, vs ~30k installs on the next most popular device. and 150k devices on an unknown carrier. is the Xiaomi Mi 8…
Using something third party isn’t free - even for zero monetary cost there’s integration cost, documentation, support, and maintenance uncertainty. The choice between rolling your own and third party is already a…
Yeah, we rolled our own auth as well. Everybody says you shouldn’t, it’s a risk, etc etc. but to me that’s less risk than our auth getting bought by somebody whose business goals don’t necessarily align with mine.
Amazon doesn’t care what you do, piracy isn’t a threat to Amazon, they just want to deliver the drm that the publishers demand in the easiest way possible. And they’ve made a fairly reasonable business decision that a…
i've yet to see a case where opus "ignores whatever it likes". opus will definitely ignore instructions if you give it contradictory instructions, or a plan that has steps that obviously don't work with each other. but…
>But I also hate the "you had one job" meme and want to argue against its mindless usage the "you had one job" meme could pretty much always be followed up by "because i refused to consider the actual complexity of your…
I don’t think that’s true. Some people really do have product ideas that they want to share with the world. The problem is that those people are really bad at making money, and have a hard time competing with the people…
Not similar at all, as explained in the article below the headline.
which cameras do this?
Is this talking to claude code, or to claude api (and paying api rates)? programatically routing requests through claude code sounds like a good way to get banned, just like the opencode and openclaw users.
You don’t need to detect it, you just need to incentivize employees and competitors to snitch on companies using unapproved models.
this is the backup strategy. the "AI doesn't pan out" scenario is basically if claude and openai go bankrupt, we continue running local models on our hardware. there isn't a future where we all just decide that nah, we…
it's just a thing to show off in their trade show booth. maybe there will be some engineer on the project who learns something useful while working on this that can be applied to some actual project, but this is pretty…
locally on what hardware? something like the new dgx spark, ryzen halo, or mac studio will cost you ~ $4k plus whatever you pay for power. at the rate AI is currently progressing, i think you'd be optimistic to consider…
this is a solved problem on basically any modern tv: HDMI-CEC lets your appletv control your tv without using the tv remote.
the pricing page doesn't seem to call it out anymore, but the claim on z.ai coding plan used to be 3x the usage of the equivalent-price claude plan. whether that's accurate i don't know, but just based on api pricing…
>The irony is I believe that if a medical devices company announced this, it was being sold to hospitals, and it would only cost the patient's insurance $100 a scan, then the medical industry would universally praise…
i think the reason this works is an implication that the article doesn't explicitly cover: if you tell somebody you're going to to do something, you're not asking them to take responsibility. you're telling them that…
apparently i'm also a minecraft youtuber. i have never played minecraft or posted a youtube video. i think somewhere along the lines the models might have just gotten "online handle" and "minecraft content creator"…
they don't just sell to law enforcement, they install surveillance equipment under contract to law enforcement. if they didn't get to have cameras everywhere, they wouldn't have as much to sell.
i thought my comment was pretty clear that i wasn't asking what the law should be, just what the law is.
>it’s also that company’s responsibility Is it? I mean legally. Obviously it’s dumb of Apple to have left this guys access open, but that doesn’t mean they actually had any legal responsibility to lock him out. As far…
It does. Claude has a built in review and it’s pretty good. But it doesn’t know exactly what you want. This is a way to tell it. Good way to double your token use though, if you’re concerned about that.
i mean, they're succeeding. whether it's coordinated or not the conclusion is the same. but i think "linux distributions are dangerous" is the wrong conclusion. the right one is to treat each distribution based on their…
>planning tasks though. I think that's what Fable is for. this is how i've been using it, and where i've found it really excels over anything else i've tried. get fable to write a plan, and get something cheaper to…
i'm not sure all those "installs on actual phones" in china are real - 107k installs all on the same device, vs ~30k installs on the next most popular device. and 150k devices on an unknown carrier. is the Xiaomi Mi 8…
Using something third party isn’t free - even for zero monetary cost there’s integration cost, documentation, support, and maintenance uncertainty. The choice between rolling your own and third party is already a…
Yeah, we rolled our own auth as well. Everybody says you shouldn’t, it’s a risk, etc etc. but to me that’s less risk than our auth getting bought by somebody whose business goals don’t necessarily align with mine.
Amazon doesn’t care what you do, piracy isn’t a threat to Amazon, they just want to deliver the drm that the publishers demand in the easiest way possible. And they’ve made a fairly reasonable business decision that a…
i've yet to see a case where opus "ignores whatever it likes". opus will definitely ignore instructions if you give it contradictory instructions, or a plan that has steps that obviously don't work with each other. but…
>But I also hate the "you had one job" meme and want to argue against its mindless usage the "you had one job" meme could pretty much always be followed up by "because i refused to consider the actual complexity of your…
I don’t think that’s true. Some people really do have product ideas that they want to share with the world. The problem is that those people are really bad at making money, and have a hard time competing with the people…
Not similar at all, as explained in the article below the headline.
which cameras do this?
Is this talking to claude code, or to claude api (and paying api rates)? programatically routing requests through claude code sounds like a good way to get banned, just like the opencode and openclaw users.
You don’t need to detect it, you just need to incentivize employees and competitors to snitch on companies using unapproved models.
this is the backup strategy. the "AI doesn't pan out" scenario is basically if claude and openai go bankrupt, we continue running local models on our hardware. there isn't a future where we all just decide that nah, we…
it's just a thing to show off in their trade show booth. maybe there will be some engineer on the project who learns something useful while working on this that can be applied to some actual project, but this is pretty…
locally on what hardware? something like the new dgx spark, ryzen halo, or mac studio will cost you ~ $4k plus whatever you pay for power. at the rate AI is currently progressing, i think you'd be optimistic to consider…
this is a solved problem on basically any modern tv: HDMI-CEC lets your appletv control your tv without using the tv remote.
the pricing page doesn't seem to call it out anymore, but the claim on z.ai coding plan used to be 3x the usage of the equivalent-price claude plan. whether that's accurate i don't know, but just based on api pricing…
>The irony is I believe that if a medical devices company announced this, it was being sold to hospitals, and it would only cost the patient's insurance $100 a scan, then the medical industry would universally praise…
i think the reason this works is an implication that the article doesn't explicitly cover: if you tell somebody you're going to to do something, you're not asking them to take responsibility. you're telling them that…
apparently i'm also a minecraft youtuber. i have never played minecraft or posted a youtube video. i think somewhere along the lines the models might have just gotten "online handle" and "minecraft content creator"…