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telecomhacker

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Paper2md – convert papers to Markdown to be used for LLM context

github.com
1 points·by telecomhacker·قبل 6 أشهر·1 comments

A Simple Recommendation System Using Vectors

angelocortez.com
2 points·by telecomhacker·قبل 7 أشهر·0 comments

Scraped 300k Japan real estate listings and created map-based metrics

nipponhomes.com
5 points·by telecomhacker·قبل 8 أشهر·1 comments

comments

telecomhacker
·قبل 6 أشهر·discuss
Soooo I've been working on a recommendation system for a top 50 shopping app in the app store. Was looking for ways to brainstorm ideas that could be used for my use-case, so I took 11 papers from 2025 RecSys and fed that into LLM's to get a summarized output that also looks for content relative to the site (tunable in the prompt.json).

Wanted to share in case other folks would like to try. Some ideas was to feed best practice coding books in there and creating an md file out of that. Anyways hope it helps you folks out there!
telecomhacker
·قبل 8 أشهر·discuss
What an insane ride it's been building this thing.... After coming back from a 2 week trip to Japan to visit my old study abroad friends and professor this past May, I decided to build https://nipponhomes.com then https://nipponhomes.com/analytics . Out of transparency, I'm losing like $2k/year in raw cloud costs (Vercel, Supabase, Zyte, OpenRouter, AWS, etc.) but I am so humbled in how much I've learned just by building this. Tbh, I realize that I am so fortunate to have the time and money to experiment with something like this, as I know many people out there are really struggling with the current market (heck I am getting rejected left and right too by my dream companies). Documenting here some of my learnings to share:

1. I learned how to create a lightweight, custom multi-modal recommendation system; I also ended up getting 2nd place for in Liquid AI's hackathon with this. (https://github.com/angelotc/lfm2-vl-embeddings) . Turns out you just need an MLP or attention layer to fuse two sets of dense embeddings.

2. Queues + async workers are a must for processing things at scale (listings in my case). Kinda go into it more in this video: https://youtu.be/qXOk7_3vZgQ?si=Mk1l3dYhzdQuvFe3&t=360

3. You need proxies (Zyte, BrightData, OxyLabs, etc.) to scrape at scale if you don't want to build your own proxy rotation system.

4. Wasn't getting sign ups until I added this feature where after a person views 3 listings, they have to sign up. That like 10x'd my signups (#growthhackingiguess)

Ps. I kinda built this out of depression tbh lol as I got rejected to Meta for the 2nd year in a row and Open AI for the 3rd time. The site currently has 8k monthly users, which is super cool, but tbh I don't know if I want to keep working on it anymore as I'm not really learning anymore, and just adding shit here and there. I know the site isn't perfect yet, and I'm getting some interests from major banks, japan real estate consultants ( the folks that help you buy the houses), and competitors (they want the data) in case you folks were interested on who is reaching out.
telecomhacker
·السنة الماضية·discuss
It’s purely remote and super chill. Not everyone wants to work on ads/compete with Indians/Chinese. I’d rather make 200k helping clinicians be more efficient using ML than $300k+ optimizing two tower models to increase the CTR on ads.
telecomhacker
·السنة الماضية·discuss
I primarily work on clinical data, and from that side, the technology stack—MUMPS included—has its quirks but generally gets the job done. The real dysfunction in U.S. healthcare isn’t the software or the language itself, but the system it’s built to serve. The core issues lie in the incentives around revenue cycle management and the structure of the insurance industry. Blaming MUMPS is like blaming COBOL for bank fees—it’s the system, not just the syntax.
telecomhacker
·السنة الماضية·discuss
Part-time MUMPS programmer here for a health system in NYC. I still love writing in it. The rates are way better than other eco-systems (e.g. Python, Java, blah blah) , probably because the eco-system isn't diluted with low-wage workers from India/China. This is because 95%+ of Epic/Ex-Epic employees are American. I would even argue it is the patriotic language of choice due to that reason.

Expected pay of 85-120/hour, which pays way more than my full-time job. It's a fun language to write in, and the adrenaline rush you get when you get a triple index loop working is awesome.

Also random fact - according to Epic HR , the average college GPA of Epic employees was 3.5, which is probably the perfect formula in hiring loyal corporate servants. I always thought it was weird that I had to apply with my transcripts and resume.