HackerLangs
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

dilyevsky

6,363 karmajoined il y a 9 ans
For professional inquiries: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dilyevsky/

Submissions

Show HN: CLRK, an open-source agent runtime with gVisor and MitM guardrails

github.com
5 points·by dilyevsky·il y a 3 jours·0 comments

comments

dilyevsky
·il y a 15 jours·discuss
Why cant anthropic just sign up to those resellers, rack up some usage and then just start banning tf out of them? Reverse uno
dilyevsky
·il y a 15 jours·discuss
Everyone says support but great support requires culture of excellence and customer obsession and that were the first things to go when those zirp-era scaleups went on hiring sprees
dilyevsky
·il y a 16 jours·discuss
I know a few who are really feeling the pressure from customers now being able to vibe code part or their product and also their cloud bill is about to explode because hardware prices are through the roof
dilyevsky
·il y a 16 jours·discuss
Pretty sure Carmack's idea of slack is what many companies would call "working as hard as possible"
dilyevsky
·il y a 19 jours·discuss
Seems like this is a problem almost entirely solved by llm+vector database setup.
dilyevsky
·il y a 19 jours·discuss
Don't get me wrong - AVP, Airpods, M-series chips are all amazing. Nothing as revolutionary as the first iphone, ipod, or an Apple II
dilyevsky
·il y a 20 jours·discuss
Why didn’t those amazing engineers develop great hardware before or after jobs?
dilyevsky
·il y a 22 jours·discuss
The context is AI made some knowledge work less cushy so now some folks are trying to point out random imaginary flaws (e.g TP or "water usage") when they're not busy trying to convince everyone AI doesn't work.
dilyevsky
·il y a 26 jours·discuss
If it's http2 then Go's stdlib is pretty unoptimized to say the least. Huffman decoder is really cache unfriendly (pointer chasing) and I think allocation heavy too. Same probably goes for http1 and http3.
dilyevsky
·il y a 28 jours·discuss
I dont think this comparison really works. Firefighter would be goalie or a defender and like you said in sports they are less appreciated/compensated for a simple reason - usually they don’t bring in views. There are exceptions ofc like Pippen or Seaman
dilyevsky
·il y a 29 jours·discuss
Tom DeMarco had a whole book about this approach: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/39276/slack-by-tom-...
dilyevsky
·le mois dernier·discuss
sure but there are tons of products from faang and other large companies that can be considered feature complete
dilyevsky
·le mois dernier·discuss
Alternative ways of working
dilyevsky
·le mois dernier·discuss
Twitter had laid off like 75%+ of staff and everyone, including on this site, was convinced it would crash and burn, yet it's still working. Explain?
dilyevsky
·le mois dernier·discuss
nearly all big companies have failed too just on longer horizon
dilyevsky
·le mois dernier·discuss
They're basically not building anything, and what they are building will be borderline unusable because of the route they chose so the car will be faster, cleaner and more convenient. If you want fast you can take the plane. So unless the problem is "how do we siphon as much tax dollars as possible banana republic-style?" I really can't agree here.
dilyevsky
·le mois dernier·discuss
I think you've missed the point - that wasn't the reason at all. In a way he was right too - we'll have fully autonomous buses and private vehicles capable of making the full trip down the I-5 long before they complete even the middle of nowhere section they currently have planned.
dilyevsky
·le mois dernier·discuss
Pinning CAHSR jobs program as hyperloop's fault is pretty funny. Maybe he did intend to upset it but since both turned out to be massive boondoggles doesn't seem like it worked - they managed to delay it themselves just fine.
dilyevsky
·le mois dernier·discuss
Like with any tech there are dumb ways of using it and there are smart ways. Treating it as a "slot machine giving you the right answer" is a dumb way - it may work for a bit, but it won't carry you very far because everyone else can also do this. No one is stopping anybody from digging deeper into problems than ever before using this technology - that's the smart way.
dilyevsky
·le mois dernier·discuss
> Because you somehow need a giant training set which describes images in natural language, no?

That's definitely one way - they train a text encoder together with an image encoder on a labelled set of images. WL & 3b1b made a nice video on it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iv-5mZ_9CPY