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arrowsmith

2,982 karmajoined 4 years ago

Submissions

UK Even Wants Image Scanners on Unsupported Devices

reclaimthenet.org
7 points·by arrowsmith·23 days ago·4 comments

Won't Somebody Think of the Children?

twitter.com
3 points·by arrowsmith·23 days ago·0 comments

UK's Social Media Ban: The Monumental Pretext for Total Digital Surveillance

modernity.news
18 points·by arrowsmith·24 days ago·11 comments

Canada Is Building a Surveillance State

twitter.com
14 points·by arrowsmith·25 days ago·1 comments

Goodbye Bloop

vibekanban.com
4 points·by arrowsmith·3 months ago·0 comments

How LLMs Feel Language

data-processing.club
5 points·by arrowsmith·4 months ago·1 comments

Spiky Points of View from 2k hours of agentic engineering

arrowsmithlabs.com
2 points·by arrowsmith·4 months ago·0 comments

Eight more months of agents

crawshaw.io
223 points·by arrowsmith·5 months ago·241 comments

My agents are working. Are yours?

jack-clark.net
1 points·by arrowsmith·6 months ago·0 comments

A Guide to Claude Code 2.0 and getting better at using coding agents

sankalp.bearblog.dev
2 points·by arrowsmith·6 months ago·0 comments

The problem with agentic AI in 2025

platforms.substack.com
4 points·by arrowsmith·9 months ago·0 comments

[untitled]

12 points·by arrowsmith·10 months ago·0 comments

You Should Be Rewriting Your Prompts

maxleiter.com
2 points·by arrowsmith·10 months ago·0 comments

Why Language Models Hallucinate [pdf]

cdn.openai.com
1 points·by arrowsmith·10 months ago·0 comments

comments

arrowsmith
·12 hours ago·discuss
Knowledge for its own sake is great, but it's worth noting that many "useless" fields of mathematics turned out to be very practical in the long run.

Number theory was long thought to have no practical application, but now it's the backbone of cryptography. Boolean algebra was developed in the 19th century (George Boole died in 1864), decades before it was used to build computers.

Those "useless" theorems being proved today may turn out to unlock a world-changing technology centuries from now. When the breakthrough comes we'll be grateful for the people who laid the foundations.
arrowsmith
·12 hours ago·discuss
Yes but it's always advertised as "$12/MONTH" in big letters with billed annually written somewhere small and non-obvous.
arrowsmith
·19 hours ago·discuss
Regulation is a good thing for big, established incumbents who can afford expensive lawyers. It keeps them safe from competition.
arrowsmith
·2 days ago·discuss
Yes but that didn't happen in the Americas. They didn't settle or leave any lasting impact.
arrowsmith
·2 days ago·discuss
They briefly visited, they didn't "conquer"
arrowsmith
·3 days ago·discuss
The president of the European Commission is “elected” through a thin pretence of democracy that the people of Europe have effectively no control over, and mostly pay no attention to. If you think she’s there because the greater public decided she’s the best person for the job then you don’t know how the EU works.

Also most of the EU population don’t know her for anything at all. I’d be surprised if more than 50% of Europeans could name her.
arrowsmith
·5 days ago·discuss
Maybe an ESL thing? "Potatoes" are literally called "earth apples" in some languages (e.g. pommes de terre in French; Erdäpfel in some German dialects.)
arrowsmith
·15 days ago·discuss
Max Planck published the same paper in multiple journals in the 1940s, which was common practice at the time. He also published a second unrelated paper that happened to have the same title as the paper it was a response to. In 2011 both papers were retracted from their journals' archives, most likely because a bot incorrectly flagged them for plagiarism.

Saved you a click.
arrowsmith
·15 days ago·discuss
Then it's perhaps not the best name, given what happened in the end to the empire's eastern border.
arrowsmith
·21 days ago·discuss
https://xkcd.com/2151/
arrowsmith
·23 days ago·discuss
The UK government has just create an upsurge of interest in digital privacy, so that might be why
arrowsmith
·25 days ago·discuss
It's here: https://codeberg.org/rickoooooo/BannedBookLibrary/src/branch...

For the curious, the "banned" books are (it's a short list):

  - Call of the Wild - Jack London
  - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain
  - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer - Mark Twain
  - Women in Love - D.H. Lawrence
Stunning and brave.
arrowsmith
·29 days ago·discuss
Yeah I had the same reaction. From the title I was expecting to find out what the "future of email" is. I'm still waiting.
arrowsmith
·30 days ago·discuss
US had net negative migration in 2025 for the first time in decades:

https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2026/01/14/immigra...
arrowsmith
·last month·discuss
Which led to a British journalist holding an "offensive poems about Erdogan" contest, which was won by Boris Johnson:

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/may/19/boris-johns...
arrowsmith
·last month·discuss
In the UK, employers pay a stealth tax of 15% (recently increased from 13.8%) on top of the quoted salary minus the first £5k (recently decreased from £9,100.)

So your "£50k" salary actually costs your employer £56,750, and that's before all the other expenses mentioned elsewhere in this thread such as hardware, office rent etc.
arrowsmith
·last month·discuss
See also: Germany's leader filing hundreds of criminal complaints against people who insult him on social media:

https://rmx.news/article/germany-chancellor-merz-quietly-fil...
arrowsmith
·last month·discuss
Don't forget Futurama's: https://futurama.fandom.com/wiki/Old_Freebie
arrowsmith
·last month·discuss
ZIRP will never happen again
arrowsmith
·last month·discuss
29 isn't remotely close to too late, dude.