Actually in 1982 I was able to store my programs on standard audio cassettes. Hardware needed: a modem and a cheap tape recorder. My apple II modem would chirp the ascii binary like Starwars' R2D2, I'd record that and when needed I'd play it back to the modem.
Excerpt: “The fact that it’s been 3 years since ChatGPT first launched, and you’ve only just now managed to make it obey this simple requirement, says a lot about how little control you have over it, and your understanding of its inner workings,” wrote one X user in a reply. “Not a good sign for the future.”
Excerpt:
But here’s a reason why other people might care. This is the first paper I’ve ever put out for which a key technical step in the proof of the main result came from AI—specifically, from GPT5-Thinking.
More generally LLMs are bad at exhaustivity: asking "give me all stuff matching a given property" almost always fails and provide at best a subset.
If possible in the context, the way to go is to ask for a piece of code processing the data to provide exhaustivity. This method have at least some chance to succeed.
https://exaQ.ai
[ my public key: https://keybase.io/joaquink; my proof: https://keybase.io/joaquink/sigs/JJNAs8AOmBn_vMJWodh1t0SkNiU-A5IdKcVM6ZiAwSY ]