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41,791,200
comment
schmidtleonard
2024-10-09T18:39:27
null
Chopping up the future and selling it to rich people is a brilliant way to obtain decentralized skin-in-the-game capital allocation decisions. But then the future arrives and it belongs to rich people whose only goal is to squeeeeeezzzzzeee.<p>Capitalism is good at avoiding boondoggles but it&#x27;s a sucker for asset pumps. We don&#x27;t have to pay heavy taxes to support a gigantic network of high-speed trains to nowhere but we do have to pay monopoly rents on land, two-sided markets, Metcalfe-law networks, and so on.
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41,791,135
41,790,026
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kabes
2024-10-09T18:39:28
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But Yup also allows to infer types from schemas...
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41,790,812
41,764,163
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[ 41797974 ]
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comment
aiforecastthway
2024-10-09T18:39:38
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The establishments are owned by a corporate person named &quot;Uno Restaurant Holdings Corporation&quot;.<p>So calling it Uno&#x27;s isn&#x27;t inconsistent with how we talk about Walmart&#x27;s stores or Google&#x27;s website, for example.
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41,790,919
41,787,647
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[ 41791258 ]
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comment
entropicdrifter
2024-10-09T18:39:54
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Yeah, but winning vs winning on all possible fronts is a meaningful distinction. Apple won, they just didn&#x27;t win <i>as much as possible</i>.
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41,774,196
41,769,657
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story
laksmanv
2024-10-09T18:40:01
Ask HN: Best books on introduction to AI/LLMs?
I want to learn a bit more about how AI like ChatGPT and LLM&#x27;s actually work, do you have any suggestions for good books in this area?
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2
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41,791,204
1
[ 41791287 ]
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comment
mecsred
2024-10-09T18:40:03
null
The thing most people find ostentatious about the &quot;mobbaroque&quot; examples is that gold is used to add gold to the work. As a physical demonstration of wealth, i.e. &quot;I can afford so much gold it&#x27;s all over my artwork&quot;. The reason people find the Byzantine halos less ostentatious is that gold is used symbolically in lesser quantities to represent something else which is perceived as valuable.
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41,789,914
41,761,409
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npt1234
2024-10-09T18:40:09
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The sexism is that you think not taking a baby up machu pichu is a genetic trait of women rather than a sign of intelligence
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41,790,300
41,788,246
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41,791,207
comment
int_19h
2024-10-09T18:40:12
null
Esperanto is indeed not culturally neutral (and was never supposed to be), but it&#x27;s still vastly better in practice than other European languages precisely because of this overemphasis on Latin (and Greek) roots - because those are exactly the &quot;fancy&quot; words that tended to be borrowed most often historically even across language families.<p>Also, interestingly enough, Esperanto attracted more interest in some Asian countries - most notably, Japan - than in much of Europe.<p>I think the bigger problem with Esperanto is phonology. It&#x27;s too heavy on affricates, including some relatively rare ones (e.g. phonemic &quot;ts&quot;), and the consonant clusters get pretty bad. For someone coming from a simple CV language, those are likely to be a bigger challenge than the word list.
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41,789,356
41,787,647
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41,791,208
story
rbanffy
2024-10-09T18:40:13
Washington's 'Forgotten Giant' Volcano Stirs: Surge in Quakes Prompts Monitoring
null
https://gizmodo.com/washingtons-forgotten-giant-volcano-stirs-surge-in-quakes-prompts-increased-monitoring-2000509873
3
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41,791,208
0
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41,791,209
comment
gmueckl
2024-10-09T18:40:13
null
That would have interesting implications. Companies would have to grow by aggressive diversification into other markets. Instead of a Google or Appple that controls your digital life, you&#x27;d have an endgame with a few ACMEs that attempt to lock you in in every aspect of your life: Your pots would work best with a stove from the same company. Your washing machine and detergent only do a good on a specific brand of clothes etc. A completely different kind of market regulation would be required.
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41,790,974
41,784,287
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41,791,210
comment
null
2024-10-09T18:40:38
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41,791,124
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41,791,211
comment
kristjansson
2024-10-09T18:40:46
null
Sure I guess? But we&#x27;ve just barely stopped talking about Python3, and that was released 13-16 years ago[1]. Is _this_ change worth another decade of thrashing the ecosystem? Is __any__ change?<p>[1]: depending on if we count 3.0 vs 3.2 when it was actually kinda usable.
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41,790,856
41,788,026
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41,791,212
comment
fragmede
2024-10-09T18:40:54
null
&gt; WITCH stands for the Indian tech giants – W- Wipro I- Infosys T- TCS C- Cognizant H- HCL A- Accenture India<p>In case anyone else was wondering about that acronym.
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41,785,265
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41,791,213
comment
ValentineC
2024-10-09T18:40:56
null
Threadreader link for anyone interested:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;threadreaderapp.com&#x2F;thread&#x2F;1843963052183433331.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;threadreaderapp.com&#x2F;thread&#x2F;1843963052183433331.html</a>
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41,787,137
41,791,369
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41,791,214
comment
DrillShopper
2024-10-09T18:41:21
null
&gt; This is what would happen anywhere else in the world<p>lmao wtf no it wouldn&#x27;t. Truth Social is used literally every day (by some) to call for the assassination of politicians belonging to the Democractic party, the party currently in power, and it has not been banned.<p>Maybe Erdogan and the rest of Turkey should grow a slightly thicker skin.
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41,788,819
41,785,553
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[ 41794610 ]
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41,791,215
comment
null
2024-10-09T18:41:35
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41,788,857
41,787,647
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41,791,216
comment
0xbadcafebee
2024-10-09T18:41:49
null
Sometimes the hierarchy can be used without directly&#x2F;perfectly extending the code. For example, in the CPAN world, you might publish your own module as &quot;x&#x2F;crypto&#x2F;ssh&#x2F;knownhosts&#x2F;client&quot;. You don&#x27;t even have to use the &quot;x&#x2F;crypto&#x2F;ssh&#x2F;knownhosts&quot; code at all, it just looks like a similar namespace. (IIRC, CPAN requires a human in the loop who&#x27;s moderating what new packages are listed; none of the craziness of PyPI where any insane person can release thousands of typosquatting malware modules)<p>You would hope a new module would reuse as much previous base modules as they can, but sometimes it&#x27;s enough to just put some new code in that namespace, with the intent then that someone will find it easier, and build off of it. The hierarchy is for organization, discovery and distribution, as much as it is about good software development practice. The goal being to improve the overall software development ecosystem.
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41,789,426
41,785,511
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[ 41791726 ]
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comment
aaroninsf
2024-10-09T18:41:51
null
Everytime this work of Wolfram&#x27;s comes up, I think the same thing: what this is more than anything else, is a tacit argument that the universe we inhabit and are structures&#x2F;processes within, is computed in a strong sense. I.e., that we are living in a computational &quot;simulation,&quot; the substrate of which is not currently accessible.<p>That he doesn&#x27;t come out and lead with this, I find quite peculiar. I&#x27;ve asked him about this in person and not gotten a less cagey response. I assume that is because he does not want his theoretic hypotheticals to be binned under &quot;simulation theory&quot; and his overall world view so categorized.<p>But I don&#x27;t see another reason to pursue this line of conjecture the way he does. And as I suspect that that premise is actually true, it&#x27;s all good IMO.<p>Unrelated directly, but certainly adjacent, is that at the intersection of simulation-theories and AI, is the premise that a computed person (i.e, an AI) is uniquely situated to &quot;jail break&quot; our own reality, to exist in the framing one. (And you know, maybe it&#x27;s turtles all the way down a la Flatland, so...)<p>As Douglas Hofstadter and Daniel Dennett foregrounded, a simulated hurricane doesn&#x27;t get you wet, but a simulated poem is a poem in every frame. So too travel entities defined well by computation.<p>A good reason, if we needed one, perhaps, to get on with the business of elevating ourselves into a purely computational embodiment, I think. I&#x27;d like to pop up a level and take a look.
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41,782,534
41,782,534
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story
todsacerdoti
2024-10-09T18:42:06
Proposed roadmap for introducing CHERI into Android
null
https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/113277021212365322
1
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41,791,218
0
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41,791,219
comment
light_triad
2024-10-09T18:42:08
null
Peace time CEOs might be a dying breed :)<p>It&#x27;s less about that distinction and more about not turning execs into mini &#x27;CEO&#x2F;founders&#x27; - their incentives are completely different. When the full extent of the damage they&#x27;ve caused reveals itself, most execs will be long gone.
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41,786,404
41,771,331
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41,791,220
comment
Kim_Bruning
2024-10-09T18:42:17
null
In certain contexts, I&#x27;m ok with eg (off the top of my head):<p>* x, y, z (coordinates)<p>* r, g, b, a; c, m, y, k; y, u, v (colors)<p>* i, j, k matrices and such<p>* p, i, d; Kp, Ki, Kd in process control<p>* rv (return value), where it is clear what The Thing To Be returned is.<p>* common variables from eg physics<p>Generally because these are well known and defined in particular contexts.<p>I don&#x27;t always make it, but sometimes an argument can be made that single letters are better known&#x2F;recognizable by their single letter name.<p>Compare:<p>* total_energy = mass * light_speed_constant ^ 2<p>vs<p>* E=m*c^2<p>Or:<p>* process_control_setting = proportional_component + integral_component + derivative_component<p>vs<p>* q=p+i+d (for those of us who know PID control)
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41,790,140
41,788,026
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41,791,221
comment
ValentineC
2024-10-09T18:42:35
null
&quot;Matt Mullenweg: &#x27;WordPress.org just belongs to me&#x27;&quot;:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theverge.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;10&#x2F;4&#x2F;24262232&#x2F;matt-mullenweg-wordpress-org-wp-engine" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theverge.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;10&#x2F;4&#x2F;24262232&#x2F;matt-mullenweg-w...</a>
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41,791,369
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story
leonagano
2024-10-09T18:42:51
Show HN: Create Sound Effects from Prompts
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https://toucanfx.com
1
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41,791,222
0
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41,791,223
comment
lcnPylGDnU4H9OF
2024-10-09T18:42:57
null
&gt; What Google has is a monopoly on search (which is bad), but I don&#x27;t think having a monopoly for advertising on your own property is a bad thing.<p>Where one might run afoul is using your monopoly in one market -- search, in Google&#x27;s case -- to gain an advantage in another market -- advertising. It&#x27;s kinda interesting because they clearly don&#x27;t treat &quot;search&quot; as a market given they don&#x27;t sell it to anyone but it also clearly has value, otherwise people wouldn&#x27;t use it.<p>Now I wonder if it is without precedent that the supposedly-monopolistic thing they&#x27;re using as a carrot for their advantage in a different market doesn&#x27;t actually generate revenue itself; not sure if that context has ever been tried in court.
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41,790,244
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comment
Kon-Peki
2024-10-09T18:43:04
null
&gt; If you have a net worth of $2M, but throughout your life never go below $1.5M of net worth (i.e your assets never drop that much in value, and you never spend the money) - then it literally does not matter that you had $1.5M.<p>A $2M portfolio allows you to spend $80k-$150k per year yet never drop in value. A $500k portfolio allows $20k-$35k per year in spending with no drop in value.<p>How on earth can someone believe that the $1.5M didn’t matter?
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41,786,211
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[ 41791260, 41792476 ]
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41,791,225
comment
randomdata
2024-10-09T18:43:20
null
<i>&gt; The free market&#x27;s great IF there&#x27;s competition.</i><p>If you have a free market finding competition isn&#x27;t an issue, but maintaining profitability is. If we had a free market when Google came onto the scene, everyone else would have copied PageRank the next day, and then you&#x27;d have hundreds of search engines all as good as each other, each sharping their pencils sharper and sharper in an attempt to win customers over on a price basis until there is nothing left. At which point there is nothing left to further innovation.<p>To combat that, we grant short-term monopolies over technology to allow their inventors time to build up a decent business before opening the flood gates, with the intent to balance what makes mixed-market economies great without ending up with no competition. The problem is that those monopoly procedures were established when time moved slowly. Back then, 20 years was barely enough time to get your product to and recognized in the market. These days, you can get there in a few years, or even less, which leaves nearly 20 more years to focus on killing all the competition.<p>Ultimately, we would have been better off if Google was pushed out into a free market after a few years. We benefitted from it having some head start, but it went on much too long.
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41,790,904
41,784,287
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NotYourLawyer
2024-10-09T18:43:22
null
If y’all don’t like the English style, maybe you should have tried harder and won WWII.
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41,787,647
41,787,647
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41,791,227
story
Tomte
2024-10-09T18:43:34
Warfighting (1997) [pdf]
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https://www.marines.mil/portals/1/publications/mcdp%201%20warfighting.pdf
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41,791,227
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[ 41791345 ]
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41,791,228
comment
dekhn
2024-10-09T18:43:38
null
I don&#x27;t know that I agree that fragment libraries use sequence homology. From my understanding of it, homology implies an actual evolutionary relationship. Wheras fragment libraries instead are agnostic and instead seem to be based on the idea that short fragments of non-related proteins can match up in sequence and structure space. Nobody looks at 3-mers and 9-mers in homology modelling; it&#x27;s typically well over 25 amino acids long, and there is usually a plausible whole-domain (in the SCOP terminology).<p>But, the protein field has always played loose with the term &quot;homology&quot;.
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41,790,948
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41,791,229
comment
jjtheblunt
2024-10-09T18:43:41
null
I wonder if the spread of English is because it&#x27;s like a barycenter pulled by multiple languages, so not too far afield if coming from any of those languages.
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41,791,086
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comment
mmcdermott
2024-10-09T18:43:47
null
While I&#x27;m sure that someone somewhere objects to paying for law and order, I think most tax grumbling comes from taxes rising (and, arguably, still not rising enough) to pay for bigger and bigger programs with an increasingly tenuous relationship to law or order. Not everyone objects to every line item, of course, but the bigger the budget gets the more certain it becomes that those rising taxes are not just to keep up with inflation on basic essentials.
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41,789,957
41,780,569
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comment
IncreasePosts
2024-10-09T18:43:49
null
Miguel worked at Exxon for 32 years as an engineer and a manager. It&#x27;s not like he was the CEO or anything close to that. There would literally be hundreds of thousands of people in a similar position to him across the world.<p>Also worth noting that Jeff Bezos was(and I think still is) the youngest person who ever became a senior VP at DE Shaw. That is a position earned by merit alone.
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41,788,467
41,786,101
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41,791,232
comment
snapplebobapple
2024-10-09T18:43:54
null
Meh, 10-12 grams of inulin plus a teaspoon of allulose has accomplished the same thing for me. Just be prepared for the fart armageddon that comes with the inulin and will last for 3-4 weeks as your gut biota adjusts.<p>My regime for informational puprposes, consult your doctor before you try anything obviously: 3 restorafiber gummies in the morning, 3 in the evening a half teaspoon of allulose in the morning and evening (tastes sweet, I just dissolve it on my tongue).<p>Costco sells 2 large 140 gummie jars for 29 bucks (46 servings) where I live and the &quot;wholesome, non-gmo pure allulose&quot; brand is available from iherb for 19 bucks for 80 daily servings, which puts the cost of this regime ~86 cents a day.
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41,777,800
41,777,800
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41,791,233
comment
brudgers
2024-10-09T18:44:03
null
Starting is the only way to start.<p>It will be hard.<p>You will do many things wrong.<p>But eventually a few things right.<p>Good luck.
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41,787,106
41,787,106
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41,791,234
comment
null
2024-10-09T18:44:03
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41,790,938
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41,791,235
comment
enragedcacti
2024-10-09T18:44:14
null
There are a lot of ideological assumptions underlying the very concept of wealth creation, but even if you buy into those I don&#x27;t think that statement is true. Bezos could only be responsible for creating the difference between him and the hypothetical other most wealth creating possibilities, and there is no reason that difference couldn&#x27;t be negative.<p>Jonas Salk, inventor of the Polio vaccine, chose not to patent his creation or seek any profit from it. Imagine the alternative where Jonas Salk patents the Polio vaccine, sells each dose for the profit maximizing price, and becomes one of the wealthiest people in the world. Which scenario led to more overall wealth?
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41,790,849
41,789,751
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41,791,236
comment
theptip
2024-10-09T18:44:14
null
It’s a Public Benefit Corporation (sub-type of C-corp) not an LLC.
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41,791,091
41,790,026
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41,791,237
comment
JangoSteve
2024-10-09T18:44:14
null
Interestingly, the award was specifically for the impact of AlphaFold2 that won CASP 14 in 2020 using their EvoFormer architecture evolved from the Transformer, and not for AlphaFold that won CASP 13 in 2018 with a collection of ML models each separately trained, and which despite winning, performed at a much lower level than AlphaFold2 would perform two years later.
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41,787,261
41,786,101
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41,791,238
comment
gorgoiler
2024-10-09T18:44:14
null
Ahhh, now I (top level author) get it :)
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41,788,064
41,758,371
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41,791,239
comment
yeevs
2024-10-09T18:44:27
null
I&#x27;d argue almost every platform with ads do have this option. You just may disagree about what&#x27;s reasonably priced.
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41,791,057
41,784,287
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[ 41791609 ]
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41,791,240
comment
mattw2121
2024-10-09T18:44:28
null
As a former North American Punk, they were posers, not punks.
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41,791,147
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null
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41,791,241
comment
DowagerDave
2024-10-09T18:44:32
null
It&#x27;s very catchy, but not super-impressive musically IMO, however it had a huge impact on the scene and entire ecosystem at the time. Many other bands piggy-backed off their success, which I&#x27;m not sure happens as much in today&#x27;s mega-single model. The band has gotten continually better while still staying relevant as well, which is really cool.
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41,790,959
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[ 41792968, 41791612, 41791607 ]
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comment
toomuchtodo
2024-10-09T18:44:37
null
Florida has neither the will nor the belief system to properly engineer or pay for the climate future that awaits it.<p>(Florida resident)
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41,791,068
41,791,068
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comment
jajko
2024-10-09T18:44:41
null
If I am worried about anybody holding my private data (apart from US&#x27; 3-letter agencies and thats a hill I am not going to die upon since I don&#x27;t have same basic human rights as US citizens), its Meta.<p>Sure Google is everywhere, but Meta holds much more data on our inner personal sides, which are the easiest things to actually abuse to no end. That and pornhub.
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41,791,020
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[ 41791314, 41791408 ]
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comment
codingdave
2024-10-09T18:44:50
null
It all depends on everything else in your life - can you afford to live without work for a while? If you are in the USA, do you need health coverage through your work, or do you have other options? Do you have any discussion going on with people to make a move or are you starting from scratch seeking work and having to send in resumes?<p>In general, I stay only as long as my circumstances force me to stay. At the same time, there are ways to make a soul sucking job suck less - mostly by figuring out how to do the job without caring about the job. Be that burned out cynical co-worker who just scrapes by and doesn&#x27;t truly care. It is a bad attitude for building a career with a company, but a life-saving attitude if your current employer will never take care of your needs anyway.
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41,790,085
41,790,085
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comment
plutomeetsyou
2024-10-09T18:44:52
null
Even with those fluctuations, you can live (more than) comfortably with those $100 billion (probably). Unless you&#x27;re being sarcastic
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41,791,001
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[ 41791413 ]
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story
sandeep_kamble
2024-10-09T18:44:52
Easy to Use Self-Hosted API Security Scanner Launched
null
https://securelayer7.net/products/api-security-scanner
1
null
41,791,246
0
[ 41791247 ]
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41,791,247
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null
2024-10-09T18:44:52
null
null
null
null
41,791,246
41,791,246
null
null
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41,791,248
comment
mixmastamyk
2024-10-09T18:44:53
null
When looking at new languages, getting the basics right is the first thing I look at. Clumsy string concatenation is a blocker in my business, which is like 75% of the code.
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41,777,090
41,758,915
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41,791,249
comment
nullindividual
2024-10-09T18:44:53
null
You can&#x27;t have &#x27;truly random&#x27;.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Random_number_generation#Computational_methods" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Random_number_generation#Compu...</a>
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41,766,130
41,765,081
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null
41,791,250
comment
err4nt
2024-10-09T18:44:59
null
What&#x27;s the risk? You own the code, and you aren&#x27;t pre-committed to updating to any new versions in the future. You can just take it and use it on your own forever. Many people do. What&#x27;s their risk?
null
null
41,787,562
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null
[ 41792088, 41791467 ]
null
null
41,791,251
comment
lovethevoid
2024-10-09T18:44:59
null
The light framework you&#x27;re referencing is Lit or Shoelace. Also web components have taken off, just in the enterprise space where most teams are going to be using whatever they prefer whether that&#x27;s Svelte or React or Vue or Angular - so slotting in web components works.<p>For everyone else, you start running into the issue of the classic <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;xkcd.com&#x2F;927&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;xkcd.com&#x2F;927&#x2F;</a> situation. The problem of ever-changing frameworks will always be a constant. People want different things from their frameworks!
null
null
41,790,612
41,780,297
null
null
null
null
41,791,252
comment
booleandilemma
2024-10-09T18:45:02
null
That dynamism English has is something that makes it such a great language, imo.
null
null
41,791,158
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,253
comment
jjice
2024-10-09T18:45:03
null
This was on April Fool&#x27;s Day, but the roman numeral constants PEP always gives me a laugh <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;peps.python.org&#x2F;pep-0313&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;peps.python.org&#x2F;pep-0313&#x2F;</a>
null
null
41,788,583
41,788,026
null
[ 41791582 ]
null
null
41,791,254
comment
ElectricalUnion
2024-10-09T18:45:06
null
If you&#x27;re really going for &quot;minimalistic&quot;, why not ignore the whole build&#x2F;SSG and just directly link to a markdown file inside a github repository?
null
null
41,790,994
41,749,680
null
null
null
null
41,791,255
comment
aguaviva
2024-10-09T18:45:10
null
<i>It becomes again wild when you remember that the Cold War was only &quot;necessary&quot; because of US antagonism post-war.</i><p>This is an extremely myopic point of view, and ignores a whole host of major events in Europe and Asia in the key years 1946-1950. I don&#x27;t have time to lay them out for you, but if the topic is of interest to you, then you&#x27;re welcome to do your own research.
null
null
41,779,256
41,776,721
null
null
null
null
41,791,256
comment
jimberlage
2024-10-09T18:45:19
null
If you want an example of a language where the exact opposite advice is taken at all times (with all the pitfalls described in this blog post), give Clojure a whirl.
null
null
41,781,855
41,781,855
null
null
null
null
41,791,257
comment
WorldWideWebb
2024-10-09T18:45:31
null
That’s the point of the license WordPress is developed under - WPE, in fact, does not have a duty to give anything back.
null
null
41,790,498
41,791,369
null
null
null
null
41,791,258
comment
xp84
2024-10-09T18:45:35
null
&gt; calling it Uno&#x27;s isn&#x27;t inconsistent with how we talk about Walmart&#x27;s stores calling it Uno&#x27;s isn&#x27;t inconsistent with how we talk about Walmart&#x27;s stores or Google&#x27;s website<p>No, calling it &quot;Uno Corp&#x27;s pizzeria&quot; would be the equivalent. Nobody says they&#x27;re &quot;Going down to Walmart&#x27;s&quot; or &quot;doing some research on Google&#x27;s.&quot;
null
null
41,791,202
41,787,647
null
[ 41791399 ]
null
null
41,791,259
comment
rootusrootus
2024-10-09T18:46:14
null
I don&#x27;t think it&#x27;s getting censored intentionally, in the sense someone is taking that action specifically. It&#x27;s falling quickly off the front page because the algorithm is biased against this kind of discussion. If it was getting killed by flags it would end up saying [flagged] in the headline as it disappeared. And you can&#x27;t downvote submissions, so it&#x27;s inferred from lack of upvotes.
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null
41,791,053
41,789,751
null
null
null
null
41,791,260
comment
qazxcvbnmlp
2024-10-09T18:46:17
null
Spending 100k a year buys you what? Security<p>What the author is saying is that most people never spend that money and instead can focus on finding security through other means.
null
null
41,791,224
41,786,211
null
[ 41791457 ]
null
null
41,791,261
comment
oersted
2024-10-09T18:46:18
null
I don&#x27;t disagree, it is certainly not unique to English, and these central institutions do largely have a descriptivist attitude (although the French are known to be rather purist ;) ).<p>But there is a practical difference: textbooks and dictionaries in English have traditionally come from distributed institutions, which are eminent but none of them claims to be official, whereas for example in Spanish they all originate from or closely follow the standards of the Real Academia.<p>Sometimes unified standards have been artificially created, like for Basque or Mandarin, and in those cases prescriptivism is more dominant.
null
null
41,791,002
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,262
comment
monero-xmr
2024-10-09T18:46:33
null
It appears there is a certain type of person, to your own exacting standards, who &quot;deserves&quot; being wealthy, but everyone else does not. Furthermore, the act of having a lot of wealth is inherently suspicious to you, although certain edge cases (a small business owner perhaps) you would allow it.<p>Overall I am not persuaded, I think rich people are a good thing for society.
null
null
41,790,933
41,789,751
null
[ 41791521 ]
null
null
41,791,263
comment
bee_rider
2024-10-09T18:46:35
null
&gt; (in theory at least, in practice there are still biases, but tracking ethnicities won&#x27;t fix that, since that&#x27;s human nature)<p>That’s what we’re trying to fix (or at least mitigate) in the US. You say it is just human nature, but we’re a pretty diverse country, so we have a strong incentive to proactively try and see if we can make it work.
null
null
41,789,401
41,785,265
null
[ 41795908 ]
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null
41,791,264
comment
dbrueck
2024-10-09T18:46:51
null
Mal: &quot;We got work to do, dong ma?&quot;
null
null
41,790,392
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,265
comment
marxisttemp
2024-10-09T18:46:57
null
I play Fortnite and Call of Duty at 120Hz VRR on Xbox Series X.
null
null
41,789,748
41,758,371
null
null
null
null
41,791,266
comment
h2odragon
2024-10-09T18:47:08
null
very well said<p>my only conclusion from TFA is &quot;someone has emitted some horseshit with chunks of numbers in it&quot;<p>your point is far more central to the discussion i feel the people compiling the figures wanted to spark. And while its a worthy argument i hafta say &quot;why didn&#x27;t they put it in those terms, then?&quot;
null
null
41,790,916
41,789,751
null
[ 41802986 ]
null
null
41,791,267
comment
err4nt
2024-10-09T18:47:11
null
They won&#x27;t need to fork WP itself (though they&#x27;re totally free to do that, WP started as a fork after all), but it sounds like they may need to quickly focus on creating their own plugin and theme marketplaces, and other services that WordPress.org provided to WordPress CMS users but is not denying to WPEngine.<p>Let this be a lesson to all of us - if you rely on a service provided by another organization external to your organization, get an SLA! Get a contract that guarantees you the provision of services you depend on.
null
null
41,789,902
41,791,369
null
[ 41791904 ]
null
null
41,791,268
comment
doctorpangloss
2024-10-09T18:47:19
null
&gt; In this era of 3-5 frame latency being the norm (at least on e.g. the Nintendo Switch)<p>Which titles is this true for? Have you or anyone else measured?
null
null
41,787,785
41,758,371
null
[ 41796477 ]
null
null
41,791,269
comment
zelphirkalt
2024-10-09T18:47:19
null
Of course all this needs to be weighed against maintainability and readability of the code. If the code base is not mainly about something very performance critical and this kind of thing shows to be a bottleneck, then changing things away from more readable towards performance optimized implementation would require a very good justification. I doubt, that this kind of optimization is justified in most cases. For that reason I find the wording &quot;prematurely breaking out code&quot; to be misleading. In most cases one should probably prioritize readability and maintainability and if breaking code out helps those, then it cannot be premature. It could only be premature from a performance limited perspective, which might have not much to do with the use case&#x2F;purpose of the code.<p>It is nice, if a performance optimization manages to keep the same degree of readability and maintainability. Those concerns covered, sure we should go ahead and make the performance optimization.
null
null
41,787,870
41,758,371
null
[ 41792333 ]
null
null
41,791,270
comment
svara
2024-10-09T18:47:24
null
They&#x27;re referring to the structure of the protein when a drug is bound, that&#x27;s what&#x27;s novel. Novel as in, you can&#x27;t think of it as &quot;just&quot; interpolation between known structures of evolutionarily related proteins.<p>That said I&#x27;m not sure that&#x27;s entirely fair, since Alphafold does, as far as I know, work for predicting structures that are far away from structures that have previously been measured.<p>You&#x27;re quite wrong about small molecule drug structures. Historically that has been the case but these days many lead structures are made by combinatorial chemistry and are not derived from natural products.
null
null
41,788,071
41,786,101
null
[ 41791452, 41791441 ]
null
null
41,791,271
comment
aprilthird2021
2024-10-09T18:47:35
null
Normally you&#x27;d be right, but we are eerily close to a WWIII right now...
null
null
41,783,876
41,780,569
null
[ 41794588 ]
null
null
41,791,272
comment
jerf
2024-10-09T18:47:36
null
Python 3 does not, but the hypothetical Python 4 would be crazy to put types on everything and then not accelerate its interpreter with the resulting data.<p>The problem Python 3 has is dynamic types, as the dynamically-typed languages implement them, are viral; one little crack lets them in somehow and all the code operating on the data has to assume it&#x27;s viral.
null
null
41,790,243
41,788,026
null
[ 41795895 ]
null
null
41,791,273
comment
cybermaggedon
2024-10-09T18:47:37
null
Have got a recursive chunker and token chunker integrated currently, all configurable. Can add others. Daniel wrote a great blog about trying different chunking parameters at blog.trustgraph.ai&#x2F;p&#x2F;dark-art-of-chunking
null
null
41,787,439
41,765,150
null
null
null
null
41,791,274
comment
edvardas
2024-10-09T18:47:42
null
Succinct and rigorous. This article has a clear problem statement, explicitly calls out assumptions and expected properties, shows how to express them in TLA+&#x2F;PlusCal, and even adds a sanity check by refining the mutex model. I wish I had seen this article when writing my BA thesis.
null
null
41,780,409
41,780,409
null
null
null
null
41,791,275
story
godelmachine
2024-10-09T18:47:45
Snake Case
null
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snake_case
1
null
41,791,275
0
[ 41791302 ]
null
null
41,791,276
story
kugurerdem
2024-10-09T18:47:53
Is It Greppable? (2022)
null
https://mrcoles.com/is-it-greppable/
1
null
41,791,276
0
null
null
null
41,791,277
comment
freejazz
2024-10-09T18:47:58
null
That would&#x27;ve never happened with a medallion in the first place, and you don&#x27;t seem to gather that it <i>was</i> the planned route.
null
null
41,790,763
41,776,861
null
[ 41791835 ]
null
null
41,791,278
comment
DowagerDave
2024-10-09T18:48:02
null
A lot of punk has always had an anti-success edge, which seems really unfair. It should be more about DIY and freedom outside what was (in the 90&#x27;s) a very restrictive, fixed business model. NOFX are the best of example of the punk aesthetic, but Green Day (the pop-punk band, not the Celtic folk band^) didn&#x27;t sell out while achieving stratospheric success.<p>^Community reference
null
null
41,791,187
41,790,295
null
[ 41791350, 41791800, 41791657 ]
null
null
41,791,279
comment
metalman
2024-10-09T18:48:06
null
point to note about country&#x2F;cultures that are generaly safe and free from theft is this: those cultures have elements that sit much higher in there value measurements than mere material possesions,and they demonstrate that casualy and without consious thought all the time interestingly there are similar behaviors here in Nova Scotia,where people (some) do not lock there doors,a point of honor bieng actualy unsble to do so for lack of a key,very common to see a truck running,while the owner has left it to go do some small task I left my house in Halifax once to travel to the US for a few weeks,and got back to see that I had left the front door OPEN,just the screen door and my les paul black beuty framed perfectly for all to see, leaning up at the end of the hall,1028 Robie st Halifax,NS,sold on a few years ago To rieterate,its our rampant materialism and endless advertising operating as the our &quot;cultural&quot;(ha!) center not bad people
null
null
41,785,023
41,785,023
null
null
null
null
41,791,280
story
godelmachine
2024-10-09T18:48:09
Snake Case vs Camel Case vs Pascal Case vs Kebab Case (2022)
null
https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/snake-case-vs-camel-case-vs-pascal-case-vs-kebab-case-whats-the-difference/
2
null
41,791,280
0
[ 41791307, 41791317 ]
null
null
41,791,281
comment
aaroninsf
2024-10-09T18:48:13
null
The author should really take a long pass through the multidisciplinary investigation of what embodiment means.<p>Multi-modal is just a start, physical agency and proception are the cores of what is missing from LLM that people mean when they say such systems don&#x27;t &quot;know&quot; what things are.<p>What they don&#x27;t have is not just the sorts of categorizations and propositional reasoning around it implicit in e.g. Wikidata entity maps and Prolog&#x2F;Wolfram like propositional reasoning.<p>It&#x27;s also having a body that inhabits space and time with other agents and bodies.
null
null
41,733,390
41,733,390
null
null
null
null
41,791,282
story
rogservin
2024-10-09T18:48:15
null
null
null
1
null
41,791,282
null
[ 41791283 ]
null
true
41,791,283
comment
rogservin
2024-10-09T18:48:15
null
[dead]
null
null
41,791,282
41,791,282
null
null
null
true
41,791,284
comment
msk-lywenn
2024-10-09T18:48:23
null
Back when I was working on hololens 1 stuff, I was very surprised how the bad resolution wasn’t actually much of an issue. I think since we’re always slightly moving, our brain makes some kind of natural temporal antialiasing ? And it’s not awful like VR since it’s super imposed on the real world and not a feed of it
null
null
41,791,030
41,760,503
null
null
null
null
41,791,285
comment
marxisttemp
2024-10-09T18:48:40
null
You’re still getting more information, which allows you to be more accurate with your inputs e.g. tracking a moving target.
null
null
41,790,542
41,758,371
null
null
null
null
41,791,286
comment
kstrauser
2024-10-09T18:48:52
null
I suspect it might&#x27;ve been a couple of reasons:<p>1. I actually preferred this link that showed the highlights in a compact format.<p>2. There are some other HN user(s) who seem to be obsessed with posting [dupe] comments like their lives depended on it, and others may find it off putting. I know I do. Unless it&#x27;s an exact dupe and very recent, for me it has &quot;ha-ha, gotcha!&quot; or Wikipedia deletionist vibes. For some reason, &quot;See also:&quot; doesn&#x27;t bug me nearly so much. Maybe because that seems like a notice for the benefit of the reader, but &quot;dupe&quot; sounds to me like a callout to a moderator to hide the story.
null
null
41,789,538
41,788,203
null
null
null
null
41,791,287
comment
mindcrime
2024-10-09T18:48:55
null
There are a couple of new books on the topic that are slated to drop any day now, IIRC. Of what&#x27;s already published, a few I&#x27;m familiar with include:<p><i>Transformers for Natural Language Processing and Computer Vision: Explore Generative AI and Large Language Models with Hugging Face, ChatGPT, GPT-4V, and DALL-E 3</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1805128728&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1805128728&#x2F;</a><p><i>Transformer, BERT, and GPT: Including ChatGPT and Prompt Engineering</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1683928989&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1683928989&#x2F;</a><p><i>Introduction to Transformers for NLP: With the Hugging Face Library and Models to Solve Problems</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1484288432" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1484288432</a><p><i>Transformers for Machine Learning: A Deep Dive</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;0367767341&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;0367767341&#x2F;</a><p><i>Natural Language Processing with Transformers, Revised Edition</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1098136799" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1098136799</a><p>EDIT:<p>a couple of the ones that I thought were still pending have now been released. I haven&#x27;t read any of these, but they are ones that caught my eye and that I was planning to get:<p><i>Large Language Models: A Deep Dive: Bridging Theory and Practice</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;3031656466" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;3031656466</a><p><i>Building LLMs for Production: Enhancing LLM Abilities and Reliability with Prompting, Fine-Tuning, and RAG</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;B0D4FFPFW8" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;B0D4FFPFW8</a><p><i>Building LLM Powered Applications: Create intelligent apps and agents with large language models</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1835462316" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1835462316</a><p>The &quot;not yet released&quot; group still includes:<p><i>Build a Large Language Model (From Scratch)</i> (ships Oct. 29th)<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1633437167" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1633437167</a><p><i>LLM Engineer&#x27;s Handbook: Master the art of engineering Large Language Models from concept to production</i> (ships Nov. 11th)<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1836200072" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1836200072</a><p><i>Hands-On Large Language Models: Language Understanding and Generation</i> (ships ???)<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1098150961" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;gp&#x2F;product&#x2F;1098150961</a>
null
null
41,791,204
41,791,204
null
null
null
null
41,791,288
comment
IncreasePosts
2024-10-09T18:49:02
null
First of all, it is extremely difficult to say whether certain actions are good for society. I think there are some things that you can say are clearly good or bad for society, but what about all the stuff in the middle?<p>Would the Coca-Cola company be allowed to exist in this world? Are professional sports team good for society?
null
null
41,790,981
41,790,026
null
[ 41791387, 41791340, 41791566, 41791814 ]
null
null
41,791,289
comment
null
2024-10-09T18:49:03
null
null
null
null
41,790,540
41,790,026
null
null
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null
41,791,290
comment
Wytwwww
2024-10-09T18:49:12
null
&gt; proliferation of LLM: that it will make reading communications from other workers less utterly painful.<p>By somehow magically inferring what the person was trying to say and padding it with pointless verbosity?<p>I&#x27;m afraid we&#x27;ll need to wait for Neuralink 20.0 to solve this problem...
null
null
41,789,259
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,291
comment
talldayo
2024-10-09T18:49:15
null
At least they&#x27;re fairly honest about it in places where government mandated backdoors aren&#x27;t kept under wraps: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;support.apple.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;111754" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;support.apple.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;111754</a><p>Further evidence that Apple is simply right about everything they do, even when their actions directly contradict how they market their brand!
null
null
41,784,226
41,782,541
null
null
null
null
41,791,292
comment
jhbadger
2024-10-09T18:49:20
null
And a fair chunk of pre-WWII Germany ended up in Poland. Poland basically moved westward, losing parts in the east and gaining territory in the west.
null
null
41,790,962
41,745,798
null
null
null
null
41,791,293
comment
ffsm8
2024-10-09T18:49:23
null
Emails don&#x27;t need OCR and are usually html with attachments, not structured pdfs.<p>If you want to process contracts or business letters... Then yes, that&#x27;d be a good choice.
null
null
41,790,663
41,788,246
null
null
null
null
41,791,294
comment
DowagerDave
2024-10-09T18:49:25
null
Saying I&#x27;m punk, and you are not punk, is about the least punk thing you can do.
null
null
41,791,240
41,790,295
null
[ 41791432 ]
null
null
41,791,295
comment
eviks
2024-10-09T18:49:27
null
But what does seem difficult is for you to use words for understanding instead of throwing throwing them in people&#x27;s faces.<p>It is true what they said within the context of the conversation where the standard notes are either explicitly or implicitly rejected.<p>&gt; that is probably so fit for purpose.<p>Or probably not. Unlike in this case where apostrophe is definitely fit for purpose
null
null
41,791,015
41,752,023
null
null
null
null
41,791,296
comment
adastra22
2024-10-09T18:49:27
null
AlphaFold doesn’t work for engineering though. Getting a shitty answer ends up being worse than useless.<p>It seems to really accelerate productivity of researchers investigating bio molecules or molecules very similar to existing bio molecules. But not de novo stuff.
null
null
41,790,707
41,786,101
null
[ 41791618 ]
null
null
41,791,297
comment
zelphirkalt
2024-10-09T18:49:37
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Giving your lambdas names defeats part of their purpose though.
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supermatt
2024-10-09T18:49:38
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The grandmother received her qualification in Warsaw, which is part of modern day Poland and has never been part of the USSR - so her qualification explains nothing about dentistry in the USSR - as per the comment I was responding to.<p><pre><code> Warsaw itself was in ruins. A great portion of the country’s doctors had been killed, and there was a desperate need for medical professionals of every kind. The intensity of this demand led to a certain loosening of standards in training. This relaxation was even more pronounced in the sister discipline of dentistry. Instead of going to years of medical school, all Zosia had to do to become a dentist was endure a short practicum and pass a test. The test was a set essay, on the “role of the mouth in the beauty of the face”.</code></pre>
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jjice
2024-10-09T18:49:40
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&gt; Handed in my notice the week before, because passing probation would increase my notice period from two weeks to twelve weeks.<p>Is this the notice that you&#x27;re required to give them? How can they enforce a notice period (genuine question)? Or is it just them trying to tell you that you need to let them know _three entire months_ in advance but without any real way to enforce it?<p>I never thought this was enforceable.
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