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kator

2,617 karmajoined 14 anni fa
https://www.karlbunch.com/

Some of my hobbies include helping people unlock creativity using LLMs: https://conjori.com/

And trying to revive a dead MMO: https://www.swgemu.com/

I work for Amazon, and all opinions I share on this handle are my own.

Submissions

Will machines replace humans? A chess grandmaster has thoughts

washingtonpost.com
3 points·by kator·11 giorni fa·1 comments

Frontier teams are reinventing AI-native development

aws.amazon.com
2 points·by kator·26 giorni fa·0 comments

Proposed Amendment to the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991

karlbunch.com
2 points·by kator·2 mesi fa·1 comments

Updating Codex Contribution Guidelines

github.com
2 points·by kator·4 mesi fa·1 comments

comments

kator
·6 giorni fa·discuss
That was 2001 today Joel seems to think this is the future: https://hash.ai/
kator
·11 giorni fa·discuss
https://archive.is/zDhfv
kator
·20 giorni fa·discuss
Years of practice and “This won’t kill me” thinking have helped a lot. Also I watch every single talk I’ve given which is brutal but it lets me improve but also re-affirm I didn’t die…

[1] https://www.karlbunch.com/random/change/
kator
·20 giorni fa·discuss
> Professional public speakers...

Maybe some do, but I've never needed it. Often I actually find public speaking easier than small groups. In a small group my brain is trying to "model" what each person is thinking about my talk, as the groups get larger that becomes impossible and I tend to relax and let go. I also find the energy in a larger setting is a useful feedback mechanism. I might toss a small joke out and see if the audience is engaged, or I will ask a question and get a show of hands. The more I engage the calmer I feel and the more enjoyable the experience is for me and my audience.
kator
·21 giorni fa·discuss
True, that said, I downloaded and compiled Perl in 1987 from comp.sources.misc, even back then, things moved at light speed compared to health and medical.
kator
·21 giorni fa·discuss
I think the most interesting thing is that it took 15 years for people to apparently take this seriously. And another 40 to recognize its impact. The original paper[1] was from 1982...

Having been in software development for 45 years, I find this crazy. Maybe it's because in our world, it often takes a month for something to spread from "interesting" to the new technology of the day, or the new way of doing things.

[1] https://www.jneurosci.org/content/jneuro/2/3/284.full.pdf
kator
·26 giorni fa·discuss
Reading your link IMHO in today's world I would set a basic rule, if you're touching >20% of a Java codebase you should refactor to Rust. With AI-Native development practices it's worth the SDE time to refactor, replace the underlying subsytem and reduce your fleet by 50% or more.
kator
·27 giorni fa·discuss
Might keep this in mind if you go to tindie:

> URGENT

> Tindie has not paid me for the last month. They take your money for your order and then require me to ship product to you, but they do not pay me. Temporarily, please place your order through the tattlersolutions.com website. See below
kator
·28 giorni fa·discuss
Next up, you must login to ID.me to use AI and providers will be required to retain every session for analysis.
kator
·28 giorni fa·discuss
Most security code scanning I am aware of does AST parsing of actual code before analysis; the comments won't even make it to the LLM. That said, embedded strings could cause this type of false denial, but even so, the errors would be raised in the pipeline for human-in-the-loop security analysis. If anything, it might get a faster reaction in some environments because it causes faults in the analysis pipeline.
kator
·mese scorso·discuss
Oh, and while you're at it, 640K ought to be enough for anybody.
kator
·mese scorso·discuss
oh good point got that backwards… OMG my fax brain didn’t even think about it.
kator
·mese scorso·discuss
The sad thing is I feel trapped on all sides of the debate, I wrote a book about LLMs and human creativity (spoiler Humans win for a long time) but I was going to do it as a blog series, instead I published https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GXCSY4W8 because I felt at least I might get a bit back for literally 100’s of hours of my life I poured into the book and my editor and friends who read and provided reviews.

And I push a lot of open source code including a ton for the SWGEmu project, but now I’m of mixed mind to stop pushing anything public. I can’t decide, am I talking out of both sides of my mouth, it’s a confusing time to navigate for sure.
kator
·mese scorso·discuss
> Yet, this shift made me re-evaluate the open source code publishing. Prior to that, I have been positive about free and open software, and considered this to be the default mode for work such as kefir. I did not require any justifications from myself to publish something. Now, however, I feel more and more that the main beneficiaries of my unpaid work are companies scraping the internet to train large language models. Currently accepted status quo in this area goes against my own intentions in licensing this work under GNU GPLv3. Publication has ceased to be the "null hypothesis" for me, and requires explicit mental justification which I am not able to provide.

I feel this pain, one of my small donation driven sites has been destroyed by crawlers who just ignore robots.txt and burn the site into the ground.

Sort of jokingly I proposed an update to the "spam fax" law:

https://www.karlbunch.com/random/website-protection-act/
kator
·2 mesi fa·discuss
[flagged]
kator
·2 mesi fa·discuss
[dead]
kator
·2 mesi fa·discuss
All this said I'm more concerned about Automatic Content Recognition (ACR) on smartTV you buy in the store and never even realize it's phoning home with everything you watch...
kator
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I recently had my donation-driven site ruined by bots, it's a constant battle. I (jokingly) proposed we should amend the fax spam law to take this into consideration:

https://www.karlbunch.com/random/website-protection-act/

555 gigabytes of bandwidth in a week! We're paying more for egress than compute and storage now. I've tried robots.txt and finally gave in and started setting up aggressive WAF rules.
kator
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I wonder whether the author deliberately avoided ontology? That's what comes to mind when I read this. The age-old debate between taxonomy and ontology.
kator
·2 mesi fa·discuss
[dead]