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manlymuppet

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Ask HN: Why isn't every programming language interoperable?

3 points·by manlymuppet·4 mesi fa·5 comments

Substack of Keir Starmer

substack.com
2 points·by manlymuppet·6 mesi fa·1 comments

HUML (Human-oriented Markup Language) [video]

youtube.com
1 points·by manlymuppet·7 mesi fa·0 comments

Synthient Credential Stuffing Threat Data Breach

haveibeenpwned.com
2 points·by manlymuppet·8 mesi fa·2 comments

Why AGI isn't right around the corner – Dwarkesh Patel [video]

youtube.com
2 points·by manlymuppet·9 mesi fa·2 comments

Every word classifying intellcutual disability has been repurposed as an insult

en.wikipedia.org
2 points·by manlymuppet·9 mesi fa·3 comments

Nestri – Open-source cloud gaming platform

github.com
8 points·by manlymuppet·9 mesi fa·0 comments

NYU Stern – Introduction to Valuation [video]

youtube.com
1 points·by manlymuppet·9 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

manlymuppet
·17 giorni fa·discuss
You can argue that they deserve less time, or that politics shouldn't be a part of their sentencing (I'd agree with you on both counts) but this isn't a First Amendment thing.
manlymuppet
·mese scorso·discuss
That $5 return doesn't actually materialize the way you're framing it.

Even if your 94x multiple held perfectly (a big if), Google's "return" here is unrealized appreciation on an illiquid, minority stake. They can't spend it. And if they try to sell post-IPO, the act of selling a large block would push the price down, shrinking the very gains you're describing.

Meanwhile, the $11B/year in cash going out the door is very real and liquid and hits Google's income statement immediately. So the actual trade is: guaranteed cash expense now, in exchange for speculative paper gains later on a stake they can't easily exit. Even if you assume bad faith on Google's part here, no CFO in their right mind would see this situation as an easy 5:1 return.

The simpler explanation is the one Google gave: they need bridge compute capacity because Gemini Enterprise demand is outrunning their own datacenter buildout, and SpaceX has 110K GPUs available now.
manlymuppet
·mese scorso·discuss
I agree with you--this is my whole point.

This deal can't just be financial engineering, since that wouldn't make sense. They must be getting something out of this, i.e. compute.

Google is buying compute because they need it. That explanation works a lot better to me than one where Google is doing this purely for unrealized future gains on a minority stake in SpaceX.
manlymuppet
·mese scorso·discuss
That's what I'm saying though. They must be getting something out of this deal, otherwise why would they be going through with it?

The explanation that this is just financial engineering (which to me, means neither Google nor SpaceX is getting anything out of this other than looking better on paper) doesn't make sense to me. How does this financial engineering benefit Google?

Even if they have an exit option, why is Google (a private, separate, self-interested firm) giving a single dollar to SpaceX if the deal isn't mutually beneficial?
manlymuppet
·mese scorso·discuss
But Google loses $11 billion per year, and they gain $50 billion... in stock?

As far as I know they really will be paying $11 billion annually in liquid cash to SpaceX (not a small ask) starting this year, and all they get in return is more money on paper?

What incentive do they have to help SpaceX out like this at great cost, if they're not actually buying something valuable? Why are they incentivized to do this if it's just an empty deal and financial engineering? Genuine, good faith question: what are they getting out of this?
manlymuppet
·mese scorso·discuss
Unrelated, but this post has a level of rigor you rarely see nowadays. I think it deserves to be commended for that.

HN relatively, is a very intellectual part of the internet, yet even still, it's really common to see very uneducated opinions here. Not that everyone needs to be very educated, but posts with plainly wrong assumptions and biases shouldn't go completely unchecked so rampantly.
manlymuppet
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Years are a pretty short time frame as it relates to technology, though. Even for software.

The solution might be well out of grasp now, but think 10, 20, 100 years from now. Somebody smart with a new perspective will eventually come around and tear out the roots, and we'll all be better for it. Perhaps what's holding us back isn't the problem itself, but the way we approach it and the assumptions we bring.

Trying is at least worth the effort, especially since "better" is very achievable, rather than total perfection.
manlymuppet
·2 mesi fa·discuss
More than React, I'm interested in the question of how to best write UI through code, in general.

Even though I'm a fan of React, and use it for practically every web application I build, my biggest and most obvious issue has been that writing UIs through React doesn't feel as natural as, say, writing command line tools in Go, or live/realtime apps in Elixir.

Some languages just feel incredibly natural and frictionless for certain things, and nobody has really nailed UIs yet. Swift, JSX/HTML, Svelte, or whatever framework of the week: they all feel like they're working around the problem to some extent. Like at some point in the process, the designers of the language/framework had to compromise and implement some hacky/weird/painful syntax to satisfy project requirements.

UI's natural interface is visual, so tools like Figma can serve as an essential part of the solution, but nonetheless, I feel there's something missing. There must be a more intuitive way to represent the visual through code. The current solutions, although I find it hard to describe precisely, are always tantalizingly lacking in one way or another.
manlymuppet
·2 mesi fa·discuss
That doesn't mean he was lying. Just that things changed.

It was uncertain then, and not so uncertain now.
manlymuppet
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Software is only as good as the end result; it doesn't matter how we get there.

There is reason to be suspicious of LLMs, but people should stop getting so wrought up over _how_ the Bun team writes their software, until they have complaints over the software itself.

Just let the team do their thing. You're free to reject the end result.
manlymuppet
·2 mesi fa·discuss
This is so awesome.

Can you setup wildcards? Like for example *.[name].san-fransisco.ca.us? That way I can do this once for my own name and have it setup for all future needs as well.
manlymuppet
·2 mesi fa·discuss
That is, excluding Microsoft users.
manlymuppet
·2 mesi fa·discuss
People are trying to “make the best software”, though.

I think the Quixotic accelerationists of AI are more or less a vocal minority of the people who make software, and the choice of online APIs over local systems is largely a choice made for users, rather than developer’s laziness.

You can do more and better with private AI today than with local models. There is no getting around that. Even if local AIs get better, being on the cutting edge of LLM performance is often a very worthy investment.

Most people won’t settle for a product if it’s not the very best and incredibly convenient. That’s a high bar, and local AI often doesn’t meet those standards.

HN’s insistence on treating all users like they are open-source, privacy-first, self-hosted Linux fanatics is painfully corny.
manlymuppet
·3 mesi fa·discuss
How do I get started if I don't even know the notes yet though?
manlymuppet
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Yes, essentially. It's been a while since I've written Rust, but I am pretty sure that's (calling C from Rust) already possible.

So imagine whatever Rust has with C but with many other languages.
manlymuppet
·4 mesi fa·discuss
If we get the Bun-ification of every package manager and language ecosystem that would be an awesome thing. This is a great trend.
manlymuppet
·4 mesi fa·discuss
I'm looking forward to the fifth iteration of this model.
manlymuppet
·4 mesi fa·discuss
They aren't saying affordable housing isn't needed. Just that the method for making housing affordable shouldn't be trying to make the current housing supply cheaper.

And from this is where you get "rent-control is a terrible idea". Essentially: trying to artificially drive down housing prices in any way is generally inadvisable if you can just build more housing.

Sure that's technically an opinion, but it's one based in facts, and it certainly doesn't have "zero evidence".

https://www.brookings.edu/articles/what-does-economic-eviden...
manlymuppet
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Would be useful if comparable scores for performance are added, perhaps from arena.ai or ARC. I know scores can be imperfect, but it would be nice to be able to easily see what the best model your machine can handle is.
manlymuppet
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Some nice to haves: automatic paywall bypass for paid sites, and automatic cookie/pop-up rejection.