> As a software developer, I am used to finding and fixing the underlying problem instead of relying on the quick fixes these doctors were offering me. I'm skeptical that avoidance of "relying on the quick fixes"…
> I mean, you can read them even without the colors I'm not colorblind and I was depending on the textual context implying Sol was better than Terra. I had to zoom in quite far to actually differentiate between the…
I was wondering the same thing. From textual context it is clear enough that Sol should be above Terra, but I had to zoom in really far to actually differentiate between the colors and I'm not colorblind. I saw a light…
I agree with the general sentiment of this comment, but national labs do hire foreigners/non-citizens, albeit possibly not from all countries with eligibility for all roles.
The funniest one I've noticed lately is a bunch of Capital One ads saying "We built a multi-agentic system for finding a car to buy!" I'm not saying I 100% wouldn't use AI to help me in product searches, but isn't one…
Presumably ~100% of the employees want to feel secure in their jobs, so I don't think this would happen unless the benefit to the 51% is extreme.
> There are some people that believe that writing is an act of creative expression. I think "some people" might be underselling it, as evidenced by the borderline innumerable fiction books in existence? > and as such,…
> I have yet to see a "error" that modern frontier models make that I could not imagine a human making I mostly agree if "a human" is just any person we pluck of the street. What I still see with some regularity is the…
> because other individuals, organizations and nation states are not going to stop, and not going to leverage their AI if they get ahead of us. I don't think that it is likely AT ALL, but it is probably only necessary…
The account is 47 minutes old and with the writing style plus the hefty dose of em dashes, I think they are an LLM.
> Job loss is likely to have statistics more comparable to the Black Plague. Maybe this is overly optimistic, but if AI starts to have negative impacts on average people comparable to the plague, it seems like there's a…
> LLM's are better at keeping consistency at details (but not at big picture stuff, interestingly.) I think it makes sense? Unlike small details which are certain to be explicitly part of the training data, "big picture…
> 3d graphics Seems like the G in GPU is very obsolete now: https://www.tomshardware.com/news/nvidia-h100-benchmarkedin-... > As it turns out Nvidia's H100, a card that costs over $30,000 performs worse than integrated…
> you'll also end up with scores of people who "correctly" followed the signals right up until the signals went away. I think this is where we're headed, very quickly, and I'm worried about it from a social stability…
LLMs and AI more broadly certainly seem to have upended (or have the potential to upend) a lot of white-collar work outside of technology and art. Translators are one obvious example. Lawyers might be on the chopping…
Yeah, I notice a lot of the optimism is from people who have been in the field for decades. I'm newish to the field, half a decade out of undergrad. It definitely feels like almost all of what I learned has been (or…
On iOS Safari it loads and works decent for me, but w/ iOS Firefox and Firefox Focus doesn't even load.
> But I think we're still a long way off non-technical people being able to develop applications. I'm surprised I haven't seen anyone do a case study, having truly non-technical people build apps with these tools. Take…
> Claude Opus 4.5 in a casual Claude Code session, approximately matching the best human performance in 2 hours Is this saying that Claude matched the best human performance, where the human had two hours? I think that…
> Someone could be taking this position in this situation because they're highly skeptical that the Americans involved in this have the ability or desire to proceed in a way that will result in a minimum of casualities…
Given what I understand about the nature of competitive programming competitions, using an LLM seems kind of like using a calculator in an arithmetic competition (if such a thing existed) or a dictionary in a spelling…
This is also why I'm skeptical of claims that it would be impossible (or nearly so) for governments to meaningfully regulate AI R&D/deployment (regardless of whether or not they should). The "you can't regulate math"…
I think you're overestimating how much real damage someone can cause with burpsuite and "a few youtube videos." I'd imagine if you pick a random person off the street, subject them to a full month's worth of…
If they're truly Chinese state-sponsored actors, does it really matter if their actions/methods are exposed? What is Anthropic going to do, send the Anthropic Police Force to China to arrest them? I suppose I could see…
This definition makes sense, but in the context of LLMs it still feels misapplied. What the model providers call "guardrails" are supposed to prevent malicious uses of the LLMs, and anyone trying to maliciously use the…
> As a software developer, I am used to finding and fixing the underlying problem instead of relying on the quick fixes these doctors were offering me. I'm skeptical that avoidance of "relying on the quick fixes"…
> I mean, you can read them even without the colors I'm not colorblind and I was depending on the textual context implying Sol was better than Terra. I had to zoom in quite far to actually differentiate between the…
I was wondering the same thing. From textual context it is clear enough that Sol should be above Terra, but I had to zoom in really far to actually differentiate between the colors and I'm not colorblind. I saw a light…
I agree with the general sentiment of this comment, but national labs do hire foreigners/non-citizens, albeit possibly not from all countries with eligibility for all roles.
The funniest one I've noticed lately is a bunch of Capital One ads saying "We built a multi-agentic system for finding a car to buy!" I'm not saying I 100% wouldn't use AI to help me in product searches, but isn't one…
Presumably ~100% of the employees want to feel secure in their jobs, so I don't think this would happen unless the benefit to the 51% is extreme.
> There are some people that believe that writing is an act of creative expression. I think "some people" might be underselling it, as evidenced by the borderline innumerable fiction books in existence? > and as such,…
> I have yet to see a "error" that modern frontier models make that I could not imagine a human making I mostly agree if "a human" is just any person we pluck of the street. What I still see with some regularity is the…
> because other individuals, organizations and nation states are not going to stop, and not going to leverage their AI if they get ahead of us. I don't think that it is likely AT ALL, but it is probably only necessary…
The account is 47 minutes old and with the writing style plus the hefty dose of em dashes, I think they are an LLM.
> Job loss is likely to have statistics more comparable to the Black Plague. Maybe this is overly optimistic, but if AI starts to have negative impacts on average people comparable to the plague, it seems like there's a…
> LLM's are better at keeping consistency at details (but not at big picture stuff, interestingly.) I think it makes sense? Unlike small details which are certain to be explicitly part of the training data, "big picture…
> 3d graphics Seems like the G in GPU is very obsolete now: https://www.tomshardware.com/news/nvidia-h100-benchmarkedin-... > As it turns out Nvidia's H100, a card that costs over $30,000 performs worse than integrated…
> you'll also end up with scores of people who "correctly" followed the signals right up until the signals went away. I think this is where we're headed, very quickly, and I'm worried about it from a social stability…
LLMs and AI more broadly certainly seem to have upended (or have the potential to upend) a lot of white-collar work outside of technology and art. Translators are one obvious example. Lawyers might be on the chopping…
Yeah, I notice a lot of the optimism is from people who have been in the field for decades. I'm newish to the field, half a decade out of undergrad. It definitely feels like almost all of what I learned has been (or…
On iOS Safari it loads and works decent for me, but w/ iOS Firefox and Firefox Focus doesn't even load.
> But I think we're still a long way off non-technical people being able to develop applications. I'm surprised I haven't seen anyone do a case study, having truly non-technical people build apps with these tools. Take…
> Claude Opus 4.5 in a casual Claude Code session, approximately matching the best human performance in 2 hours Is this saying that Claude matched the best human performance, where the human had two hours? I think that…
> Someone could be taking this position in this situation because they're highly skeptical that the Americans involved in this have the ability or desire to proceed in a way that will result in a minimum of casualities…
Given what I understand about the nature of competitive programming competitions, using an LLM seems kind of like using a calculator in an arithmetic competition (if such a thing existed) or a dictionary in a spelling…
This is also why I'm skeptical of claims that it would be impossible (or nearly so) for governments to meaningfully regulate AI R&D/deployment (regardless of whether or not they should). The "you can't regulate math"…
I think you're overestimating how much real damage someone can cause with burpsuite and "a few youtube videos." I'd imagine if you pick a random person off the street, subject them to a full month's worth of…
If they're truly Chinese state-sponsored actors, does it really matter if their actions/methods are exposed? What is Anthropic going to do, send the Anthropic Police Force to China to arrest them? I suppose I could see…
This definition makes sense, but in the context of LLMs it still feels misapplied. What the model providers call "guardrails" are supposed to prevent malicious uses of the LLMs, and anyone trying to maliciously use the…