Teratomas are insane. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teratoma
"ALL DEBTS HAVE BEEN ERASED. JUBILEE."
> Pascal style strings were much safer. The limitations were brutal. Initially you could only have 255 bytes in a string. The length of a string and the size of the allocation are now separate and you may need to think…
That's one of the problems with the lack of diplomacy in the US's position for the past 40 years. We have pushed the envelope beyond our own control: "The U.S. military reverse-engineered Iran’s Shahed-136 loitering…
The problem with that is if you turn off power to the aircraft then the IMU no longer maintains state and you will need to realign it on startup. The procedures for this are broadly incompatible with military missions.
They're falling back to the C/A (coarse, civilian) signal. Part of the attack is to drown out the frequency where the P (fine, military) signal is so they can more easily attack the civilian signal. There's another…
> spoofing I don't understand how "spoof-to" works. If you have to mimic a satellite then isn't everyone going to get a different location? Unless you're tracking a specific target how can you intentionally spoof them…
> You can use a trivial experiment to verify that you can't keep details in your sliding attention window for more than a few seconds or focus on more than a few things simultaneously. I said "context window" not…
> Human attention is truly ephemeral, with a ridiculously short span. I do not believe this at all. I think you'd have to have a very limited experience working with other human beings to be able to believe this. > and…
Okay. Can you take _all_ the data you have out of your mind and put into a computerized format? Is there nothing intangible in your mind? The human context window includes actual _context_ not just _data_.
> that you can't actually reproduce with the software If the vendors of that software are not aware of the failure mode then they may accidentally introduce it by later code changes. Systems evolve. Blind evolution…
> That has never happened before like this. You should possibly spend some time reading what people used to say about the invention of Radio and Television. > It is quite extraordinary and breath-taking at times to see…
> Or are AIs fundamentally different, and if so, why? Literally: the context window. With the human you have a window that possibly extends up to _years_. With your language model you have maybe a few megabytes which is…
So the meaning of what I said was slightly obscured but actually easy to apprehend? oookay.
We baked the snake charmer problem into the law? Good lord.
The results are interesting but the whole project is worth a look. https://people.csail.mit.edu/mengjia/data/2026.SP.fractal.pd...
To be fair Elixir shows you can just use the BEAM if you want. If you need these semantics at this level there's very few reasons not to go this route.
A large portion of DNS is outside of your control. You're relying on at least two third parties you have indirect relationships with in order to work. If you're outside of the standard TLDs you've got additional social…
You've never read the "errata" section of a CPU manual have you?
> If you've ever built a three-window layout and then wished the editor pane were on the other side, these do the job and keep every buffer in place while they're at it. I built a tmux like buffer manager. So I can just…
> To be fair to AMD, there is no clear indication that the company ever publicly advertised TSME as a consumer Ryzen feature. A feature that was possibly accidentally enabled on consumer chips is now being disabled. I…
It seems like they did all this to please Elon Musk and advantage SpaceX. The people at the top are nihilists. They don't even believe the things they say.
I'm a simple guy and I don't understand the "sales and marketing" cost. I don't like these products. I have several negative opinions on them. To the extent they work and there is a customer base what marketing could…
The question is: "Do you want to be holding a Mossberg or a Beretta?"
Fortunately the government has demonstrated that it can regulate the terms of warranties.
Teratomas are insane. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teratoma
"ALL DEBTS HAVE BEEN ERASED. JUBILEE."
> Pascal style strings were much safer. The limitations were brutal. Initially you could only have 255 bytes in a string. The length of a string and the size of the allocation are now separate and you may need to think…
That's one of the problems with the lack of diplomacy in the US's position for the past 40 years. We have pushed the envelope beyond our own control: "The U.S. military reverse-engineered Iran’s Shahed-136 loitering…
The problem with that is if you turn off power to the aircraft then the IMU no longer maintains state and you will need to realign it on startup. The procedures for this are broadly incompatible with military missions.
They're falling back to the C/A (coarse, civilian) signal. Part of the attack is to drown out the frequency where the P (fine, military) signal is so they can more easily attack the civilian signal. There's another…
> spoofing I don't understand how "spoof-to" works. If you have to mimic a satellite then isn't everyone going to get a different location? Unless you're tracking a specific target how can you intentionally spoof them…
> You can use a trivial experiment to verify that you can't keep details in your sliding attention window for more than a few seconds or focus on more than a few things simultaneously. I said "context window" not…
> Human attention is truly ephemeral, with a ridiculously short span. I do not believe this at all. I think you'd have to have a very limited experience working with other human beings to be able to believe this. > and…
Okay. Can you take _all_ the data you have out of your mind and put into a computerized format? Is there nothing intangible in your mind? The human context window includes actual _context_ not just _data_.
> that you can't actually reproduce with the software If the vendors of that software are not aware of the failure mode then they may accidentally introduce it by later code changes. Systems evolve. Blind evolution…
> That has never happened before like this. You should possibly spend some time reading what people used to say about the invention of Radio and Television. > It is quite extraordinary and breath-taking at times to see…
> Or are AIs fundamentally different, and if so, why? Literally: the context window. With the human you have a window that possibly extends up to _years_. With your language model you have maybe a few megabytes which is…
So the meaning of what I said was slightly obscured but actually easy to apprehend? oookay.
We baked the snake charmer problem into the law? Good lord.
The results are interesting but the whole project is worth a look. https://people.csail.mit.edu/mengjia/data/2026.SP.fractal.pd...
To be fair Elixir shows you can just use the BEAM if you want. If you need these semantics at this level there's very few reasons not to go this route.
A large portion of DNS is outside of your control. You're relying on at least two third parties you have indirect relationships with in order to work. If you're outside of the standard TLDs you've got additional social…
You've never read the "errata" section of a CPU manual have you?
> If you've ever built a three-window layout and then wished the editor pane were on the other side, these do the job and keep every buffer in place while they're at it. I built a tmux like buffer manager. So I can just…
> To be fair to AMD, there is no clear indication that the company ever publicly advertised TSME as a consumer Ryzen feature. A feature that was possibly accidentally enabled on consumer chips is now being disabled. I…
It seems like they did all this to please Elon Musk and advantage SpaceX. The people at the top are nihilists. They don't even believe the things they say.
I'm a simple guy and I don't understand the "sales and marketing" cost. I don't like these products. I have several negative opinions on them. To the extent they work and there is a customer base what marketing could…
The question is: "Do you want to be holding a Mossberg or a Beretta?"
Fortunately the government has demonstrated that it can regulate the terms of warranties.