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iamnotagenius

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iamnotagenius
·il y a 6 mois·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·il y a 6 mois·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·il y a 6 mois·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·il y a 9 mois·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·il y a 10 mois·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·il y a 10 mois·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·il y a 10 mois·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·il y a 10 mois·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·il y a 10 mois·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·il y a 10 mois·discuss
православный is used in jargon for exactly that meaning. source: 45 years of native Russian speaking.
iamnotagenius
·il y a 10 mois·discuss
They are different. Gemma 3 12b excels at natural languages but terrible at long context. Pixtral 12b is better at long context (not stellar), but worse at natural language.
iamnotagenius
·l’année dernière·discuss
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iamnotagenius
·l’année dernière·discuss
Mistral models though are not interesting as models. Context handling is weak, language is dry, coding mediocre; not sure why would anyone chose it over Chinese (Qwen, GLM, Deepseek) or American models (Gemma, Command A, Llama).
iamnotagenius
·l’année dernière·discuss
well this is not how normally coding models used anyway.
iamnotagenius
·l’année dernière·discuss
Coding problems are never solved with rag.
iamnotagenius
·l’année dernière·discuss
small models can be funny (12b model):

tell me funny story about techbro and real developer who actually ships code

Sure, here's a light-hearted story for you:

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Once upon a time in Silicon Valley, there was a shiny new startup called "TechBro Inc." It was filled with eager young techbros, all wearing their "10x Developer" t-shirts, and sipping on their $8 cold-pressed juices. Among them was Chad, the self-proclaimed "Tech Bro King."

Chad was always posting his impressive code snippets on his social media profiles, bragging about how he could "crush" any coding challenge in no time. He was the epitome of a techbro, all talk and no walk.

Meanwhile, in the corner, there was Alex, the quiet, unassuming developer who actually shipped code. Alex didn't have flashy t-shirts or a massive online following, but the company's products worked, and that was thanks to Alex.

One day, TechBro Inc. decided to host a "Hackathon" to impress their investors. Chad saw this as his opportunity to shine. He spent the entire day tweeting about his progress, posting screenshots of his code, and even live-streaming his "epic coding session."

Alex, on the other hand, quietly sat at his desk, coding away. He didn't take any breaks for photoshoots or live streams. He was there to work, not to perform.

As the hackathon came to a close, Chad confidently declared, "I've just finished the most amazing feature ever! It's going to revolutionize our app!" The room erupted in applause, and Chad basked in the glory.

The next day, the team gathered to demo their new features. Chad confidently presented his "revolutionary" feature. He clicked the button to launch it, but nothing happened. He tried again, and again, but the app remained unchanged. Chad's face turned red, and sweat dripped down his forehead.

It was Alex's turn. He quietly stepped up, clicked a button, and suddenly, the app was filled with new, useful features. The team gasped in awe. The investors were impressed. The app actually worked, and that was thanks to Alex.

Chad, trying to save face, turned to Alex and said, "Well, Alex, it seems you've just... shipped some code. Not bad for a... real developer."

The room burst into laughter. From that day forward, Chad learned the difference between talking about coding and actually doing it. And Alex? He just kept shipping code, one line at a time.

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