So much of our information is being leaked nowadays that news like these don’t surprise me anymore…
I think everyone should understand that if they truly want something private, storing it offline or destroying it completely, are the only safer options.
Any sort of convenience to access said data, is a possible surface of attack.
The "worst" part of this comment, is that it's not even exaggeration.
In the last 6 months, my competition increased 5x. People that didn't have the skills to compete, now do. My margins will keep shrinking while hardware and servers gets more expensive.
It's a fucking miserable future for us software people.
Architecting and "good taste" won't be good enough to put food on the table next year...
I found it to be otherwise, but it was not a complete hands off experience. Which is ideal for me, I like to be specific and grok 4.3 and composer are great code monkeys.
Opus and GPT are the models you want right now, for "I have no idea how to build this, so figure it out".
careful there cowboy, we are in the golden age of ai, regulation is still catching up.
You don't want to sell guns to people without some sort of background check. The amount of exploits found in the last few months have been pretty scary already.
This is just one more layer of caution, because it reveals how little we know how these llms work. They know how to make them, but they seem to be unable to properly restrain them.
Yes, I think that too. Besides sports, most young people studying today are aiming for jobs that are mainly indoors. It's not a requirement, of course, but because a lot of modern careers consist of working in offices or other enclosed environments.
No movement, No sun, Stale Air (Unless you have good ventilation). Pretty harmful if we think about it.
I see comments like this and they seem so pointless.
The port was done in a week. Do you think the development is finished?
Obviously there are some unsafe blocks that will remain forever unsafe. But other will eventually be removed.
> Delegate, do not pair-program. Cat Wu (Claude Code team): “The model performs best if you treat it like an engineer you’re delegating to, not a pair programmer you’re guiding line by line.” Write a crisp brief upfront, then let it run.
This is also how you get a slop codebase that you won’t easily understand.
It becomes a labyrinth that only the Agent knows.
It’s not a catastrophe when your making prototypes or projects like you see on X.
But if you are expanding your codebase or trying to build something more professional and maintainable. I find it important to explicitly spec things bit by bit so I can understand and some what keep my writing style in this codebase.
But this is only productive when you have a fast model otherwise it kills your chain of thought while you wait for the output.
If the model is slow, delegation is probably the only way.
I trust them because of their reputation.
I have been a bun user before v1.0.0 and I experienced some shortcomings, bugs, memory leaks and things of that nature. But all of them were eventually patched, and it has become my go to runtime for at least 2 years now.
I trust their judgement to do the right thing.
I don’t understand the overreaction since this is a parallel development.
If it turns out to be better than make it default. Bugs get fixed it’s not like their zig version didn’t have issues before.