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dcre

4,804 karmajoined 14 years ago
https://crespo.business/

Submissions

Why narcissistic leaders resist remote work

sciencedirect.com
58 points·by dcre·11 days ago·37 comments

Formal Methods and the Future of Programming

blog.janestreet.com
3 points·by dcre·26 days ago·2 comments

How fast is autonomous AI cyber capability advancing?

aisi.gov.uk
3 points·by dcre·2 months ago·1 comments

An FAQ on Reinforcement Learning Environments

epoch.ai
44 points·by dcre·4 months ago·9 comments

An x86-64 back end for raven-uxn

mattkeeter.com
41 points·by dcre·4 months ago·10 comments

An FAQ on Reinforcement Learning Environments

epoch.ai
2 points·by dcre·6 months ago·0 comments

Epiplexity: Rethinking Information for Computationally Bounded Intelligence

arxiv.org
5 points·by dcre·6 months ago·0 comments

Reflections on Vibe Researching

joshuagans.substack.com
2 points·by dcre·6 months ago·1 comments

Distributional AGI Safety (DeepMind)

arxiv.org
4 points·by dcre·7 months ago·0 comments

Project Vend: Phase Two

anthropic.com
2 points·by dcre·7 months ago·1 comments

16 charts that explain the AI boom

understandingai.org
4 points·by dcre·8 months ago·0 comments

In the economy of user effort, be a bargain, not a scam

lea.verou.me
25 points·by dcre·9 months ago·0 comments

comments

dcre
·4 days ago·discuss
I think we actually are seeing an app explosion, just not a consumer app explosion.
dcre
·9 days ago·discuss
A joke but also not a joke.
dcre
·13 days ago·discuss
This reads to me as fully written by LLMs. Pangram agrees. Note the (alleged) author misHQ’s comments on this thread are getting downvoted as obvious slop.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48706307

Even if it were written by hand, it’s a very poor and frankly stupid essay about an interesting topic. “The model's attention is a fixed quantity, and it has to add up to one, so the more things you make it look at, the less of that attention any single earlier thing can keep.” This is borderline gibberish and it outright rejects the interesting question about LLMs and attention, namely that they have very different capacities from us. LLMs can read an entire OpenAPI schema in seconds and immediately construct valid requests from it. The article first points this out, and then switches to arguing that LLMs have similar limits to us. It’s completely incoherent.
dcre
·14 days ago·discuss
That message is obviously aimed at the government. See the other thread.
dcre
·15 days ago·discuss
All we can say is empirically this is not true. Plenty of people whose full time job is managing rack infra are sick and tired of the customizability of commodity hardware, of the many custom bugs in commodity software, and of the customizability of the price of VMware.
dcre
·15 days ago·discuss
Source code here :)

https://github.com/oxidecomputer/rack-explorer
dcre
·26 days ago·discuss
Thanks, missed it!
dcre
·last month·discuss
He has said every month for the past three years that there is no technical progress left to be made in LLMs and that there is no more room in the market for inference spending to grow.

Here[0] is a fun selection of excerpts from his July 2024 post "How Does OpenAI Survive?"[1]

"I see no signs that the transformer-based architecture can do significantly more than it currently does."

[0]: https://xcancel.com/pathsnotchosen/status/206360940100129633...

[1]: https://www.wheresyoured.at/to-serve-altman/
dcre
·last month·discuss
Jane Street’s profit per employee (profit, not revenue) in 2025 was high single-digit millions per employee.
dcre
·last month·discuss
Yeah, I agree — not a big difference for me between the Opuses. I really just meant Opus 4.x.
dcre
·last month·discuss
Claude Code (or Codex, or OpenCode, or Pi, or Amp — whatever) can do this out of the box without any skills or special tools. The most important thing for making results like this easier to achieve (in any harness) is using the best current models. Right now that's Opus 4.8 and GPT-5.5.
dcre
·last month·discuss
They're only good at it because that's what they're good at? Come on.
dcre
·last month·discuss
They are metered. That's why their ARR went from $9B to $45B in 6 months.
dcre
·last month·discuss
I must have thought I wrote something that I didn't actually write in the previous comment — I can't figure out what "as I said" is supposed to be about.

In any case, maybe I was too subtle. I was talking about Mythos, a model that continues the trend, but which is not available to the public yet. The "overwhelming evidence" is the testimony of the people who have used it. The irrational skepticism was people who don't believe that testimony. In other words, we do know the future, because we know that model and others like it will come out soon.
dcre
·last month·discuss
And there's a whole lot more evidence than that!
dcre
·last month·discuss
I think we have quite good reason to expect more. As I said, we already know (caveat with your level of irrational skepticism toward the overwhelming evidence) that the best existing models are better than the ones publicly available.
dcre
·last month·discuss
Judging from the fact that the Opus 4.5 inflection point was not really anticipated, and we still don’t really know what threshold was crossed that suddenly made agentic coding accessible to so many more people, I think it’s safe to say we don’t know what the thresholds will be until they’re crossed. The fact that we don’t know exactly what they’ll be isn’t a good reason to think there won’t be any more.
dcre
·last month·discuss
1. Global IT spend is $6T per year

2. Where does this $5T number come from? If they make $4T in revenue over the next 5 years instead, what happens?
dcre
·2 months ago·discuss
I don’t think “Usage has plateaued except for coding” is compatible with lab ARR at $80B and still growing exponentially.

https://www.theinformation.com/articles/anthropic-openais-sh...
dcre
·2 months ago·discuss
Weird is far too generous. It’s a travesty of thinking.