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raylad

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raylad
·23 giorni fa·discuss
Looks very cool. I would like to try it, but don't want to use API billing. OpenAI I think would allow it to use account login. Would you support that?
raylad
·mese scorso·discuss
Possibly a deliberate strategy by the Chinese to undermine the US AI industry, data centers, and basically everything that’s powering the economy.

Just like they did with the US steel industry in the 80s.
raylad
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I wonder if this violates noncompete/no reverse engineering clauses in many or some SAAS agreements?
raylad
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Seems very cool, but also opens an additional attack vector into your development machine or personal laptop as the case might be.
raylad
·2 mesi fa·discuss
So all these sites like EquityZen or Forge Global or Hiive etc. who sold "shares" in these companies through SPVs are now going to lose their customer's money?

How would that all play out?
raylad
·2 mesi fa·discuss
The Pedometer functionality is free, and I’ve been using it for many years just because its display is pleasant.

The map tracking features cost $29.95 a year.
raylad
·2 mesi fa·discuss
The article complains about the keyboard layout. And they are probably right.

But if you are going to use a VT-100 keyboard you might as well try an editor actually designed for that keyboard, which I remember really loving at the time. KED:

https://avitech.com.au/?page_id=959

Also, if you want efficient and fast displays on that screen, remember to use scrolling regions. They scroll the sections of the screen in hardware. By using them correctly you can insert and delete single lines without repainting the screen.
raylad
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Actual write up:

https://www.arimlabs.ai/writing/loss-of-control
raylad
·3 mesi fa·discuss
I haven’t noticed this sort of behavior with opus 4.6, but the first time I used 4.7 it decided to “simplify“ an existing piece of functionality rather than fixing it, which of course made it completely unusable.
raylad
·3 mesi fa·discuss
That was more than one task. It was 3.

I also had Opus 4.7 and Opus 4.6 do audits of a very long document using identical prompts. I then had Codex 5.4 compare the audits. Codex found that 4.6 did a far better job and 4.7 had missed things and added spurious information.

I then asked a new session of Opus 4.7 if it agreed or disagreed with the Codex audit and it agreed with it.

I also agreed with it.
raylad
·3 mesi fa·discuss
I am using 4.7 with the default extra high thinking, and it is clearly very stupid. It's worse than old Sonnet 4.5.

I had it suggest some parameters for BCFtools and it suggested parameters that would do the opposite of what I wanted to do. I pointed out the error and it apologized.

It also is not taking any initiative to check things, but wants me to check them (ie: file contents, etc.).

And it is claiming that things are "too complex" or "too difficult" when they are super easy. For instance refreshing an AWS token - somehow it couldn't figure out that you could do that in a cron task.

A really really bad downgrade. I will be using Codex more now, sadly.
raylad
·3 mesi fa·discuss
One explanation is that the ones who quit believed it was a real experiment and decided they wanted no part of it.

The ones who were "obedient" figured out it was fake and treated it as a game.
raylad
·3 mesi fa·discuss
N-acetylglucosamine actually is effective against MS.

Article: https://www.ucihealth.org/about-us/news/2023/09/multiple-scl...

Paper: "N-acetylglucosamine inhibits inflammation and neurodegeneration markers in multiple sclerosis: a mechanistic trial"

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37705084/

It is available fairly inexpensively as a supplement.
raylad
·3 mesi fa·discuss
One question is whether the participants really believed they were giving shocks to the "learners".

In college I participated in a number of psychological studies that were similarly deceptive, where one of the other participants was obviously (to me) an actor, or, sometimes, a pre-recorded video.

At least one of the studies I participated in was quite like the Milgram study described in the article, where I was supposed to punish another participant. It was very obvious to me that this wasn't really happening, so I randomly punished or didn't punish them, and then afterwards told the researcher that I knew it was all fake.

I think many or most other people who saw through the deception probably wouldn't have let the researcher know, because it seemed somehow disrepectful to tell him.

No idea if he used my results or, as he should have done, discarded them.
raylad
·4 mesi fa·discuss
So the real site is https://nanoclaw.dev

(putting this here for the search engines to see)
raylad
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Also why did they get rid of select all? Is there any excuse for that?
raylad
·6 mesi fa·discuss
"DON'T use pure white or pure black..."

This is something I hate: gray text. Designers love it but it is often very illegible because of inadequate contrast.
raylad
·6 mesi fa·discuss
MANTIC_IGNORE_PATTERNS seems not to be implemented, or am I missing something?
raylad
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Or, never play it faster than you can play it perfectly.
raylad
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Feels more like a spiderweb simulation. The fibers are sticky and stretchy.