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jmtulloss

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LLM-as-a-Courtroom

falconer.com
74 points·by jmtulloss·5 mesi fa·30 comments

Instant Checkout in ChatGPT

stripe.com
6 points·by jmtulloss·9 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

jmtulloss
·mese scorso·discuss
Is your argument that $1500 / mo is too much? Why would the engineering team not be more rigorous in their model selection given a constraint?
jmtulloss
·mese scorso·discuss
Why do you think this? Confidential filings before an IPO are standard practice.
jmtulloss
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Exactly this. If there is some nuance in the article vs what Claude can tell you, then that's worthwhile. This article is just generated with a specific prompt on style but very little content editing. What's the point? It's like posting the results of a Google search. The prompt would have been more interesting.

It's not against the rules to post AI slop here, and I don't necessarily think it should be. But I do wonder how we value written content going forward. There's value to taste and style and editing and all the other human things... there's very little value in the actual words themselves. We'll figure it out.
jmtulloss
·4 mesi fa·discuss
The best stretch Github ever had was post-acquisition when Nat Friedman as CEO.
jmtulloss
·4 mesi fa·discuss
FWIW the whole group received permission to cross. The instructions were to "Truck 1 and company", not just Truck 1
jmtulloss
·5 mesi fa·discuss
The comments so far seem focused on taking a cheap shot, but as somebody working on using AI to help people with hard, long-term tasks, it's a valuable piece of writing.

- It's short and to the point

- It's actionable in the short term (make sure the tasks per session aren't too difficult) and useful for researchers in the long term

- It's informative on how these models work, informed by some of the best in the business

- It gives us a specific vector to look at, clearly defined ("coherence", or, more fun, "hot mess")
jmtulloss
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Yes, it’s not a hill I’m willing to die on. It’s a hill I’m willing to defend until the cause is lost.
jmtulloss
·5 mesi fa·discuss
This is what I'm saying. Chipmunks are not squirrels. I will do my best on this hill.
jmtulloss
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Obviously novel problems require novel solutions, but the vast majority of software solutions are remixes of existing methods. I don’t know your work so I may be wrong in this specific case, but there are a vanishingly small number of people pushing forward the envelope of human knowledge on a day-to-day basis.
jmtulloss
·7 mesi fa·discuss
The reason for this is Rivian and Tesla bet big on software defined platforms… ie every piece of hardware talks to a small number of central computers instead of many independent systems. This gives them a huge leg up in developing software than can actually take all the available input and use it to control all aspects of the vehicle.

Downside is all the buttons are on a screen. But I’ve grudgingly decided it’s worth it for software upgrades.
jmtulloss
·7 mesi fa·discuss
The current Gen 1s will start beeping at you if they can’t see the lines. If you don’t take over quickly it will start slowing down and beeping very insistently.
jmtulloss
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Not only is Rivian betting on an integrated platform being important for their own cars long term, they’ve also essentially sold that portion of their business to VW. They are investing in the software platform for a lot more cars than just the rivian branded ones.
jmtulloss
·8 mesi fa·discuss
Linear is a venture funded company
jmtulloss
·8 mesi fa·discuss
A lot of commenters are focusing on the legalities and likelihood of backpay, which is relevant but I tend to agree with you… it’ll get paid because it’s in the interest of both parties to pay their employees what they’re owed.

We’re staring down the barrel of two missed paychecks though. If you're living paycheck to paycheck you’re getting desperate. If you’re living with about 1 month of emergency buffer… that buffer is one paycheck away from gone. It’s a cash flow issue
jmtulloss
·8 mesi fa·discuss
And the republicans could just vote to change the rules of the senate.

The out of power party gets a little veto power here. The republicans know the day will come they want that, so they won’t change the rules even though they have the power to do so (theoretically… there are republicans that will never compromise on this). Unfortunately they can’t get on the same page with their lame duck leader
jmtulloss
·9 mesi fa·discuss
My interpretation of the parent comment was that they were loading specific curl calls into context so that Claude could properly exercise the endpoints after making changes.
jmtulloss
·9 mesi fa·discuss
It doesn’t have access to your repo when the agent is running (unless you give it internet access and credentials). The code is checked out into the sandbox before it’s let loose.
jmtulloss
·9 mesi fa·discuss
Good point. The environments I’ve set up have been pretty easy but I’ll admit that at first I was very annoyed that it couldn’t just use a pre-existing GitHub action workflow.

Edit: environment setup was also buggy when the product launched and still is from time to time. So, now that I have it set up I use it constantly, but they do need to make getting up and running a more delightful experience.
jmtulloss
·9 mesi fa·discuss
Why aren’t more folks using Codex cloud? Simon’s post mentions it, but the vast majority of comments are talking about parallel agents locally or getting distracted while agents are running.

Personally I’ve found that where AI agents aren’t up to the task, I better just write the code. For everything else, more parallelism is good. I can keep myself fully productive if many tasks are being worked on in parallel, and it’s very cheap to throw out the failures. Far preferable imo to watching an agent mess with my own machine.
jmtulloss
·10 mesi fa·discuss
I'm the same way but that makes the bulge even more annoying. They're designing it to put a case on it.

The thickness should be from the front to the back of the camera lens, not to the thinnest point they can find.