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timbilt

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NanoClaw's architecture is a masterclass in doing less

jonno.nz
47 points·by timbilt·3 months ago·13 comments

Google open-sources experimental agent orchestration testbed Scion

infoq.com
230 points·by timbilt·3 months ago·62 comments

[untitled]

9 points·by timbilt·6 months ago·0 comments

Kubernetes Resource Optimization Strategies That Work in Production

scaleops.com
7 points·by timbilt·11 months ago·1 comments

Google's Reverse Acquihire of Windsurf and the Future of AI Developer Tools

qodo.ai
14 points·by timbilt·12 months ago·5 comments

Making file encryption fast and secure for teams with advanced key management

dropbox.tech
2 points·by timbilt·12 months ago·0 comments

Obesity drugs show promise for treating a new ailment: migraine

nature.com
2 points·by timbilt·last year·0 comments

Slashing CI Costs at Uber

uber.com
1 points·by timbilt·last year·0 comments

Detecting and Countering Malicious Uses of Claude

anthropic.com
2 points·by timbilt·last year·0 comments

Uber's Journey to Ray on Kubernetes: Ray Setup

uber.com
1 points·by timbilt·last year·0 comments

Why we chose LangGraph to build our coding agent

qodo.ai
17 points·by timbilt·last year·9 comments

The Hidden Costs of Men's Social Isolation

scientificamerican.com
35 points·by timbilt·last year·5 comments

Looking back at our Bug Bounty program in 2024

engineering.fb.com
1 points·by timbilt·last year·0 comments

Scaling up test-time compute with latent reasoning: A recurrent depth approach

arxiv.org
149 points·by timbilt·last year·44 comments

AI is accelerating scientific production, not progress

twitter.com
5 points·by timbilt·last year·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by timbilt·last year·0 comments

The Sport of Tuning Quantum Dot Arrays: QDarts Simulator

quantum-machines.co
1 points·by timbilt·last year·0 comments

Improving Search Ranking for Maps

medium.com
1 points·by timbilt·2 years ago·0 comments

Do We Live in a Special Part of the Universe?

scientificamerican.com
3 points·by timbilt·2 years ago·0 comments

Introducing Qodo Cover: Automate Test Coverage

qodo.ai
16 points·by timbilt·2 years ago·8 comments

comments

timbilt
·11 months ago·discuss
Yes, but in a case like this it's a neutral third-party running the benchmark. So there isn't a direct incentive for them to favor one lab over another.

With public benchmarks we're trusting the labs not to cheat. And it's easy to "cheat" accidentally - they actually need to make a serious effort to not contaminate the training data.

And there's massive incentives for the labs to cheat in order to get the hype going around their launch and justify their massive investments in training. It doesn't have to be the CEO who's directing it. Can even be one/a few researchers who are responsible for a specific area of model performance and are under tremendous pressure to deliver.
timbilt
·11 months ago·discuss
> Unlike many public benchmarks, the PR Benchmark is private, and its data is not publicly released. This ensures models haven’t seen it during training, making results fairer and more indicative of real-world generalization.

This is key.

Public benchmarks are essentially trust-based and the trust just isn't there.
timbilt
·last year·discuss
anyone else concerned that training models on synthetic, LLM-generated data might push us into a linguistic feedback loop? relying on LLM text for training could bias the next model towards even more overuse of words like "delve", "showcasing", and "underscores"...
timbilt
·last year·discuss
Twitter thread about this by the author: https://x.com/jonasgeiping/status/1888985929727037514
timbilt
·last year·discuss
Until we get real-time learning to work in production, every AI tool feels like it's getting dumber over time. It goes very quick from "wow this is magic" to starting to notice all the little gaps. I think we have a fundamental expectation of intelligence to learn and when it doesn't, it just doesn't seem that smart
timbilt
·last year·discuss
The weirdness of LLMs is that they're so damn good at so many things but then you see these glaring gaps that instantly make them seem dumb. We desperately need benchmarks and evals that test these kinds of hard to pin down cognitive abilities
timbilt
·2 years ago·discuss
Unit tests are more commonly written to future proof code from issues down the road, rather than to discover existing bugs. A code base with good test coverage is considered more maintainable — you can make changes without worrying that it will break something in an unexpected place.

I think automating test coverage would be really useful if you needed to refactor a legacy project — you want to be sure that as you change the code, the existing functionality is preserved. I could imagine running this to generate tests and get to good coverage before starting the refactor.
timbilt
·2 years ago·discuss
> validates each test to ensure it runs successfully, passes, and increases code coverage

This seems to be based on the cover agent open source which implements Meta's TestGen-LLM paper. https://www.qodo.ai/blog/we-created-the-first-open-source-im...

After generating each test, it's automatically run — it needs to pass and increase coverage, otherwise it's discarded.

This means you're guaranteed to get working tests that aren't repetitions of existing tests. You just need to do a quick review to check that they aren't doing something strange and they're good to go.
timbilt
·2 years ago·discuss
https://archive.md/Bn3Dz
timbilt
·2 years ago·discuss
I think one of the biggest advantages is the security/privacy benefit — you can see in the demo that the model can mask entities instead of tagging. This means that instead of transcribing and then scrubbing sensitive info, you can prevent the sensitive info from ever being transcribed. Another potential benefit is in lower latency. The paper doesn't specifically mention latency but it seems to be on par with normal Whisper, so you save all of the time it would normally take to do entity tagging — big deal for real-time applications
timbilt
·2 years ago·discuss
GitHub repo: https://github.com/aiola-lab/whisper-ner

Hugging Face Demo: https://huggingface.co/spaces/aiola/whisper-ner-v1

Pretty good article that focuses on the privacy/security aspect of this — having a single model that does ASR and NER:

https://venturebeat.com/ai/aiola-unveils-open-source-ai-audi...
timbilt
·2 years ago·discuss
PDFs are now also supported in the API: https://docs.anthropic.com/en/docs/build-with-claude/pdf-sup...

I think Anthropic is actually the first to support PDFs in their API