- 420officialDoes this acquisition preclude implementing an s3 style integration for AWS bedrock? Also is IMDSv2 auth on the roadmap?
- What makes this a better option than just using an API with well formed output?
- If all we did was supply arms to our allies who are under attack without making egregious profit off of it, then yeah I think folks would feel better about the MIC, but as you're well aware we are only granting small shipments of weapons along with big demands including currently asking Ukraine to give up it's land to russia. We also have a long history of giving weapons to sow chaos around the world leading directly to things like isis and others. Arguably worse than that, we're now using these military weapons to suppress liberty in American cities.
- Sure, I can agree that companies using gender dysphoria as only a way to increase profit is a bad thing, and I recognize that pharmaceutical companies are this way with _every_ drug and not just ones that benefit people. However I do disagree with the idea that people should be stripped of their right to free speech if you disagree with their statements, or stripped of their right to choose how to live their own lives.
I would offer that this is entirely different than the lack of choice we have in regard to how our government uses the military to "spread democracy at the point of a gun" while taking more and more of our tax dollars and liberty without improving our lives or tackling the problems that ordinary Americans face.
- The thinking is they will offer it at a high enough cost that they don't go broke. The problem is a lot of consumers, if not most, would be fine reading street signs or using mapquest.
- It's liquid propellant being vented, the fuel is under extreme pressure so when its released it immediately expands to a gas. I don't know that Honda has said what their propellant is, but it's probably liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.
- Waymo is firmly SAE self driving level 4 "automated driving" vs Tesla at level 2 "driver support". You're correct that waymo has operators that can jump in in the event something unusual happens, but the vast majority of the time the vehicle is operating autonomously within their defined area. All that is described by SAE level 4 where no human is driving while automatic driving is engaged.
- The 2025 model of the Hyundai Ioniq 5 has NACS and is my favorite alternative in terms of looks, features, and price. Rivian has been in a different price category so I have a hard time believing the $45k starting price.
- The author wanted to use languages that were new to them, if the author has enough familiarity with rust to have a vendetta then it probably isn't new to them.
- It really isn't that challenging to get going with JWT auth in AWS. Gitlab has pretty good documentation for how to use Gitlab ID tokens to assume roles that includes everything other than how to generate a JWT here: https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/cloud_services/aws/
And of course generating OIDC PKI JWTs is pretty easy and well documented elsewhere.
The harder parts in my mind are:
- Updating this OSS project to serve a JWK from OIDC .well-known - Convincing people that this method of authn is safe and that those keys are securely stored - The US Army at least uses Azure and AWS govcloud and not their own infrastructure. I don't think this takes away from your points though, the infrastructure is very locked down and meticulously managed and approved.
- An LLM isn't providing its "best" prediction, it's providing "a" prediction. If it were always providing the "best" token then the output would be deterministic.
In my mind the issue is more accountability than concerns about quality. If a person acts in a bizarre way they can be fired and helped in ways that an LLM can never be. When gemini tells a student to kill themselves, we have no recourse beyond trying to implement output filtering, or completely replacing the model with something that likely has the same unpredictable unaccountable behavior.
- There is no other way to use an LLM than to give it context and have it give its best guess, that's how LLMs fundamentally work. You can give it different context, but it's just guessing at tokens.
- I highly doubt it's possible to have a single solution in a puzzle like this at any size
- Why buy this for $250 when you get the same thing from a pinecil v2 and use it with any 20v 100w PD USB-c power pack? I'm not seeing any differentiating features.
- This is really cool, I've been running something similar to simplify rotating database credentials for legacy projects.
- Offsetting your damage doesn't change the fact that you are causing damage. What would be good is if these people stopped flying around the billionaire circuit on private jets _and_ paid their fair share of taxes but that's too much to ask these days.
I do agree having a separate list of who pays the most in taxes relative to wealth/income would be interesting but also obviously less accurat.
- Whenever I see pinball machines I check the embedded bubble level and 9/10 are not set to the right angle, even in reputable arcades. It seems important to keep the angle in spec, otherwise the ball goes either too slow or too fast but I wonder how much it really matters.
- That makes it a lot more clear, thank you!
- The nuance you provide here is missing from the site. Your chart says only this (maybe I'm missing your explanation somewhere?):
> Amount of code needed for a rich, interactive web page.
And lists "Tailwind CSS" as 804k.
As a reminder, Tailwind CSS doesn't require or use JS in the browser at all and the majority of tailwind gets removed during build so the vast majority of the code you're attributing to Tailwind CSS is unrelated to the task of using Tailwind to build a rich interactive webpage.
To your point about inlining styles, using Tailwind out of the box I struggle to see how you're forced above 14kb, and if you really had kilobytes of classes in your markup you can switch to composing your own rules with @apply.
I recognize you are making a tool and not trying to do ecosystem wide benchmarks, but still suggesting you need 804kb to use Tailwind still seems disingenuous, or at least misinformed, to me.