- 8338550bff96 parentFebruary 6, 2024... okay grandpa
- How convenient does the law say that it has to be?
- There are no websites that I visit now that don't have a login that I would still visit if they suddenly started putting up captchas
- Let us see how that works out for you
- At what point is this just extortionary cash grab from U.S. tech companies?
Want to fund some expensive grand program? Find a reason to fine U.S. companies.
- I doubt how useful it would be as an attack. As a single point of info it tells you next to nothing. As part of a composition of other indicators it would be the weak link in the chain probably just causing noise for the not un-likly scenario where the person you're targeting is using a VPN.
If it was any less specific we'd be talking about a deanonymization attack that outs whether or not a target is still on Earth.
- Do you have any sources that you would recommend? So far, you're throwing out "got a source for that?" left and right and when you get a source you've nothing to say.
Just curious if you have knowledge about this subject or if you're just trying to block the conversation from going in directions you don't like
- I would say that HTML is a programming language of the Declarative programming language paradigm.
For SQL you are not instructing the computer what to do, you're describing the rules and structure of the result that you want in some coded language such that an execution engine can determine how to deliver the expected result.
For HTML you're not instructing the renderer what to do, you're describing the rules and structure of the result that you want in some coded language such that the rendering engine can determine how to deliver the expected result.
If I'm wrong, I would be very happy to be corrected because I've argued this for a long time with people who don't know what a programming language paradigm is - so I'd like to know if I'm mistaken.
- Then is "agents" just non-spooky coded language for "cyborgs"
- Who cares what it is called? I care about the capabilities.
In my experience when people say things like this what they're just projecting insecurity
- I work on such a team too. I don't care what you call me - pay me
- None of this has to do with. AI. At all.
This is politics and policy
- Low and behold, no response. Only downvote. Because there doesn't exist a legitimate argument against is, so all that is left is to be mad
- They will remain bifurcated so long as some platforms censor political dissent while others do not.
- I would rather have lazy devs that actually ship shit to production than slow devs that drag what I could get done in 1 day out for entire sprints because they only communicate with each other for 30min tops per-day to unblock each other.
That this comes at the cost of "understanding" needs supporting evidence. Most devs I know only know 1 or 2 programming languages and their own special silo corner of the tech stack.
You're not paid to be not lazy or to learn in the most fulfilling way possible. You're paid to ship software that works.
- The levenshtein distance of the title is 50. Considering the title is 62 characters, I would say it is not accurate.
- Best of both worlds
- Women actually deserve a constitutional amendment to protect their rights, not a court ruling of the most dubious jurisprudence. Because of Roe V. Wade the political will create a new actually applicable amendment was never pursued - a bandaide that eventually fell off.
Part of the problem is that most people lack the cognitive capacity to understand the legal argumentation of Roe V. Wade and how shaky it was and so they out of incompetence set themselves up as women's rights constitutional amendment obstructionists
- I'll shut up when I see humans get 99.9% on anything. This seems an awful lot like non-meat brain prejudice where standards that humans do not live up to at all are imposed on other things in order to be worthy of consideration
- How do you distinguish between the real thing and a perfect simulation of the real thing?
You seem to be engaged in faith-based reasoning at this point. If you were born in a sensory deprivation chamber you also would have no inner world, and you wouldn't have anything at all to say about solving chemistry problems.
> Im actually surprised so many get fooled by the hype and are ready to declare a winner.
Find me one person that says something like this. "AGI is here!" hype-lords exist only as a rhetorical device for the peanut gallery to ridicule.
- Is this something that is necessarily true or true due to policy decisions or tech debt?
Honest question as someone that is definitely not a networking expert.
- I am (҂`_´)
Continuously micro-manage the layout of individual application windows your window manager is a form of procrastination.
Back to work!
- Yeah, let's just have everyone hosting TOR nodes out themselves and their friends to local authorities...
Nice try Winnie Poo
- That is good to hear and hopefully gets fixed. It has been some years now, but I did use flutter for some toy projects and liked using it - I am used to using ReactJS I found there was a lot of transitive knowledge coming from that background.
Ultimately what dissuaded me from pursuing it for any bigger projects is a lack of examples of great looking production apps with complex requirements. When I was looking, I was seeing a lot of CRUD apps - display a form, click an upload button, ect. This was probably 2018/2019 when I was taking a serious look at it.
All of that is to say: Quality app showcases do matter for whether or not devs will trust a solution enough to pull the trigger.
- Yeah, I'm not really following the line of reasoning presented on the "/history" page: https://typeschema.org/history
It seems to me like a mischaracterization of JSON Schema to say you can't define a concrete type without actual data.
I am a very stupid individual so I could be misunderstanding the argument.
- Your source is a blog post by a polemic author whose own source is second-hand by NYT, an organization that is in lawsuit with OpenAI. I would have rather have heard it from the horse's mouth. What financial information about OpenAI does NYT have that I don't? Do they have privileged access to private org financials?
In my estimation, you're not qualified for this conversation.
- Have the same experience with Microsoft support. The difference is the timeline is much shorter and when our issues don't get any traction our rep intervenes and escalates to engineers.
I understand that level-1 support for these orgs are basically documentation librarians. Cool. We pay an incredible amount for premium support, but whatever. It's fine. What matters is that we have a rep that is engaged and cares about us being unblocked and isn't going to let us flounder for issues their support team is not going to solve. Have never seen this level of commitment from Google.
- Lots of people struggle to understand the declarative programming language paradigm. It is really pesky because since you're declaring what kinds of results you expect rather than dictating what must be done, you're forced to define your boundary conditions up-front. Much more fun and exciting to charge ahead without worrying about such things