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d--b

9,516 karmajoined hace 14 años
Software developer + wannabe screenwriter.

Submissions

Ask HN: How do you avoid / get out of LLMs local minima?

3 points·by d--b·hace 27 días·3 comments

Musk vs. Altman lawsuit over OpenAI starts today

theguardian.com
8 points·by d--b·hace 2 meses·0 comments

Ask HN: Quick technical questions about LLMs

2 points·by d--b·hace 4 meses·0 comments

Ask HN: Do you know of a AI company that's using user's clients to request stuff

1 points·by d--b·hace 8 meses·0 comments

The Right to Be Lazy (1883)

en.wikipedia.org
3 points·by d--b·hace 9 meses·0 comments

A bit of nostalgia: Space Harrier game is 40

theguardian.com
7 points·by d--b·hace 9 meses·1 comments

comments

d--b
·hace 4 días·discuss
> Today, in some parts of the company, work passes through as many as 14 layers of management.

> We will reduce management layers to no more than 5, and where possible, 3

I don’t understand why they need to make a big announcement when what they’re doing is cutting the stupid management structure. Everybody hates cuts, except those that cut middle management.

They should have titled this “xbox cuts middle management: Less burocracy, faster delivery, more original games, more money for everyone involved, yay!”
d--b
·hace 8 días·discuss
Can we get a windows 11 DVD that works without an internet connection instead?
d--b
·hace 9 días·discuss
yes but no other mRNA vaccines had completed the various trial phases and got approved.

And we shouldn’t assume that all mRna vaccines are the same. The rna sequence that’s used potentially can matter as well.
d--b
·hace 9 días·discuss
There is a process in place that’s meant to capture a certain number of potential problems. I didn’t make that process. The people who are making drugs safe designed the process. There is never zero risk of a treatment behaving badly, of course but when a drug gets fast tracked and doesn’t go through the regular approval process, it just hasn’t been proven to be safe by the regular standard of what experts deem safe.

It’s not very complicated.

trials ok => drug most likely ok

trials not done => we don’t really know.
d--b
·hace 9 días·discuss
By late 2020, when they got approved, the vaccines were not scientifically proven safe for mainstream use. No other mRNA vaccine had been through all the trial stages, and certainly not those COVID ones.

Could the vaccines have side effects that became visible after 6 months? Yes and we couldn’t have known that they didn’t.

Could the vaccines have side effects on people with rare conditions? Sure, and we couldn’t have known that either.

My point is that in 2020, the decision to approve the vaccines and pretty much force everyone to get it was a risk tradeoff. It was way more risky to let the disease continue spreading and mutate than it was to release the vaccines. mrna vaccines had been in trials and there was no reason to believe they could have been harmful. But the reality is that we just didn’t know. Biology is complex enough that you can’t just assume everything will be fine without proper testing. And what we deem proper testing is a process that these drugs hadn’t gone through.

I happily got vaxed in early 2021, and did it again 4 times , so I was willing to trust the tradeoff.

But ignoring that it was a tradeoff and hiding behind a sign that says “science” is just taking people for dummies.
d--b
·hace 9 días·discuss
You mean the stuff the whole world got injected with in 2020? Good to know!

Seriously though, I am very pro-vax, but the fact that studies like these come out now is just confirmation that people had the right to doubt the safety of mRNA back then. Many people shamed others for being anti vax but everyone has the right to be careful.
d--b
·hace 10 días·discuss
[dead]
d--b
·hace 15 días·discuss
I’d have called it NATCHA but whatever
d--b
·hace 15 días·discuss
Online privacy is already an illusion.

I mean, your ISP knows your IP, the government can know your IP, Google knows your IP, Meta knows your IP, all the websites you log on know who you are and what you're IP is, and forward your data to 3rd parties, many of these connect the dots between the various websites you visit.

If there is one benefit to true ID verification on the internet, is that people won't feel as if they're browsing things anonymously while they're not.
d--b
·hace 16 días·discuss
Maybe GP was treating Trump to the royal "they"
d--b
·hace 18 días·discuss
> The price of a meme coin reflects only the collective belief of meme coin holders that they will be able to sell to a greater fool

Author is at times a little too emphatic, but he has some sentences like this one that are really efficient in conveying the idea.
d--b
·hace 18 días·discuss
yes it's a bit of a mystery to me as well, especially knowing that most of them are scams.

There are 2 things I don't understand.

1. Most online ads are illegal in EU, cause it's illegal to lie/mislead in an ad in the EU. The Tai Chi ads, the water pressure thing or the breezamax scams are all I see on Youtube, yet, they're obviously fake, and still running strong. How is it that they're not taken down?

2. The tai chi ad campaign must be costing millions of dollars. Everyone I know is seeing these fifteen times a day. Is anyone actually paying for that crap? Shouldn't Youtube increase the price of ads, so that they make more money and actually push scammers off the platform?

It doesn't make any sense
d--b
·hace 19 días·discuss
> Young children can acquire absolute (perfect) pitch — but adults cannot. The window closes around age 6.

What?

That doesn’t sound true at all.

Jude Kofie started the piano at the age of 8. But music prodigy apart, I defintely don’t have perfect pitch right now, but I am very confident that I could with some training.

Like, when I sing a song without music, I usually am very close to the right tone. Mostly because I intuitively know how my voice is supposed to feel (the vocal chords move differently based on the tone).

And I can clearly ear the different “colors” between different scales.

And when I play the guitar a lot, after a month or so I start to be able to know where a note I hear is on the guitar.
d--b
·hace 20 días·discuss
A CORS protected endpoint tells YOUR BROWSER not to let YOU access its content if the website you’re browsing from is not whitelisted.

It’s confusing because unlike most security features, it’s meant to protect the users from themselves. The risk comes from a combination of users being allowed to visit malevolent sites and browsers letting all websites do a lot of random stuff, including making 3rd party requests with cookies and private stuff
d--b
·hace 21 días·discuss
when you don’t know the right answer is always the longest one…
d--b
·hace 21 días·discuss
Oh so there will be a sequel!
d--b
·hace 22 días·discuss
Idk about that particular company but the benefit of cheating may be much higher than the 1.8m fine they got.

I personally never specifically consent to anything, yet get a ton of marketing emails. To most companies that send me those emails 1.8m would be a slap on the wrist.
d--b
·hace 22 días·discuss
> GEMINI 3.1 LITE SAYS A FRENCH DIPLOMAT WHO SERVED AS THE AMBASSADOR OF FRANCE TO THE REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO (BRAZZAVILLE) FROM 2017 TO 2020.

er. okay. The good thing about this test is that I am the only person in the world with my full name, and I know all the people with my last name (about 30-ish people). None of us are ambassadors, none of us are related to Congo in any way.
d--b
·hace 23 días·discuss
2 things:

1. Like everything, apts degrade over time, maintenance usually happens in spikes, so the state of the place goes down until someone pays for the new paint job

2. It depends on the market, in highly attractive places, owners don't care about keeping tenants, so they'll let the place fall apart, until they can't get anyone anymore. Then they'll put in the price to put the place back in order and start again.
d--b
·hace 25 días·discuss
It seems that each time there's a new tech cycle, another zero gets appended to all financial transactions.