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mppm

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mppm
·7 days ago·discuss
... which is entirely unsurprising given that exhaled air is about 50.000 ppm CO2 and can vary by several 10.000s depending on depth and rate of breathing. I actually consider the recent wave of findings that CO2 levels as low as 500-1000 ppm measurably affect cognitive performance and well-being to be a great example of how you can prove literally anything with statistics and a sufficiently small sample size.
mppm
·20 days ago·discuss
This is cute, but here is the result I got by always clicking the longest answer, or the first one if two seemed equal:

Scientific Estimate: 71,650 words

"Unbelievable. Are you actually Stephen Fry in disguise?"

Core Basics: 16/20

Intermediate: 15/20

Advanced: 19/20

Expert: 18/20

Grandmaster: 16/20

This is significant beyond this particular app, because biases like this are found all over the place in popular LLM benchmarks.
mppm
·last month·discuss
> I remember when Microsoft was the new darling not many years ago, because of VS Code and WSL

I was genuinely puzzled by that, actually. I thought it quite obvious from the start that Nadella is no longer interested in Windows and other Microsoft software as products and will be moving them to thin cloud wrappers, but for some reason people were really optimistic about the "New Microsoft".
mppm
·3 months ago·discuss
"A guy on HN told me one time, 'Don't let yourself get attached to any cloud services you are not willing to walk out on in 30 seconds flat if you feel the heat around the corner.'" -- Robert de Niro
mppm
·3 months ago·discuss
Theoretically yes, practically no. The ECJ can order the revision of national laws, but the country in question is responsible for implementation, and can send plaintiffs on a multi-decade merry chase. Several countries have also taken the view that they can refuse changes to their constitutions. This stands on shaky ground legally, but there is no real enforcement mechanism anyway.
mppm
·4 months ago·discuss
Thank you for Making Minesweeper Great Again!
mppm
·4 months ago·discuss
What you are seeing here is probably the effect of window size. BZip has to perform the BWT strictly block-wise and is quite memory-hungry, so `bzip2 -9` uses a window size of 900KB, if I recall correctly. Dictionary-based algorithms are more flexible in this regard, and can gain a substantial advantage on very large and repetitive files. The article kind of forgets to mention this. Not that BZip isn't remarkably efficient for its simplicity, but it's not without limitations.
mppm
·last year·discuss
I get that. But if you want to work in relative isolation, would it be too much to ask to not advertise the project publicly and wax poetic about how productive this (unavailable) language makes you? Having had a considerable interest in Jai in the past, I do feel a little bit cheated :) even though I realize no binding promises have been made.
mppm
·last year·discuss
Jai's perpetual closed beta is such a weird thing... On the one hand, I sort of get that the developers don't want to waste their time and attention on too many random people trying to butt in with their ideas and suggestions. On the other hand, they are thereby wasting the time and attention of all the people who watched the development videos and read the blog posts, and now can do basically nothing with that knowledge other than slowly forget it. (Except for the few who take the ideas and incorporate them into their own languages).
mppm
·last year·discuss
It's even worth than that. The personal utility of money is definitely sublinear. Hence a small chance to make a lot of money is worth considerably less than getting its expected value with certainty.