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gdubs

10,659 karmajoined há 15 anos
I make stuff: art, music, code.

Views expressed here are my own.

Submissions

Apple Predicted Siri AI in 1987

youtube.com
2 points·by gdubs·há 5 dias·0 comments

Apple Design Awards – 2026 Finalists

developer.apple.com
1 points·by gdubs·há 2 meses·0 comments

WTF Are Metaballs?

youtube.com
2 points·by gdubs·há 3 meses·5 comments

The Forest Service–A Force Across Rural America–"Reorganizes" Under Trump

newyorker.com
6 points·by gdubs·há 3 meses·2 comments

This AI Supercomputer was 30 years too early [video]

youtube.com
2 points·by gdubs·há 4 meses·2 comments

See around you: panoramic videos using Apple's QuickTime VR (1995)

halfhill.com
2 points·by gdubs·há 4 meses·0 comments

HyperCard Changed Everything [video]

youtube.com
12 points·by gdubs·há 4 meses·4 comments

Apple Vision Pro: M5 vs. M2 [video]

youtube.com
1 points·by gdubs·há 8 meses·0 comments

Logitech Muse for Apple Vision Pro

youtube.com
2 points·by gdubs·há 9 meses·0 comments

Making Ice Moon for Apple Vision Pro [video]

youtube.com
2 points·by gdubs·há 9 meses·0 comments

comments

gdubs
·há 2 meses·discuss
As an American, I just want to say that I'm very dismayed by the discourse around this topic over the past 24 hours in particular. The polarization of politics has become so intense, that the bipartisan mainstream position of just a couple of decades ago – that immigrants are a net positive to this country – feels like a distant dream.

We've gone from perpetually punting the football on comprehensive immigration reform, to people saying, "Good, go back home, we don't want you here."

The same people who want to paint the Statue of Liberty gold seem to have no clue what it represents.
gdubs
·há 2 meses·discuss
Because absent more evidence we don't yet know if this is a different variant of the Andes virus than the one people have had experience with. A lot hinges on whether this flight attendant is hospitalized out of an abundance of caution, or something entirely unrelated. But given that they came into relatively brief contact with an infected person, it would be significant if somehow she contracted it. A lot of people disembarked and went to various parts of the world. Combined with a long incubation period, that's a lot of guessing.
gdubs
·há 2 meses·discuss
Most of the public messaging I see is basically "please don't stop shopping, flying, or going to restaurants."
gdubs
·há 3 meses·discuss
Oh that's interesting because I would have assumed the demoscene stuff would have done some kind of direct signed distance field rendering and skipped the marching cubes part.

And yea I remember the patent being in effect for so many years. The Spore creators got around it by using the "ear clipping" algorithm.

Negative Metaballs are really fun — included them in our app I mentioned at the end of the video. But they date all the way back to Blinn's paper!
gdubs
·há 3 meses·discuss
Ah, this is amazing thank you. I had dug and dug for some demoscene examples for the video. It turned out to be quite difficult to find many of these sources, especially the early Japanese stuff.

Despite having recently done a video on The Connection Machine, the Links-1 was new to me – and I basically did a double take to learn that they had this parallel ray-tracing super computer back then. Sadly, there's not a ton of documentation beyond a couple of brief papers.

Thanks for watching!
gdubs
·há 3 meses·discuss
Uploading 15 minute videos to YouTube, downloading hundreds of gigabytes of 3D assets, updating large applications, streaming movies for a 4k projector, frequently downloading beta OS updates, etc, etc, etc.
gdubs
·há 3 meses·discuss
Congrats, you've killed the idea in its infancy because you demanded answers to questions before it could even walk.

Ideas need time to be explored, and given a chance.
gdubs
·há 3 meses·discuss
I really enjoyed it! Actually read it to my kids as a bedtime book, and although it was pretty advanced for them, they really stayed with it. Really too bad he's not around anymore.
gdubs
·há 3 meses·discuss
Thanks! My primary source for this was Carl Sagan's book "A Pale Blue Dot" IIRC — don't have the folder in front of me to double check, but fairly certain.

Edit: found it!

Here's the excerpt. According to Sagan they sent these instructions up. Given his details on what had to be done to boost the signal upload, it sounds like this really did happen:

"...while taking a photograph of a street scene from a moving car. This may sound easy, but it's not: You have to neutralize the most innocent of motions. At zero gravity, the mere start and stop of the on-board tape recorder can jiggle the spacecraft enough to smear the picture.

This problem was solved by sending up commands to the spacecraft's little rocket engines (called thrusters), machines of exquisite sensitivity. With a little puff of gas at the start and stop of each data-taking sequence, the thrusters compensated for the tape-recorder jiggle by turning the entire spacecraft just a little.

To deal with the low radio power received at Earth, the engineers devised a new and more efficient way to record and transmit the data, and the radio telescopes on Earth were electronically linked together with others to increase their sensitivity. Overall, the imaging system worked, by many criteria, better at Uranus..."
gdubs
·há 3 meses·discuss
One of my favorite stories about the Voyager mission was how they wanted to grab photos of the outer planets but the click of the tape drive was enough to ruin the long exposures. I made a YouTube short about it a while back:

https://youtube.com/shorts/fssIy-wQisA?si=_HM1fgZKGFfaxWhc
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
Thank you so much! Even though I knew a bunch about the Connection Machine when I started making this, I learned so many new details doing the research for it.

"Surely you're Joking, Mr Feynman" was a great read.
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
The annoying thing about corporate hiring practices is – speaking from experience – some of us would have loved your answer. But then it goes to committee and someone's like, "this iOS engineer doesn't know any javascript, and I'm an expert in javascript, so I'm a 'no'."
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
As I see my kids bring home Chromebooks from school, it has made me recently nostalgic for the Apple of the 90s in terms of their presence in education. Using my Science teacher's Performa to play Sim Ant after we finished our assignments, (or Oregon Trail before that on the lab of Apple IIs) – not to mention HyperCard, etc.

Anyway, updating my priors a bit with this Neo laptop. This feels like it could maybe spark some renewed excitement over Apple as a student / classroom device. If nothing else, the price makes it more of an option.
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
The quote in this case is because "cringe" is what many online have been calling it. So, they're actually quoting a very common critique.
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
There's a wide variance, but there's been a lot of 'title inflation' over the past decade that has more to do, I think, with giving people incentives when they don't want to stretch the equity package any further.
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
One thing I've learned is, there's a ton of interesting stuff in the world. Super talented people. But, what surface and gets widespread recognition and adoption is often very much determined by luck, and these days by algorithms. It's very possible there's some really cool AI games out there already, and they just haven't been discovered.

The other aspect is that a lot of people in the AI community are completely hooked on the reward-seeking of 'new thing'. Every hour there's some new tool to try out that 'changes everything'. But, without grinding it out you might never create something interesting by constantly jumping to the next new thing. Because, technological capabilities are just one part of the story.

Third, what makes something 'fun' often requires tons of iteration and a lot of LLM-type tools still rely on snapshots of applications. They're not fully there yet in terms of what happens in between moments. There are lots of principles they can draw on from and get a good prototype quickly, but it again comes back to really just slogging through lots of iterations until you find something fun.

Finally, I think with every new medium you get a first wave that really just copies the medium that came before it. Early radio was a lot like theater. Early TV was a lot like radio. I think eventually we'll see people – probably younger people – who are fully into AI and will find interesting things about that medium to express in ideas, and we'll get some really new and interesting stuff as a result.
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
Thank you!

I had to suffer the embarrassment of a Tandy Sensation as our first home computer lol. (Sorry, Tandy Sensation – you were a very good friend and I owe you a lot.)
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
OP here. A ton of work went into making this video and I tried to be as accurate as possible. I know folks like Alan Kay and others come by Hacker News from time to time, so please let me know in the comments if there's anything I missed or got wrong.

This was both difficult and fun to make — it's a departure from the types of videos I've been making. Hope you like it!

Were you a HyperCard user? Tell your story here.
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
Don't get me wrong – I think if people grew more of their own food it would be fantastic! And technology combined with alternative farming practices has the potential to be hugely transformative. I'm all for it. But the way things are currently, it's a monumental effort to grow food for sustenance on any meaningful scale, and would take enormous amounts of time, energy, and effort – leaving very little for other pursuits. I want people to also be able to make art, music, etc.
gdubs
·há 4 meses·discuss
I'd at least, you know, pretend we had a top-secret amazing model. By airing all of this publicly, they've basically admitted that Claude is the best there is.