there's no prize for predicting 12 of the past 2 bubbles
oh no he's using computers to write software
if you want people to use public transit, you need to make it not be a mobile homeless shelter. otherwise everyone who can afford to will insist on a private transport
it seems like they were trying that last year, it didn't work, so he flipped out and fired everyone and now plan B is to buy Cursor and run a quick rename of "Composer 3" to "Grok 5"
there is literally zero evidence to support that assertion
fascinating! we find the objectively correct value system by "currently widespread agreement"! Good thing "the common view" is always correct. Hey, have there ever been any issues where there used to be "widespread…
"Mainly, one suspects, to make the open models less ethical on demand" Or because the user's idea of what is ethical differs from the model creator. The entire "alignment" argument always assumes that there's an…
it's in a former appliance factory that's right next to two pre-existing TVA power plants, a Nucor steel mill, and a sewage treatment facility. you've been lied to about how close it is to a residential area, just look…
You should backtest this strategy over the last 20 years before you make serious decisions off of the vibe from internet comments
it's been pretty funny seeing people who did not predict Claude Code's success and previously said the whole sector was a nonsense dead end now saying, well okay there's one massively successful killer app, but what if…
fortunately, you aren't only operating on representations, right? lemme check my Schopenhauer right quick...
the people that want to make sure the AI never gives you any "potentially dangerous information" also want to rigorously control your google search results, and also what books you're allowed to read
are these "technological advancements" in storage in the room with us right now? because I'm looking at today's price per TB and it's higher than it was in 2020
connectors are bad for signal integrity and GDDR is particularly picky about this
you've posted this multiple times and it's not actually true. go read the ingredients list on a supermarket burger
no, the other such labeled companies are foreign owned firms like Huawei that the government never intended to do business with in the first place
Grocery stores track their customers very extensively and cash purchases are fairly rare. I'm very confident that Costco, for example, knows everything that every member has bought from them since the tariffs started.
Hydrogen is so hard to handle that NASA never really figured it out; hydrogen leaks just delayed Artemis 2 last week. There's been about 70 years of trying to solve these issues for space launch and very little…
coding like a hospital patient
Google fucks up 90% of their products, why do you think Gemini is in the 10%?
Aluminum is 8% of the earth's crust and silicon is 28%; I think we're good
you know you're looking at some hard analysis when they use the number "gazillion". can I get that one in scientific notation?
there are, he was just too lazy to use them
the more you don't want somebody to be allowed to say something, the more stochastic it is
I can't speak to San Francisco, but in Los Angeles the waymo has been cheaper than the Uber even before tip every time I've compared them
there's no prize for predicting 12 of the past 2 bubbles
oh no he's using computers to write software
if you want people to use public transit, you need to make it not be a mobile homeless shelter. otherwise everyone who can afford to will insist on a private transport
it seems like they were trying that last year, it didn't work, so he flipped out and fired everyone and now plan B is to buy Cursor and run a quick rename of "Composer 3" to "Grok 5"
there is literally zero evidence to support that assertion
fascinating! we find the objectively correct value system by "currently widespread agreement"! Good thing "the common view" is always correct. Hey, have there ever been any issues where there used to be "widespread…
"Mainly, one suspects, to make the open models less ethical on demand" Or because the user's idea of what is ethical differs from the model creator. The entire "alignment" argument always assumes that there's an…
it's in a former appliance factory that's right next to two pre-existing TVA power plants, a Nucor steel mill, and a sewage treatment facility. you've been lied to about how close it is to a residential area, just look…
You should backtest this strategy over the last 20 years before you make serious decisions off of the vibe from internet comments
it's been pretty funny seeing people who did not predict Claude Code's success and previously said the whole sector was a nonsense dead end now saying, well okay there's one massively successful killer app, but what if…
fortunately, you aren't only operating on representations, right? lemme check my Schopenhauer right quick...
the people that want to make sure the AI never gives you any "potentially dangerous information" also want to rigorously control your google search results, and also what books you're allowed to read
are these "technological advancements" in storage in the room with us right now? because I'm looking at today's price per TB and it's higher than it was in 2020
connectors are bad for signal integrity and GDDR is particularly picky about this
you've posted this multiple times and it's not actually true. go read the ingredients list on a supermarket burger
no, the other such labeled companies are foreign owned firms like Huawei that the government never intended to do business with in the first place
Grocery stores track their customers very extensively and cash purchases are fairly rare. I'm very confident that Costco, for example, knows everything that every member has bought from them since the tariffs started.
Hydrogen is so hard to handle that NASA never really figured it out; hydrogen leaks just delayed Artemis 2 last week. There's been about 70 years of trying to solve these issues for space launch and very little…
coding like a hospital patient
Google fucks up 90% of their products, why do you think Gemini is in the 10%?
Aluminum is 8% of the earth's crust and silicon is 28%; I think we're good
you know you're looking at some hard analysis when they use the number "gazillion". can I get that one in scientific notation?
there are, he was just too lazy to use them
the more you don't want somebody to be allowed to say something, the more stochastic it is
I can't speak to San Francisco, but in Los Angeles the waymo has been cheaper than the Uber even before tip every time I've compared them