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kyle_grove

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kyle_grove
·7 ay önce·discuss
thecutline.ai , a Product Management Suite. I call it "A Product Manager That Says No", which stems from previous challenges I had using AI that was too sycophantic and optimistic to help with product decisions.

Working heavily right now on Customer Personas to use in validating/invalidating , which are configured with viewpoints, biases, and tendencies. Coming very soon will be Persona Journeys, in which you can get live, goal-oriented evaluation of your web app by a Persona.
kyle_grove
·8 ay önce·discuss
Anthropic sign-on is surprisingly bad.
kyle_grove
·8 ay önce·discuss
The problem of running a $4 Trillion consumer hardware company, with incredibly optimized supply chain operations, is that it heavily constrains the directions a new CEO would take the company, and by extension, the set of plausible people who could take the helm. I think even if the next CEO has a new or different product vision, they'd need deep knowledge on the hardware side of the house just to steer in any different direction.
kyle_grove
·9 ay önce·discuss
I'd agree with all those facts about the competitive landscape, but in each of those competitors, there's enough wiggle room for me to think OpenAI isn't completely boxed in.

Google on multimodality: has been truly impressive over the last six months and has the deep advantages of Chrome, YouTube, and being the default web indexer, but it's entirely plausible they flub the landing on deep product integration.

Chinese companies and pricing: facts, and it's telling to me that OpenAI seems to have abandoned their rhetorical campaign from earlier this year teasing that "maybe we could charge $20000 a month" https://techcrunch.com/2025/03/05/openai-reportedly-plans-to....

Coding: Anthropic has been impressive but reliability and possible throttling of Claude has users (myself included) looking for alternatives.

Social: I think OpenAI has the biggest opportunity here, as OpenAI is closest to being a consumer oriented company of the model hyperscalers and they have a gigantic user base that they can take to whatever AI-based platform category replaces social. I'm somewhat skeptical that Meta at this point has their finger on the pulse of social users, and I think Superintelligence Labs isn't well designed to capitalize on Meta's advantages in segueing from social to whatever replaces social.
kyle_grove
·geçen yıl·discuss
There's the technique of model orthogonalization which can often zero out certain tendencies (most often, refusal), as demonstrated by many models on HuggingFace. There may be an existing open weights model on HuggingFace that uses orthogonalization to zero out positivity (or optimism)--or you could roll your own.
kyle_grove
·geçen yıl·discuss
Honestly, I think the mode that will actually occur is that incumbent businesses never successfully adopt AI, but are just outcompeted by their AI-native competitors.
kyle_grove
·geçen yıl·discuss
IMO the lack of real version control and lack of reliable programmability have been significant impediments to impact and adoption. The control surfaces are more brittle than say, regex, which isn’t a good place to be.

I would quibble that there is a modicum of design in prompting; RLHF, DPO and ORPO are explicitly designing the models to be more promptable. But the methods don’t yet adequately scale to the variety of user inputs, especially in a customer-facing context.

My preference would be for the field to put more emphasis on control over LLMs, but it seems like the momentum is again on training LLM-based AGIs. Perhaps the Bitter Lesson has struck again.
kyle_grove
·geçen yıl·discuss
I think in part because of YouTube demonization, which is how TikTok could poach the creators in the first place.

I suspect if they're mirroring content to YouTube, it's more to try to attract audience to TikTok than monetize through YouTube.
kyle_grove
·geçen yıl·discuss
I would use the word 'fresh' for TikTok; like old school YouTube, there's quirkiness and variety.
kyle_grove
·2 yıl önce·discuss
My belief is that while eng manager empire building was the easier path to get promoted before 2022, it's not anymore, for two main reasons:

1. HC doesn't accrue like that anymore. 2. Many organizations are looking to delayer; harder to promote up to director when your org went from 9 runs to 5.

I hear a lot of the focus going to Tech Lead Manager roles--fewer reports but more hand-on keyboard than EM roles of the past.
kyle_grove
·2 yıl önce·discuss
As I understand it, the Q-hypothesis is often situated within the hypothesis of Marcan priority (Mark was the source for Luke and Matthew), and Q is a way of explaining agreements within Luke and Matthew that are not also found in Mark. The hypothesis would be that Luke and Matthew each combined text from Mark with Q.
kyle_grove
·2 yıl önce·discuss
I think (but cannot prove) that along the way, it was decided to explicitly measure ability to 'study to the test'. My theory goes that certain trendsetting companies decided that ability to 'grind at arbitrary technical thing' measures on-job adaptability. And then many other companies followed suit as a cargo cult thing.

If it were otherwise, and those trendsetting companies actually believed LeetCode tested programming ability, then why isn't LeetCode used in ongoing employee evaluation? Surely the skill of programming ability a) varies over an employee's tenure at a firm and b) is a strong predictor of employee impact over the near term. So I surmise that such companies don't believe this, and that therefore LeetCode serves some other purpose, in some semi-deliberate way.
kyle_grove
·2 yıl önce·discuss
I lived in Woodland for a time and I really wish I had heard about them back then so I could arrange a plant tour.
kyle_grove
·2 yıl önce·discuss
My 16GB M2 Air is doing it well.
kyle_grove
·2 yıl önce·discuss
Interesting, I'm playing with it and I asked it what SIEMs are and it gave examples of companies/solutions, including Splunk and RSA Security Analytics.
kyle_grove
·3 yıl önce·discuss
My main thoughts on RTO:

    1. No one work arrangement is optimal for all firms.

    2. Most policies around RTO (or remote work) are not meaningfully exploring optima (with respect to organizational health and work product quality).

    3. Therefore, the amount of preserveration and energy spent on RTO steals focus from main drivers for firm success. Which is probably the point, as the article points out.
kyle_grove
·3 yıl önce·discuss
I think your and nostrademon's comments are both insightful.

What I would add as someone who has been managing collaborative science teams embedded in large companies remotely, pre- and post-pandemic, is that some forms of alignment translate to the remote setting, but other forms of alignment are more challenged. I think the boundary is probably: if the teams were aligned pre-remote, you can sustain the alignment, even with new collaborative initiatives, but gaining new alignment with new teams is way more challenging.

Which is fine when what you are doing is Business as Usual, but falls apart when there are crises or disruptions that require net new collaborative relationships.
kyle_grove
·3 yıl önce·discuss
NordPass does the first part of this—it at least alerts you to breaches and prompts you to change it.

I think the full use case you describe is better suited for a passkey manager, since passkeys are marching generated already.
kyle_grove
·3 yıl önce·discuss
Mazda engine R&D is seemingly quite impressive: the SkyActive X engine is an unusual ICE gasoline engine that takes ideas from diesel, with greater fuel efficiency and horsepower.
kyle_grove
·3 yıl önce·discuss
I’m pretty confident (close to the 95% level) they will abandon the public charity structure, but throughout this saga, I have been baffled by the discourse’s willingness to handwave away OpenAI’s peculiar legal structure as irrelevant to these events.