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112233

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Gearmulator

github.com
2 points·by 112233·6 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Extended Rigid Bodies

puzzlescript.net
4 points·by 112233·6 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Bignum Bakeoff: The Coding Competition You've Probably Never Heard Of

youtube.com
2 points·by 112233·7 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

comments

112233
·26 hari yang lalu·discuss
They did not misunderstand anything. All of the behaviour is not inherent in raw base model and has been planted by the agressive, secretive reinforcement learning they do for benchmaxxing, "safety" and all other things. Claude begins any other sentence with "honestly". That is not how LLMs work, that is how they work after being RLed to the brink.
112233
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Before everyone piles on this comment with "whoosh" and "it was sarcasm" and such — have you noticed that reacting to ironic, sarcastic comments as if they were meant literally is what real LVL 80 trolls do oftener and oftener? On internet, you can never know who is pulling leg...
112233
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
why for? the reply is about factual historical experience with webpage hard errors.

Would you like to have a law that forbids you, under penalty of fine, to read any book you buy or borrow that is lacking or has damaged pages?
112233
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I'd much prefer correct sitemap.xml to an RSS. Please let me keep up to date with your site/blog/homepage without scraping it!
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I have been carefully following the following personal rule:

Never edit or comment or contribute to stack overflow or english wikipedia or linux kernel.

It kind of feels like being non-smoker and reading about issues people who smoke have. Only the damage wikipedia causes appears to be much more random and severe.

I understand not all other language wikipedias are like the english one, but it's not worth the risk to your mind.
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The addiction research has terms like LDWs and near-misses. It is massively researched topic. Even cursory reading helps to understand why table saw makes really bad slot machine. Really bad 3d printer? Maaaybe. But LLMs are, either by intelligent design or coincidence of worst outcomes, excellent slot machines! They almost succeed, produce small payouts, create suspense and anticipation, and their operation is unpredictable. Table saws have a long way to go
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
C is about the safest language you can choose, between cbmc, frama-c and coccinelle there is hardly another language with comparable tooling for writing actually safe software, that you can actually securely run on single-core hardened systems. I would be really interested to hear the alternatives, though!
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> web proxy

do you know of a mitm proxy that "just works"? meaning, is able to spoof/intercept/modify running processes well enough that most stuff would run without manual modification?
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
"Prevent exceptions from leaving destructors." — thank you for providing well known sources that support my point! Although sadly we all have to eat Sutter Meyers bread, at least it explicitly tells you to not worry about the way exceptions are handled during object destruction — by simply avoiding such exceptions.

No C++ "bread and butter" I have seen so far goes into depth on this subject.
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
What book covers in depth *throwing* from destructors? Even more sane thing — throwing from constructors and function arguments — is mentioned in passing ("unwind will take care of everything, don't think too hard about it") unless you are in a language lawyer mailing list. But exceptions *during destruction*? What book discusses that? That's like covering use of NaN values as map<> keys...
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
yeah, but AI played crucial role in this fraud. It turbocharged and spearhedded. Thanks to AI, you can now fraud too!
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
If you noticed, the article did not actually tell you what happens when destructor throws. It was only about double-exception case and throwing in nothrow() function (both perfectly valid things to know when jobbing).

What state are members left in when destructor throws? If exception happens in virtual base? If member destructor throws, what other class members have they destructor executed? will delete[] be called?

The author possibly does not care to know themselves! As you say, totally irrelevant to any normal programming. Unless you are writing clang or gdb
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
this is always overlooked. AI stories sound like "with right attitude, you too can win 10M $ in lottery, like this man just did"

Running LLM on 1000 functions produces 10000 reports (these numbers are accurate because I just generated them) — of course only the lottery winners who pulled the actually correct report from the bag will write an article in Evening Post
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
https://www.cnbc.com/2025/09/05/anthropic-to-pay-1point5-bil...
112233
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
If lossy-compressed transcodes of ripped movies are not "transformative works" and can get people even jailed, then lossy-compressed text of ripped books and websites is neither.

There is a lot of knowhow going into a good divx rip too, you know.

And it enables so much novel uses such as popcorn time, with fluorishing business opportunities.

You wouldn't download a car. They did.
112233
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Nothing gives programmer bigger sense of future job security than trying vibe-coding with a "frontierest" model and looking at the code. Especially once it starts changing existing code. Ah. And the fake tests. And those grandiose coments. Oh. It is quite marvellous.

I just wonder if companies will just instantly fold and sink once their internal slop pressure causes hull breach, or will they call slopbusters.
112233
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
But... what sort of storage device does not allow your computers to use all 256 byte values? Why is random access data stored on teletype?
112233
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Not to water down the snark, but isnt cause of situation described in the article the exact mentality you are mocking?
112233
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Sorry, I tought you meant "support infrastructure" in a much wider sense — yeah, LLMs are frighteningly good at lockpicking tests using source code shaped inputs. It's just that they are also frighteningly good at finding insane ways to game the tests, too. I wouldn't say that LLMs are very "G" in the AI they do — present them with confusing semantics, and they fall off the self-contradiction cliff. No capability of developing theory systematically from observations.
112233
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
So how much Kagi without AI costs? It should me much cheaper subscription, right?