HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

kumarvvr

no profile record

Submissions

Open AI Restructures as a For-Profit

nytimes.com
4 points·by kumarvvr·9 bulan yang lalu·3 comments

comments

kumarvvr
·7 hari yang lalu·discuss
I loved technical books from Mir publishers. Russian authors have a special place in my heart for explaining complex technical topics in concise yet engaging way.

Books like Problems In physics by I E Irodov were my favourites
kumarvvr
·13 hari yang lalu·discuss
I have done everything from desktop apps to web apps and a bunch in between. Regular debugging is good enough for me. Never had the need to go down into call stack level.

Even with embedded programming, regular C debugger has always been enough.
kumarvvr
·13 hari yang lalu·discuss
I am, for 20 years now. I do embedded stuff too. Still.
kumarvvr
·13 hari yang lalu·discuss
I see posts like this, this deep dive into the call stacks and am always humbled and reminded of the limits of my knowledge about computers and programs.
kumarvvr
·17 hari yang lalu·discuss
I love these articles. Like. Of the million possible ways this could go, squiggles were the one, and it was from decisions of one man, on a whim. Yet, they completely change the world.
kumarvvr
·bulan lalu·discuss
Been using Angular v21 for a very complex app. Have had a wonderful experience, in terms of the cognitive load to make and work with components, state and data flow.

Signals and signal stores make it very easy.

Did the whole coding by hand, no ai coding tools too.
kumarvvr
·bulan lalu·discuss
When all the prompts are by AI, and all the commits by AI, and all the use by AI,only then will corporations realize that..something ..
kumarvvr
·bulan lalu·discuss
I just want to know what exactly is wrong with it?

I get the history with Ferrari cars and their aesthetic and all.

But it looks like what one would expect from the man who designed iPhone.
kumarvvr
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Would these maintain their signature under repeated use? Or regular wear and tear?
kumarvvr
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> there is no 1st party Apple made hiking and topography map on the Apple Watch is such a failure

I remember a time when Apple was chided for integrating functionalities of popular apps into its OS.

Apple created an incredibly awesome device, and its up to the market to make full use of its potential. Why would it be a failure for Apple to not make such an app?
kumarvvr
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
LaTeX has a huge learning curve, and a mess of online information.

I tried to use it to generate automated reports, and was frustrated at every turn. My usage scenario was a completely offline system to generate reports of a few dozen pages, which included graphics, tables and other visualizations.

1. The whole system download is about 1 or more Gigs. 2. Each report is accompanied by half a dozen files. 3. The choice of packages to use, and the versons to use, is all confusing, with various books and site using various packages, often further customized. 4. The syntax is confusing and jarring, at least to me.

Finally, I ended up using simple template tools to generate HTML with proper semantic structing and CSS print media queries to generate my reports.

I do appreciate the fact that my requirement does not involve laying out content over multiple pages, something which LaTeX is good at. That is very difficult to achieve with HTML and CSS.

But, for use cases where each document page is independent, HTML, CSS and print media queries are great.

You can also use all the exciting javascript visualization libraries to generate awesome graphics.
kumarvvr
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I think after the initial euphoria dies down, and the models reach a capability plateau, the use cases will start to come to fore.

I am an experienced developer, and, if I know what I am doing, then AI tools are an average junior programmer that I can beckon.

I have also dabbled in music creation with AI, first generating the lyrics, and then the music with vocals. Is it good. Nope. Is it average, some might say so. Is it a great use of my time, sure. Like a paid video game.
kumarvvr
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
So, Amazon wants to own the tubes too?

I guess the stack should be completed with this. AWS servers, satellite communications, boxes to view content on TVs, apps on mobiles, content creation studios, advertising, product placement, product sales. Whew!

I guess they also want expertise to launch stuff into space, in case it becomes feasible to run space data centers.
kumarvvr
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Presently we are seeing a rally around the flag in vogue in Iran.

They are a civilization going back centuries. No matter their internal fights, they will come together against a common enemy, an enemy for 45 years that is.

I am guessing the IRGC will also be careful enough to not rile up the populace until this war is over.
kumarvvr
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The money thing is true. But China and Russia will extend support.

Iran is collecting about 2 million USD from each vessel through the strait. And they are about 50 passing through them each day. That's 100 million USD per day. Or about 30 odd Bullion USD per year.

Plenty of money to spend on war and some more. Not to mention the money it earns from selling it's oil and blocking GCC oil.
kumarvvr
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> when they sent Vance

It was Iran's demand that they will not speak to Witkoff or Kushner, who were the original morons in this fiasco. They wanted only Vance on the table, most likely because he was against this war and has kept himself away from the whole thing.

> They can use drones to clear the straight of Hormuz of mines, but that won't address all the other methods Iran has to threaten shipping

Iran does not have to even mine or bomb the strait. Them just declaring that they will hit is enough to stop traffic.

> Any military measure short of the full occupation of Iran will likely fail to reopen the straight

I highly doubt even this. Iranian drones have a range of about 1000 km. They can continue to block the strait, even with a ground force. Not to mention that ground forces blitzing through the whole territory will take at-least a year, if not more. That is enough time to plunge the whole world into a recession.

> At what point do these nations lose patience with the constant economic disruption and look for coercive measures to force the U.S. back to the table?

Most nations cannot coerce the US, at least not Trump. What they will most likely do is have secret or open deals with Iran to let their oil through, with a toll tax of course.
kumarvvr
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
What leverage does US actually have here? Even Israel for that matter?

The only options left for US are large scale bombing, like in Vietnam or Cambodia OR putting soldiers on the ground. Going on for years. Or drop a nuke.

Bombing will be of limited use and extremely costly, because is Iran is too large. Its a geographical fortress, mostly large mountain ranges, or deserts.

Soldiers on the ground means a large scale logistics setup, bases, buildup, etc. Its costly and deadly. US soldiers will start dying from day 1.

And then, Iran has total control over the strait. It can decimate the livable conditions in the GCC countries. Mind you, Iran gets about 5% of its water from desalination plants. Almost all GCC countries get more than 50%, sometimes upto 85% of their water from desalination plants. Couple that with hits on their power infra, and the population will be left thirsty in the middle of the desert. None of them can survive without their Air conditioners and water supply. With those countries dying out, Iran emerges as the super power in the region.
kumarvvr
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
How does the fast charging affect the life and long term performance of the battery?
kumarvvr
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Market manipulation.

Although, it seems like the markets have started to get a sense of this as well and are not so swaying.
kumarvvr
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I think the nature of war has changed. A slow moving swarm of drones, will keep large Aircraft carriers well outside the range of their fighter jets.

A nation can swarm an aircraft carrier with a 1000 drones, each costing about 40k USD. Only a few are needed to seriously damage the carrier. Not to mention ballistic missiles.

In this scenario, does a US massive, slow moving aircraft carrier possibly carrying hundreds of billions of assets really work ? Can the US meaningfully project power with these?

In this scenario, who holds more power or leverage ?

An aircraft carrier can project power within 500 miles. The idea is to use a few of these to knock out the air power of the opposing nation, basically airfields, missile stockpiles, factories, power infra, etc. And then drop in a ground invasion force.

Does this now work? I dont think so. 10 drones can be launched from the back of a truck.