HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

jnurmine

no profile record

comments

jnurmine
·8일 전·discuss
I use Claude with Kiro at work and at home Mistral stuff with pro subscription for coding and research. I don't see a fundamental difference between them in results, at least with what I use them for. The cost is lower too, but it is not the only reason why I won't use Claude at home.

Vibe (the CLI Kiro-like tool) feels more "Claude-ish" as it has more terse answers, while the Le Chat can get quite chatty if you really push it ( * ). Prompting it right gets Le Chat more focused and back to being terse.

( * ) Le Chat is by default in "Fast" mode. It also has "Think" and "Research", but I've not felt the need to use those yet.

As a practical example:

I'm doing some on-and-off family research when I can and have some time since it's the rabbit-holest of all rabbit-holes.

I already knew the answers, but decided to test how well Le Chat does. I fed a 208 year old church book page to Le Chat and asked if it can read that handwritten old cursive Swedish and tell me the contents. Le Chat had a look and then explained it could not, but it pointed me to something I had completely missed before, despite having looked for it: The Swedish Lion OCR model by Riksarkivet (Swedish National Archives) which is purpose-built for OCRing such records (the tool by READ-COOP including The Swedish Lion is at http://www.transkribus.org/).

Then, Transkribus confirmed my existing information and confirmed that I can kind of sort of read that cursive too. I did not expect any new findings here, just to verify against known facts and things were OK. The tip to Transkribus was very nice and I'll be using that tool more.

After this, I asked if Le Chat could dig up some more information about the person (it's a Swedish-Russian noble family connection so a lot of written material exists). Le Chat went about it, summarized real web pages, and the information matched with what I knew already, which was good, no hallucinations or such. I prompted Le Chat further towards the parents and grandparents and so on, it kept on replying with factual summaries and references to web pages that actually exist.

This was all in all very good. For what I earlier spent perhaps a weekend or two (taking like two weeks of wall clock time) in total, I could dig up basically the same information, with sources referenced, in a fraction of the time. Even if Le Chat could not read the page, it pointed to Transkribus and that was very helpful.

The point is: Mistral performs well for me and I see no reason to use something else. There's also the option to turn off the "use my inputs to learn the model". I don't know if Claude has it or not.

Edit: formatting Edit: READ-COOP SCE does the Transkribus
jnurmine
·10일 전·discuss
It was delightful to see the Dzhanibekov effect in the "gyroscopic torque" part of the video.
jnurmine
·25일 전·discuss
And yet, the ESMC Dresden fab is getting built. And now there's a Chips Act 2.0.
jnurmine
·4개월 전·discuss
It's not universally so, but is more like that in some parts of Europe.

It's mostly a branding issue, in my opinion.
jnurmine
·4개월 전·discuss
No, EU is not the root of the problem, whatever the problem is. For example, countries are stronger, more resilient and business is more effective together than everyone trying to do it alone. And of course the EU is not perfect and there is room for improvement.

In my experience, one concrete problem is that so many people misunderstand or are unaware of basic things about the EU and why EU even exists. With the former I mean things like how the EU Parliament is put together, the relation of the EU Commission to the EU Parliament, how is the President of the EU Commission chosen (no, it's not "undemocratic"), what does Schengen mean, what is the Euro and WHY does it exist, why was there legislation which mentioned the curvature of cucumbers, and so on.

As there is no big picture, or it is rejected due to ideological reasons, the lack of knowledge and misunderstandings then manifest as fear of the unknown (=the EU). At this point, these people become against everything in EU: whatever new things are proposed from the EU side, it is somehow "lousy", "bad", "failing", "won't work anyway", and so forth. Any EU company has "bottom-barrel products" and "can't succeed", euro cannot work between countries, Europe is "weak" and "gay" and "collapsing".

Also, some people look at an individual member state and confuse it with the whole EU. For example, the nuclear power stance of Germany is seen as an EU-mandated position and then the whole EU is seen to be against nuclear power. This can also work in reverse: Poland sends generators to Ukraine, well done Poland and why is the weak and failing EU doing nothing (except the generators were from RescEU stores, and one such store was located in Poland, so EU was sending them).

When people understand what the EU is and know the basics, of course they might still disagree with things, that's normal, but at least the arguments are more factual.
jnurmine
·6개월 전·discuss
Doesn't Proton Unlimited have both?
jnurmine
·6개월 전·discuss
Norway is an anomaly.

Examples for Europe, 2025 vs. 2024:

  Sweden: -68%
  Belgium: -53%
  Germany: -48%
  France: -37%
  Switzerland: -28%
  Portugal: -22%
  Italy: -18%
Edit: I fail list formatting
jnurmine
·7개월 전·discuss
If one were to simply assume that yes, electrons are in fact photons in a toroidal configuration... are there special "hacks" enabled by this configuration which could be tested?
jnurmine
·8개월 전·discuss
Yes, of course I need to buy new blades... What I don't have to do is to buy a new sharpener because the old one made of "stainless steel" rusted.

Yes, Chinese companies CAN do high quality products. Of course they can, they're not lazy or stupid. But if the price difference isn't too big, I'd rather buy something made close-by, to keep the money in the local economy (my country or Europe), instead of bleeding it into some faraway place.

Some people do not consider that aspect, they only look at the price in numbers and think that's the end-all, which it isn't. There is an "invisible cost" added. On the surface it might be cheaper for me, but it ends up hurting the local industry, it will create unemployment, at some point social problems, and so forth; in short: it will harm the place I call my home.

For this reason, to me a Chinese (or US, whatever) product would have to be vastly cheaper than something made close-by, yet have a parity in quality to be worthwhile at all. And the equation of vastly superior quality for a substantially cheaper price is rare.

As for the car industry and cheaper Chinese cars: I don't see the how German industry is "dying", as it's not really a level playing field. It's easy for Chinese producers to be cheaper when the Chinese government subsidizes the exports. I'm sure Germany could do higher quality cars cheaper than the Chinese, if the German government were to subsidize a large part of each produced car. Would government subsidies then mean that the industry is "not-dying"? I don't think so.
jnurmine
·8개월 전·discuss
Cost is not everything. Quality matters a lot.

If things are of higher quality, higher cost is acceptable to many.

As a trivial example, talking about a ca. 5 EUR purchase here, I bought a German-made pencil sharpener (Möbius-Ruppert nr. 0603 "Vertex").

It's basically a small metallic block (brass) with two holes with blades attached. It is surprisingly heavy and while it may sound strange, the sharpening result is simply excellent. (I bought some Japanese-made pencils to pair with it)

Chinese sharpeners can be had for under 0.5 EUR at best, they can be very cheap.

However, I had Chinese sharpeners and they actually were the reason I ended up buying a German one. Unless I lose the German sharpener, I will never need to buy another.
jnurmine
·8개월 전·discuss
Which products are you talking about...? Duralex is not really expensive at all.

For example, Duralex drinking glass Le Picardie (as in the article), transparent, 36 cl, 18.90 EUR for 6-pack.

That is 3.15 EUR per glass.

At that price the price/quality is extremely good. Chinese products won't even come close to this.
jnurmine
·8개월 전·discuss
"Draft changes would create new exceptions for AI companies that would allow them to legally process special categories of data (like a person’s religious or political beliefs, ethnicity or health data) to train and operate their tech."

Fully anonymized health data I can somehow understand, but what kind of AI needs to be trained with "a person's religious or political beliefs [or] ethnicity", anonymized or not?
jnurmine
·8개월 전·discuss
Exactly.

In the current pension system (at least the ones in the Nordics), the new generation pays for the old generation. This mechanism is broken, as it expects (as you pointed out) an ever-growing population, which is of course unrealistic.

Fixing [*] the broken pension system in a sustainable way is politically unpalatable and seems to have been so for decades. Lifting the pension age is the only "innovative" action available that is even discussed nowadays anywhere in public, as if that were the only viable alternative, which of course it isn't.

I've pondered why. Hammering out the details of a new system and taking care of a transition period etc. cannot be unsurmountable problems. It probably has to do with pensioners being a large voter demographic, thus the reason is some form of political self-preservation on behalf of the traditionally large parties.

So, instead of changing things to the better, a broken system must be maintained. Since the system is not only broken, it's essentially untouchable, therefore political decision-taking has to accept possibly sub-optimal decisions in related areas to avoid disturbing anything. In a way, the brokenness leaks.

Then, a shrinking population only exacerbates the problems of the pension system, spreading the brokenness further into other societal systems and decisions. And that's a bad path to be in.

[*] In an example of a better-working alternative system, any pension contributions would be personal, kept in an account managed by the state. The money is (low risk) invested by the state, profits/dividends reinvested, etc. Once one becomes a pensioner, the money can be withdrawn in whole or parts. Add taxes somewhere, such as when withdrawing the money. The state guarantees the lowest level of pension, something like today. Simple enough, and not tied to "children pay for parents".

Edit: formatting
jnurmine
·5년 전·discuss
Yes and no :)

Yeah, they got vented into space et cetera, but I'd say in the first 2 movies humans actually failed to kill the xenomorphs (eggs on LV-426 and aboard Sulaco). At the end of the third movie the newly born xenomorph queen clearly dies. However, in the fourth movie the xenomorphs are again brought back through cloning.

Also, in "Prometheus" and "Alien: Covenant" it becomes apparent that the original crashed ship on LV-426 in "Alien" was not one of a kind, there were tons of ships carrying the gooey secret sauce of xenomorphs.

Also, at the end of the second movie the queen xenomorph was simply vented into space, but whether it died or not was not very clear. I mean, the xenomorphs seemed to be quite resilient and not too picky about things like atmosphere and cold temperatures.
jnurmine
·5년 전·discuss
One thing I've found fascinating is how the outside appearance of a human body repeats the number 5; there are 5 things sticking out from a center mass (2 legs, 2 arms and the head). Each foot has 5 toes, each hand has 5 fingers. And in the head are 5 outward-facing holes: 2 eye sockets, one nose/mouth hole and 2 ears.
jnurmine
·5년 전·discuss
Perhaps it evolved on a planet with an Earth-like, but much harsher, environment.

To draw an analogy from fiction, what would happen if one sent Giger's Alien in all its glory, razor tail and all, to compete in an entry-level boxing match? The Alien has no rules, has acid for blood, tongue-crushes the skull of the referee, and so on.
jnurmine
·6년 전·discuss
Have you tried https://github.com/cyrus-and/gdb-dashboard ?

Edit: just saw that several people mentioned this already. Good, it is a nice tool!