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dabber

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dabber
·il y a 9 jours·discuss
Family relationships are the first thing that come to my mind.

In Spanish for example, consuegro and consuegra refer to the father and mother of your child's spouse.

The Spanish words succinctly encode that relationship while English requires verbally traversing the family tree.
dabber
·il y a 7 mois·discuss
The original person didn't say "I wrote this non-trivial software", they said "I built Velo".
dabber
·il y a 7 mois·discuss
> If anybody knows someone involved in GrapheneOS, we'd really like to get their perspective on modern mobile platform hardening.

A few of them seem to be pretty active in GrapheneOS related threads here. strcat for example.
dabber
·il y a 7 mois·discuss
> If anybody knows someone involved in GrapheneOS, we'd really like to get their perspective on modern mobile platform hardening. I will repay them in Monsanto Roundup-Ready(tm) gift certificates.
dabber
·il y a 8 mois·discuss
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2025/oct/28/u...
dabber
·il y a 8 mois·discuss
> It’s articles (not papers) _about_ LLMs that are the problem, not papers written _by_ LLMs

No, not really. From the blog post:

> In the past few years, arXiv has been flooded with papers. Generative AI / large language models have added to this flood by making papers – especially papers not introducing new research results – fast and easy to write. While categories across arXiv have all seen a major increase in submissions, it’s particularly pronounced in arXiv’s CS category. > [...] > Fast forward to present day – submissions to arXiv in general have risen dramatically, and we now receive hundreds of review articles every month. The advent of large language models have made this type of content relatively easy to churn out on demand, and the majority of the review articles we receive are little more than annotated bibliographies, with no substantial discussion of open research issues.