HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

meisel

no profile record

comments

meisel
·2 個月前·discuss
Another more practical issue with using LLMs for Zig is that it’s a quickly changing language, meaning LLMs may generate code for an older version of the language.
meisel
·3 個月前·discuss
Yeah the author really should’ve taken some responsibility here. It’s true that the services they used have issues, but there’s plenty of blame to direct to themself
meisel
·3 個月前·discuss
Gotta love starting the y-axis above 0
meisel
·4 個月前·discuss
What % of users actually care that much about local LLMs? It appears to still be an inferior (though maybe decent) service compared to ChatGPT etc., and requires very top-end hardware. Is privacy _that_ important to people when their Google search history has been a gateway to the soul for years? I wonder if these machines would cost significantly less (or put the cost to other things, e.g. more CPU cores) without this emphasis on LLMs.
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
Yeah show me the 5-line HTTP server
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
Why did Ladybird even attempt this with Swift, but (I presume) not with Rust? If they're going to go to the trouble of adding another language, does Rust not have a better history of C++ interop? Not to mention, Swift's GC doesn't seem great for the browser's performance.
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
I wonder what the internal conversations are like around memory safety at Apple right now. Do people feel comfortable enough with Swift's performance to replace key things like dyld and the OS? Are there specific asks in place for that to happen? Is Rust on the table? Or does C and C++ continue to dominate in these spaces?
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
If you're doing enough divisions with the same divisor, it'd be faster to do what compilers do for division by a known constant, where they multiply by an integer reciprocal and shift
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
I wonder if their "5.3" was continuously being updated, with regenerated benchmarks with each improvement, and they just stayed ready to release it when claude released
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
My experience with AI with its predecessor, Xcode 26.2, was _really_ bad. One bug made it objectively unusable, and there were lots of fun issues/huge functionality gaps on top of that. Apple doesn't really seem to "get" agent-based coding, but I'm curious to see the results of other braver souls with 26.3.
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
> Julia emits light, over an ever-changing spectrum

Haven’t heard of this feature in Julia lang, must be new in v1.12.4
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
> It’s kind of like enabling LTO (Link-Time Optimization) across the libc boundary, except it’s done properly in the frontend instead of too late, in the linker

Why is the linker too late? Is Zig able to do optimizations in the frontend that, e.g., a linker working with LLVM IR is not?
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
> Gas Town has illuminated and kicked off the next wave for everyone

That sounds pretty hyperbolic. Everyone? Next “wave”?
meisel
·5 個月前·discuss
This all just sounds like problems we see when making new features, of any sort, for customers. A feature is never objectively done, there are many opinions on its goodness or badness, once it’s released its mistakes can last with it, etc.

If this is a wicked problem, then so is much of other real-world engineering.
meisel
·6 個月前·discuss
To be clear, is AI actually at play here, aside from the fact that the repo is for Gemini? It just looks like two simple rules that interact poorly, that we could've seen in 2015.
meisel
·6 個月前·discuss
The real solution is that as soon as you need square brackets, switch to a better language than bash
meisel
·6 個月前·discuss
Looks like it beats everything in the large text compression benchmark for enwik8, but loses to several programs for enwik9. I wonder why that is.
meisel
·6 個月前·discuss
How much less? Their companies clearly have access to the latest GPUs.
meisel
·6 個月前·discuss
What is with the annoying snow going over the text? That is a pretty “arbitrary” graphic element
meisel
·6 個月前·discuss
> Responses to my publication submissions often claimed such problems did not exist

I see this often even in communities of software engineers, where people who are unaware of certain limitations at scale will announce that the research is unnecessary