> But the thing is, Molo doesn’t actually have to be good at this job, because the point of this trial isn’t to win — though I’m sure Musk wouldn’t mind a win. The point is to punish Altman, Brockman, and OpenAI. Musk has done that pretty thoroughly — reinforcing in the public’s mind that Altman is a liar and a snake. This morning, I read an exclusive in The Wall Street Journal that assorted Republican AGs and the House Oversight committee wanted to look into Sam Altman’s investments. References to the trial are peppered throughout the article.
Model testing and swapping is one of the surprises people really appreciate DSPy for.
You're right: prompts are overfit to models. You can't just change the provider or target and know that you're giving it a fair shake. But if you have eval data and have been using a prompt optimizer with DSPy, you can try models with the one-line change followed by rerunning the prompt optimizer.
Dropbox just published a case study where they talk about this:
> At the same time, this experiment reinforced another benefit of the approach: iteration speed. Although gemma-3-12b was ultimately too weak for our highest-quality production judge paths, DSPy allowed us to reach that conclusion quickly and with measurable evidence. Instead of prolonged debate or manual trial and error, we could test the model directly against our evaluation framework and make a confident decision.
Last year they pushed out an update stating if any “Meta AI” is left on, they can access image data for training,
I turned the AI off and used them as headphones and taking videos while biking. After a couple rides, I couldn’t bring myself to put them on because people started to recognize them and I realized I didn’t want to be associated with them (people are right to assume Meta has access to what they see).
Meta Ray Bans, if kept simple, could have been a great product. They ruined them.
I believe this method works well because it turns a long context problem (hard for LLMs) into a coding and reasoning problem (much better!). You’re leveraging the last 18 months of coding RL by changing you scaffold.
I didn’t say AI was bad and I acknowledged the benefits of Electron and why it makes sense to choose it.
With 64gb of RAM on my Mac Studio, Claude desktop is still slow! Good Electron apps exist, it’s just an interesting note give recent spec driven development discussion.
1. Batch/Pipeline: Processing a ton of things, with no oversight. Document parsing, content moderation, etc.
2. AI Features: An app calls out to an AI-powered function. Grammarly might pass out a document for a summary, a CMS might want to generate tags for a post, etc.
3. Agents: AI manages the control flow.
So much of discussion online is heavily focused towards agents so that skews the macro view, but these patterns are pretty distinct.
There was a good study on this a few years ago that ran the numbers on this and landed on white paint for residential homes as the best option, for a few reasons, if I remember correctly:
- Installation, maintenance and transmission costs are lower when solar is aggregated on farms
- Solar offsets air conditioning, but that moves the heat outside. White roofs reduce the need for AC, which helps significantly with urban heat scenarios
I was struck by this as people suggest alternatives that refute the headline (QGIS, PostGIS, GDAL, etc): nearly every one emerged in the early 2000s.
Strongly agree with your sentiment around maps: most people can’t read them, they color the entire workflow and make it more complex, and (imo) lead to a general undervaluing of the geospatial field. Getting the data into columns means it’s usable by every department.
> But the thing is, Molo doesn’t actually have to be good at this job, because the point of this trial isn’t to win — though I’m sure Musk wouldn’t mind a win. The point is to punish Altman, Brockman, and OpenAI. Musk has done that pretty thoroughly — reinforcing in the public’s mind that Altman is a liar and a snake. This morning, I read an exclusive in The Wall Street Journal that assorted Republican AGs and the House Oversight committee wanted to look into Sam Altman’s investments. References to the trial are peppered throughout the article.