I'm assuming you're talking about the featured image for the post.
What you're seeing is not uncommon in America, especially in the mountains. Roads for traffic in the opposite direction can be separated from your road.
It's also often the case that the other road might be on the other side of a hill/mountain. I've seen that in multiple states across the US.
This specific instance, where two separate roads are going in the same direction can occur where the left road doesn't have exits/entrances, and can move faster than the right road when there's traffic. The left road may also be switched to change traffic directions. I most recently saw this in some mountainous terrain in Arizona.
As someone who has done a lot of downloading/parsing, this is so awesome and impressive to see.
One thing to think about, which I also struggle with when it comes to large and complicated datasets, is the UI. Even being in the search industry for a long time, it's difficult for me to concretely see how I would use this.
I'd suggest taking a small sample of the dataset that might be reflective of how people would use it, then make that segment public and immediately searchable without registering. eg: One year of articles related to the Olympics.
What I've found is that it's hard for a lot of people to imagine how they would use something without actually using it. So giving people the actual experience of searching the archive and interacting with the results would go a long way.
Again, congrats on the work. This is really impressive work.
Yesterday, Opus 4.6 cost three credits. You can no longer use 4.6 or 4.5.
Opus 4.7 is available today for 7.5 credits per prompt.
They have also suspended new signups.
After testing all of the major IDEs/tools that integrate with LLMs over the last four weeks, I was happy to settle on Copilot. I, and others, seem to be a lot confident in that decision. Especially since there seems to be no refund path for people who prepaid for a year.
In my 30+ years online, I've never seen an industry change so much in terms of pricing, service levels, etc, as I have the last two months.
I'm really curious where all of this lands, and if AI coding tools will be something that only a small percentage can genuinely afford at a competitive level.
I have been attempting this exact sort of clustering solution for a few years now (on and off as a side project). Do you have source code available, or more detailed explanations/resources of how to approach this?
Edit: I just looked around for your YOShInOn RSS reader code and couldn't find it. I did find a number of references it looks like you've made to it on various forums, etc over the years.
What you're seeing is not uncommon in America, especially in the mountains. Roads for traffic in the opposite direction can be separated from your road.
It's also often the case that the other road might be on the other side of a hill/mountain. I've seen that in multiple states across the US.
This specific instance, where two separate roads are going in the same direction can occur where the left road doesn't have exits/entrances, and can move faster than the right road when there's traffic. The left road may also be switched to change traffic directions. I most recently saw this in some mountainous terrain in Arizona.