I was anticipating that having AI write code to pass tests (human and/or AI written tests) would be worthwhile, but in practice, I've found that even models such as Opus 4.6 Thinking, High Effort simply "cheats", or…
Anaphylactic shock, and possibly death, is a potential outcome from the worm breaking internally. Far too risky.
Steam Deck spotted, two minutes, seven seconds in. Seems to be getting a fair amount of use for puppeteering robots at Disney.
Maybe it's just me, but this "We have to fudge the truth because nuance would support the alt-right" business just seems to drive a bigger wedge into the political divide than would just being reasonable. Folks closer…
Following similar thinking, there's no world in which AI becomes exactly capable of replacing all software developers and then stops there, miraculously saving the jobs of everyone else next to and above them in the…
For the record, having suffered the effects of extreme dehydration before, if someone insists on aiding me in the process of dying (against my wishes) please get it over with quickly. End it with the morphine right off.…
If that's in line with the patient's wishes, cool. Otherwise, not so cool, both for the act of killing someone and for undermining the arguments in favor of legal euthanasia.
Everywhere, license agreements that can be changed by the company at any time, pretty much for every game developer that can afford a lawyer to write up said license agreement. They could all start doing shady stuff at…
We can barely afford 5 dimensions with our current operating budget, and it's just not going to scale, I'm afraid. Saddle up boys, I'm proposing we draw them on a _hyperbolic plane_. Two dimensions, fits on a coffee…
Acknowledging that my own reading of the situation may be flawed, I'd though the situation was that pigs on average are better at sniffing out truffles, but dogs are the better truffle hunters on account of being "good…
> The latter indicates people who simply don't read. Or more charitably, their vocabulary is fine and they merely suffer from noun recall deficiency and or other issues with public speaking. I personally find myself…
I'd go so far as to liken it to a series of memory wipes between age 3 to 4. Memory otherwise appears to function quite fine, from day to day and year to year, but then large blocks all vanish in rapid succession. Also…
Personally, I'm convinced Bluey is covertly a wholesome show for parents, dressed up as a kids' show, but ultimately still for the sake of children by way of 1) encouraging watching together, 2) improving parents'…
Heard the of bimodal salary distribution? I'd bet it matches up quite well with a bimodal influence distribution.
> flame retardant insulation Which are almost definitely known to the state of California to cause cancer.
Which reminds me that verbal and emotional abuse from parents and close family can have a severe impact reaching far into adult-hood. You can't help having internalized behaviors build around trying to avoid abuse. You…
> This is what I’m thinking. All of the kids I know from 16-22 are the most level headed group of young adults I’ve known. Taking this on a bit of a tangent, but as an elder millennial, I recall having been told (by…
> Didn't they explicitly acquire the people behind CRDT's. They may well have hired some of the cohort behind early CRDT research. But I don't believe that work was ever directly applied to Google Docs, from what I've…
> It's what used when multiple people edit a Google doc at the same time. I expect Google Docs is still using Operational Transform, rather than CRDT, which solves a similar set of problems, the former being suited for…
Gotta add some Angostura bitters nowadays to give your Moxie some moxie.
Yeah, I'd heard they were still iterating on their routine.
I'm still awaiting the punchline.
Figure the man (or woman) is really only there to meet legal requirements around having a human somewhere in the loop. The human is a liability, thus the dog. From the interpretation where dog is guarding the equipment,…
> people are talking about timing attacks on state updates in the universe, hopefully we can exploit it If the universe did happen to be a simulation (as opposed to just naturally holographic), I imagine exploiting it…
> The “lights in the sky” stuff has always had better explanations. I watched a C-5 fly over low at night in the Adirondacks and it was very odd; very UFO-y until just before it passed over us. I've witnessed quite a…
I was anticipating that having AI write code to pass tests (human and/or AI written tests) would be worthwhile, but in practice, I've found that even models such as Opus 4.6 Thinking, High Effort simply "cheats", or…
Anaphylactic shock, and possibly death, is a potential outcome from the worm breaking internally. Far too risky.
Steam Deck spotted, two minutes, seven seconds in. Seems to be getting a fair amount of use for puppeteering robots at Disney.
Maybe it's just me, but this "We have to fudge the truth because nuance would support the alt-right" business just seems to drive a bigger wedge into the political divide than would just being reasonable. Folks closer…
Following similar thinking, there's no world in which AI becomes exactly capable of replacing all software developers and then stops there, miraculously saving the jobs of everyone else next to and above them in the…
For the record, having suffered the effects of extreme dehydration before, if someone insists on aiding me in the process of dying (against my wishes) please get it over with quickly. End it with the morphine right off.…
If that's in line with the patient's wishes, cool. Otherwise, not so cool, both for the act of killing someone and for undermining the arguments in favor of legal euthanasia.
Everywhere, license agreements that can be changed by the company at any time, pretty much for every game developer that can afford a lawyer to write up said license agreement. They could all start doing shady stuff at…
We can barely afford 5 dimensions with our current operating budget, and it's just not going to scale, I'm afraid. Saddle up boys, I'm proposing we draw them on a _hyperbolic plane_. Two dimensions, fits on a coffee…
Acknowledging that my own reading of the situation may be flawed, I'd though the situation was that pigs on average are better at sniffing out truffles, but dogs are the better truffle hunters on account of being "good…
> The latter indicates people who simply don't read. Or more charitably, their vocabulary is fine and they merely suffer from noun recall deficiency and or other issues with public speaking. I personally find myself…
I'd go so far as to liken it to a series of memory wipes between age 3 to 4. Memory otherwise appears to function quite fine, from day to day and year to year, but then large blocks all vanish in rapid succession. Also…
Personally, I'm convinced Bluey is covertly a wholesome show for parents, dressed up as a kids' show, but ultimately still for the sake of children by way of 1) encouraging watching together, 2) improving parents'…
Heard the of bimodal salary distribution? I'd bet it matches up quite well with a bimodal influence distribution.
> flame retardant insulation Which are almost definitely known to the state of California to cause cancer.
Which reminds me that verbal and emotional abuse from parents and close family can have a severe impact reaching far into adult-hood. You can't help having internalized behaviors build around trying to avoid abuse. You…
> This is what I’m thinking. All of the kids I know from 16-22 are the most level headed group of young adults I’ve known. Taking this on a bit of a tangent, but as an elder millennial, I recall having been told (by…
> Didn't they explicitly acquire the people behind CRDT's. They may well have hired some of the cohort behind early CRDT research. But I don't believe that work was ever directly applied to Google Docs, from what I've…
> It's what used when multiple people edit a Google doc at the same time. I expect Google Docs is still using Operational Transform, rather than CRDT, which solves a similar set of problems, the former being suited for…
Gotta add some Angostura bitters nowadays to give your Moxie some moxie.
Yeah, I'd heard they were still iterating on their routine.
I'm still awaiting the punchline.
Figure the man (or woman) is really only there to meet legal requirements around having a human somewhere in the loop. The human is a liability, thus the dog. From the interpretation where dog is guarding the equipment,…
> people are talking about timing attacks on state updates in the universe, hopefully we can exploit it If the universe did happen to be a simulation (as opposed to just naturally holographic), I imagine exploiting it…
> The “lights in the sky” stuff has always had better explanations. I watched a C-5 fly over low at night in the Adirondacks and it was very odd; very UFO-y until just before it passed over us. I've witnessed quite a…