HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

etherio

882 karmajoined 7 lat temu
https://www.uzpg.me

halcyon (at) disroot dot org

Submissions

Fable is SOTA at CIFAR Speedrun: lessons on AI R&D automation

fulcrum.inc
4 points·by etherio·przedwczoraj·0 comments

Agents are under-elicited: A case study in optimization tasks

fulcrum.inc
2 points·by etherio·24 dni temu·0 comments

Inverse Rubric Optimization: A testbed for agent science

fulcrum.inc
30 points·by etherio·w zeszłym miesiącu·0 comments

Multi-agent systems as distributed software

fulcrum.inc
4 points·by etherio·2 miesiące temu·0 comments

Show HN: Druids – Build your own software factory

github.com
64 points·by etherio·3 miesiące temu·15 comments

Show HN: Druids – coordinate and deploy coding agents across machines

github.com
9 points·by etherio·4 miesiące temu·3 comments

More Is Different for Intelligence

fulcrumresearch.ai
5 points·by etherio·4 miesiące temu·0 comments

Show HN: Orpheus – PR review that runs the code

orpheus.dev
1 points·by etherio·5 miesięcy temu·0 comments

2025 Letter

zephyyr.substack.com
1 points·by etherio·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Personalization Requires Data

uzpg.me
3 points·by etherio·6 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Show HN: Lunette – auditing agents for evals and environments

fulcrumresearch.ai
1 points·by etherio·7 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Dense reconstruction is the scaffold of machine learning

uzpg.me
1 points·by etherio·8 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Show HN: Quibbler – A critic for your coding agent that learns what you want

github.com
114 points·by etherio·8 miesięcy temu·27 comments

Show HN: Orchestra – an interface to usefully run coding agents in parallel

github.com
1 points·by etherio·9 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Show HN: Automated monitoring and orchestration of coding agents

fulcrumresearch.ai
3 points·by etherio·9 miesięcy temu·0 comments

comments

etherio
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
yes, you can read the logs, and see full actions, the agents can send messages to each other, and I am also about to make it possible for them to optionally read each other's traces
etherio
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Yeah, I guess we have sandboxes qwith our various code environemnts, and then we've been developing programs that run agents to do various things, which we iterated on to make them better at the task.

For example, one spawns copies of the env with a PR and runs agents in the dev env to verify by running and demonstrating functionality and then comments on github

another one is just a generic software factory that spawns a bunch of agents to coordinate on some repo, others do a redteaming flow, etc...
etherio
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
What do you do with those agents? It's useful if you want to iterate on a flow and have more control over the orchestration/environment
etherio
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
hey HN! happy to answer any questions

this kind of tool is especially useful in longer running tasks to enforce your intent without having to check in on your agent all the time
etherio
·5 lat temu·discuss
Yeah usually I read in PDF format for this purpose. Not sure but maybe there are alternatives for epub.
etherio
·5 lat temu·discuss
I use https://github.com/lucasrla/remarks, which OCRs (text recognition) your highlights to extract what exactly was highlighted, and also outputs screenshots of all pages on which I wrote notes.

This way I can go through my annotations sequentially, save highlights / their main ideas, and reformulate my notes into plaintext a bit more clearly.
etherio
·5 lat temu·discuss
This is just subjective, but I use it to read many books and enjoy it. I can scribble / highlight / notetake very easily and find the whole experience quite convenient.

Where did you hear that?
etherio
·5 lat temu·discuss
I do this too using my remarkable (reader tablet )and then scripts that export highlights / notes which I then index for as plaintext - it makes this process much more seamless.
etherio
·5 lat temu·discuss
They say about their own summaries: "And we still don’t pretend they’re as valuable as reading the book!"
etherio
·5 lat temu·discuss
I think a lot of this is true not only for books, but also for articles.

I've started trying to be more selective with the online content I choose to spend my time on, and then conserve takeaways from the articles I read (like this one).

Of course sometimes you just want entertainment, in which case this isn't worthwile.