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atomicnature

969 karmajoined 4 anni fa
Building git-lrc:

https://github.com/HexmosTech/git-lrc

Free, Micro AI Code Reviews That Run on Commit

Submissions

Organization is a bigger idea than intelligence – human, or artificial

shrsv.hexmos.com
1 points·by atomicnature·3 giorni fa·0 comments

Show HN: git-lrc – Free, Micro AI Code Reviews That Run on Git Commit

github.com
9 points·by atomicnature·25 giorni fa·0 comments

Academic-Brain vs. Founder-Brain

fchaubard.github.io
2 points·by atomicnature·mese scorso·0 comments

All Lean Books and Where to Find Them

lakesare.brick.do
33 points·by atomicnature·2 mesi fa·2 comments

Rich [Sutton's] Slogans

incompleteideas.net
3 points·by atomicnature·2 mesi fa·2 comments

TLA+ in support of AI code generation

medium.com
1 points·by atomicnature·3 mesi fa·0 comments

Machine Learning Systems: Principles and Practices of Engineering AI Systems

mlsysbook.ai
3 points·by atomicnature·4 mesi fa·0 comments

China developed by defying free trade – not embracing it

theglobalcurrents.com
2 points·by atomicnature·4 mesi fa·0 comments

The future belongs to those who can refute AI, not just generate with AI

learningloom.substack.com
46 points·by atomicnature·5 mesi fa·18 comments

AI Is Stress-Testing Software Engineering as a Profession

learningloom.substack.com
4 points·by atomicnature·5 mesi fa·0 comments

A Brief History of Solving Simultaneous Equations via Matrices

learningloom.substack.com
1 points·by atomicnature·6 mesi fa·0 comments

Isaac Newton on Learning Mathematical Thinking and Reasoning

learningloom.substack.com
2 points·by atomicnature·6 mesi fa·0 comments

INSV Kaundinya – Indian wooden sailing ship built using traditional stitching

bairdmaritime.com
1 points·by atomicnature·7 mesi fa·0 comments

Reimplementing Unix Correct: The Lost Bayesian Spelling Corrector

learningloom.substack.com
2 points·by atomicnature·7 mesi fa·0 comments

Chomsky and the Two Cultures of Statistical Learning (2011)

norvig.com
103 points·by atomicnature·7 mesi fa·119 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by atomicnature·7 mesi fa·0 comments

Who Wins CS Best Paper Awards?

jeffhuang.com
1 points·by atomicnature·7 mesi fa·0 comments

Thoughts on Team Metrics

adrianhesketh.com
2 points·by atomicnature·7 mesi fa·0 comments

AI Assist is now available on Stack Overflow

meta.stackexchange.com
3 points·by atomicnature·7 mesi fa·0 comments

Speech and Language Processing (3rd ed. draft)

web.stanford.edu
64 points·by atomicnature·7 mesi fa·13 comments

comments

atomicnature
·2 mesi fa·discuss
It's his website -- official I think.
atomicnature
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Just a question to people who may know better than me about this.

I thought the whole point of trying to write out TLA+ is so that you get a better idea of what you want and put it into formal language?

I get that an LLM can assist/help with expressing what we want in formal language a bit, but if one automates all this there is no human intent/design anymore.

If the LLM generates both the design (TLA+) and writes an arbitrary program that satisfies said design -- what exactly have we proved?

What assurance do humans get since human doesn't know or cannot specify what they want.
atomicnature
·4 mesi fa·discuss
What's the difference as you see it?
atomicnature
·5 mesi fa·discuss
If you read the article carefully -- I've dealt with an alternative scenario as well -- where we may have smaller codebases with larger blast radius.

As to disposable software, it's harder to get traction/adaption when things constantly break or are slow or the experience is crappy in general.

To make it simpler - all else being equal - as a user would you prefer using highly reviewed/vetted/reliable software, or otherwise?

My bet is reliability is an invariant -- nobody wishes for software that crashes, leaks your private info, gives faulty output, is laggy to use and so on.
atomicnature
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Try git-lrc, totally free since it uses gemini key. Triggers reviews automatically on git commit.
atomicnature
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Specification languages need big investments essentially - both in technical and educational terms.

Consider something like TLA+. How can we make things such as that - be useful in an LLM orchestration framework, be human friendly - that'd be the question I ask.

So the developer will verify just the spec, and let the LLM match against it in a tougher way than it is possible to do now.
atomicnature
·5 mesi fa·discuss
AI code review has genuinely helpful - especially when we generate code with copilot, etc.

Many times, these GenAI tools can delete/modify code mistakenly.

I use LiveReview's git precommit features - so the review happens right before I commit code automatically. And it has saved me many (100s of) times.

Give LiveReview's Precommit checks a try.
atomicnature
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Go concrete. In FAANG engineering jobs now what % is this factory designer category vs what % is writing some mundane glue code, moving data around in CRUD calls, or putting in a monitoring metric etc?

Once you look at the present engineering org compositions see what's the error in thinking.

There are other analogy issues in your response which I won't nitpick
atomicnature
·5 mesi fa·discuss
I don't agree with the limited point about fast fashion/enthittification, etc.

Quick check: Do you want to go back to pre-industrial era then - when according to you, you had better options for clothing?

Personally, I wouldn't want that - because I believe as a customer, I am better served now (cost/benefit wise) than then.

As to the point about recursive quality decline - I don't take it seriously, I believe in human ingenuity, and believe humans will overcome these obstacles and over time deliver higher quality results at bigger scale/lower costs/faster time cycles.
atomicnature
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Where have I said engineers/architects aren't necessary? My point is that it is easier to get AI to get better than try to improve a million developers. Isn't that a straightforward point?

What the role of an engineer in the new context - I am not speculating on.
atomicnature
·5 mesi fa·discuss
This is the "artisanal clothing argument".

I'd think there'll be a dip in code quality (compared to human) initially due to "AI machinery" due to its immaturity. But over-time on a mass-scale - we are going to see an improvement in the quality of software artifacts.

It is easier to 'discipline' the top 5 AI agents in the planet - rather than try to get a million distributed devs ("artisans") to produce high quality results.

It's like in the clothing or manufacturing industry I think. Artisans were able to produce better individual results than the average industry machinery, at least initially. But overtime - industry machinery could match the average artisan or even beat the average, while decisively beating in scale, speed, energy efficiency and so on.
atomicnature
·7 mesi fa·discuss
It was available earlier. Here's the HN history:

https://hn.algolia.com/?query=Chomsky%20and%20the%20Two%20Cu...

The oldest submission is from 15 y.o ago - that is 2010.

I resubmitted it - thinking - with the success of LLMs - felt this was worth a revisit from "how real-world scientific progress works" point of view.
atomicnature
·7 mesi fa·discuss
You can look into Judea Pearl's definitions of causality for more information.

Pearl defines a ladder of causation:

1. Seeing (association) 2. Doing (intervention) 3. Imagining (counterfactuals)

In his view - most ML algos are at level 1 - they look at data and draw associations, and "agents" have started some steps in level 2 - doing.

The smartest of humans operate mostly in level (3) of abstractions - where they see things, gain experience, and later build up a "strong causal model" of the world and become capable of answering "what if" questions.
atomicnature
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Only one thing comes to mind:

The species as a whole will evolve inevitably; the individual animal may not.
atomicnature
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Leslie Lamport built latex, most of distributed systems such as AWS services depend on formal verification. The job of Science here is to help Engineering with managing complexity and scale. The researchers are doing their jobs
atomicnature
·8 mesi fa·discuss
Why do you think developer enjoyment is orthogonal to productivity and delivery?
atomicnature
·8 mesi fa·discuss
Willful ignorance is a different process. Consider a food analogy.

Of the food we take - cells accept a % of it as nutrients and such, rest is discarded as waste. The cells know how to get this job done - it's a very complex process for sure.

I think it's the same with information content - a % actually is useful for making life happen - whereas the rest should ideally be discarded because it is meaningless from a life perspective. The mind just knows what's important most of the time.

In this case - willful ignorance would be something like intermittent fasting or regulating food intake carefully, since it is a conscious process.

The former process is unconscious and operates at the "cell level" whereas the latter is a conscious process that operates at the "whole-being" level.
atomicnature
·8 mesi fa·discuss
1. The survey seems limited to UK or so. Not sure - it doesn't look like a global report.

2. Don't confuse "enjoyment" with "number of readers". The previous generation may have enjoyed it more - because there were no better options.

3. People over the globe are more educated now, and engaged in knowledge work. They must read to get work done.

4. Don't forget the "pirate book" scene - such as lib gen, Anna's archive, etc. - in developing countries.
atomicnature
·8 mesi fa·discuss
Book sales in general (across all formats) are up I think - so there are still many, many readers around. We just have many new formats (EPUB, audiobooks, reader devices, etc.) and of course population is increasing over the globe. I'm pretty sure we have the highest number of readers on the planet right now than ever before in absolute terms.
atomicnature
·8 mesi fa·discuss
Will this be open source?