- MichaelMoser123 parentCNN is quoting data from the Gaza health ministry, an organization run by genocidal Islamist Hamas, without mentioning its affiliation and without questioning the data. So much for objectivity on CNN and "Hacker News". There is also no mention on the food convoys that get plundered by Hamas. Just to mention: Hamas is designated as a terrorist organization in the US, since 1997 - just adding some missing background information.
- I think publishers will not be pleased about a steep fall in click rates, now publishers still have considerable political influence. What will Google do in the event of serious legal pushback or a renewed drive for antitrust action?
The introduction of AI overviews into Google search will cost quite a lot in compute/other resources, despite heavy caching, therefore this might be a significant bet in terms of costs vs profit for Google. What does Google expect from this feature in terms of business results? This seems to be quite a big bet, but what is actually at stake - in real terms?
Come to think of it: is there now a showdown between Google and Microsoft/OpenAI, where collateral costs are no longer taken into account?
- > I seriously think I'm going to stop posting on the internet for good.
I had similar thoughts, but it would probably not make a difference, at this stage. What is there stays there - either online, as in the case of HN, or as part of some collected dataset.
In hindsight: the world changed in so many ways, from the world I knew some twenty years ago, and I am not even talking about politics or technology: the attitudes and perception of people seems to have changed in many ways. Back then I thought it would be of benefit to be open and upfront about things. Now that is no longer a common perception.
Enough said.
- reliability is much better now, as far as i can tell.
- using zeebe/Camunda at work. The system gives you a way of designing and partitioning message-based workflows. It has a very thorough design.
- "What do you think about user XYZ?" or "What do you think about the comments of user XYZ?"
It starts a whole lot of SQL queries that find and aggregate data & statistics
It must have a very interesting and well written system prompt for this type of questions.
(gives me second thoughts about my personal approach to privacy)
- I once had a python side project, it parses the 1911 edition of Roget Thesaurus into memory and provides some queries.
- cpython doesn't have a JIT, why is free-threaded python a higher priority than developing a just in time compiler? The later would be more resonant with the typical use case for python and benefit a larger portion of users, wouldn't it? (Wouldn't a backend server project use golang or java to begin with?)
- you have a point. The usual approach was to choose a subset of C++ features, so it becomes appropriate for a given project. But yes, the language is huge - as it tries to suite everyone but no one in particular (which is insane)
- and putting structure instances into an array so that you can refer to them via indexes of the array entries (as the only escape from being maimed by the borrow checker) is normal?
- deepseek-v2,v3,r1 are all using multi-headed attention.
- I hope you are right, however:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indus_Waters_Treaty#Suspension
Following the suspension of the treaty, India significantly reduced the flow of water through the Chenab River, which crosses into Pakistan. Pakistani authorities claimed a 90% drop in water supply and accused India of choking the river’s flow. India also initiated new hydroelectric projects and began constructing dams on the western rivers, actions previously constrained under the treaty.[125][126][127]
Pakistan has reportedly warned that any attempt by India to disrupt the flow of water from shared rivers could be considered an act of war, and would attack India with nuclear weapons.[128]
- The bad news: there is some real potential for escalation due to the suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/india/indias-water...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indus_Waters_Treaty
Wasn't there something in the intro of "Mad Max fury road" about water wars?
- i think an Agent is an LLM that interacts with the outside world via a protocol like MCP, that's a kind of REST-like protocol with a detailed description for the LLM on how to use it. An example is an MCP server that knows how to look up the price for a given stock ticker, so it enables the LLM to tell the current price for that ticker.
see: https://github.com/luigiajah/mcp-stocks
The implementation: https://github.com/luigiajah/mcp-stocks/blob/main/main.py
Each MCP endpoint comes with a detailed comment - that comment will be part of the metadata published by the MCP server / extension. The LLM reads this instruction when the MCP extension is added by the end user, so it will know how to call it.
The main difference between REST an MCP is that MCP can maintain state for the current session (that's an option), while REST is supposed to be inherently stateless.
I think most of the other protocols are a variation of MCP.
- >The certainty that kids require is to know know they are loved and provided for.
I think kids start to ask more complex questions around the age of fourteen. Maybe it's now their turn to find out, maybe it is still our role to guide them.
Thanks for your answer.
- Are all of the ai model benchmarks just made up? https://epoch.ai/data/ai-benchmarking-dashboard https://ai.azure.com/explore/benchmarks
- Thank you. Good luck to all of us.
- I agree with you. Wish I could pass this message with a straight face and with absolute certainty.
- At the time of the Pentium people could work as graphic artists, without competition from generative AI models. Education was the differentiator, that used to be a settled question.
- i don't think that this is going to be an effective strategy.
- > First, how do you teach them not to believe everything an AI says?
critical thinking is a thing, certainly. I am thankful to my late father, for having me taught the art of questioning stuff.
- 4 points
- We noticed the sincerity of this outreach on the 7th of October 2023, with 1,195 people butchered by the terrorists and 251 hostages taken. We are still grappling with the results.
- Thanks for your comment, it explains why there seems to be a high degree of support for these measures in some quarters (was looking at the youtube comments to the liberation day speech) vs the consensus here at HN.
Let's suppose these policies are to the benefit of some Americans over other the benefit of other Americans. The open question now is: does it matter? does it really have an influence on the gross profit numbers? Will an isolationist foreign policy destroy the international order and how could this effect the US in return?
- Naive question of a foreigner: I see a lot of approval on the youtube comments to Trump's liberation day speech and over at twitter. Now the consensus on HN is diametrically opposed. My question: why do some people think that this is a good idea? Why is there such a huge rift in US society and how do you plan to bridge this gap?
- 5 points