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myk-e

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Claude Code: The Revolution Nobody Noticed

dentro.de
1 points·by myk-e·4 months ago·0 comments

WTF Happened in 2025?

wtfhappened2025.com
2 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·2 comments

Ars Technica hallucinated quotes in its story about hallucinations

medium.com
2 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

AI could eat itself: Competitors (..) steal their secrets and clone them

theregister.com
12 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·5 comments

CPUs Are Back: The Datacenter CPU Landscape in 2026

newsletter.semianalysis.com
2 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

The many masks LLMs wear

understandingai.org
2 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

Ask HN: Open Models are 9 months behind SOTA, how far behind are Local Models?

11 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·12 comments

China ramps up energy boom flagged by Musk as key to AI race

techxplore.com
3 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

OpenAI's Latest Platform Targets Enterprise Customers

aibusiness.com
2 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

Goldman Sachs taps Anthropic's Claude to automate accounting, compliance roles

cnbc.com
5 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·4 comments

Mindfulness can support GenAI use in transforming project management

techxplore.com
2 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

Irony alert: Anthropic helps UK.gov to build chatbot for job seekers

theregister.com
5 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

The Future of the Global Open-Source AI Ecosystem: From DeepSeek to AI+

huggingface.co
1 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

One Year Since the "DeepSeek Moment"

huggingface.co
3 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

This robot hand detaches and walks by itself

nature.com
1 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

Watch awkward Chinese humanoid robot lay it all down on the dance floor

livescience.com
1 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·2 comments

Anthropic grabs $111M office in downtown San Francisco for expansion

sfgate.com
2 points·by myk-e·5 months ago·0 comments

Like digging 'your own grave': The translators grappling with losing work to AI

cnn.com
85 points·by myk-e·6 months ago·71 comments

Jim VandeHei's note to his kids: Blunt AI talk

axios.com
1 points·by myk-e·6 months ago·0 comments

When two years of academic work vanished with a single click

nature.com
4 points·by myk-e·6 months ago·3 comments

comments

myk-e
·5 months ago·discuss
pretty sweet!
myk-e
·5 months ago·discuss
Yes, fair point. I was trying to use the same comparison we are currently having between closed weights and open weights and their time gap. If there might be a similar time gap to what is possible with ordinary equipment.
myk-e
·5 months ago·discuss
Maybe the industry adapts too and the future PC is AI-ready out-of-the-box. Because people demand that.
myk-e
·5 months ago·discuss
I love the spec, but it is like 5x or 10x a Macbook Air I mean really ordinary, Personal Computer in broad sense - not dedicated LLM kit.
myk-e
·5 months ago·discuss
Yes, a small open model that can run on today's hardware and that compared to a historic SOTA closed model with all in. What time difference do we think?
myk-e
·5 months ago·discuss
Thanks, yes, I meant even ordinary retail PCs, not specialized GPUs. At some point in time in history, SOTA closed models were at a level that compares to todays open models that can run on ordinary hardware.
myk-e
·5 months ago·discuss
Yes, I meant ordinary hardware which you find at home, like a current MacBook Air or equivalent Windows desktop. There must be a time frame when early SOTA LLMs were at a level that compares to open models that can run on ordinary hardware. But it's more like years rather than months. My rough guess would be 2-3 years. Which still would be amazing if we could get OPUS 4.5 quality within 2-3 years on an ordinary computer.
myk-e
·5 months ago·discuss
I think there are also implications for governments and states. Imagine when all this is done without human involvement, you want to have your legislation machine and AI ready to remove all the friction. In the future, states who are getting that will have a big advantage. Today, everything is designed to interact with humans, and even governments need to rethink that.
myk-e
·5 months ago·discuss
I found the creative idea interesting - like the humanoid robots who do not have front or back - it is always both. So they do not need to turn around.
myk-e
·6 months ago·discuss
got it - corrected.
myk-e
·6 months ago·discuss
The trap in my view is that they think they "do something AI" (the AI Adoption) and by thus completely miss the point that in 2-3 years "AI Native" might be a thing. I see that in companies or at conferences, they are proud of what they have achieved and how good it works. Which makes them kind of blind on what is really coming, the tsunami that's just building up, requiring a complete re-think of what an organization looks like.