- hhthrowaway1230 parentFirst time I saw a post here of her I found it odd, and made me think, now I know it's one of the things that makes HN, HN and I appreciate. To make me think.
- 1 point
- Don't think there is anything wrong with a centralised service being down, you just make a conscious decision if you want that and can afford that?
People not being ready for cloudflare/[insert hyperscaler] to be possibly down is the only fault.
- A good thing is to incorporate some old school observability and benchmarking, MLFLOW has been around for some time. You could push some some parameters to that to track your scores, and you could use Meta's AX optimisation framework to finetuning the settings (hyperparameters)
- Good like these small tools. I'd like to opt for more strategies too like doclings HierarchicalChunker.
- 2 points
- 1 point
- Also curious! I was also wondering if criu frozen containers would help here. I.e. load the notebooks, snapshot them, and then restore them.
- how many permutations of Fe dev do we need?
- auto rerender by comparing trees?
- track all changes by signals?
- knockout js is that you?
- Good work! Needed this today
- Sorry about that, will be more considerate in the future
- Sounds like LinkedIn story to me. Written by claude trying to drive a point home.
- Guess that is why there isn't an easy go to solution yet. But it's well needed.
- 1 point
- > Can you help me understand that?
Like 10 nodes behind tailscale/wireguard in a private network, with only 2 nodes where you have a port open on 80/443, those are exposed to the public network. The rest of the nodes are all private like db, redis, etc etc.
- I like it but I always miss features or defaults like: - internal network only with edge nodes (i.e tail scale out the box, + some edge nodes) - option to deploy on multiple servers to scale with super simple non k8s approach.
- doesn't this make the language a little unpredictable in terms of loading times? requiring to touch all parts to fully load the app?
- Used this, sigh of relief, thank you
- this is the case indeed
- 5k pdfs a month for archival purposes, must be pdf, customers demand this
- doesn't pandoc rely on some engine itself?
- 176 points
- 6 points
- Thank you for clearing this up!
- Thats good news! I'm a huge fan or Rails but a little surprised of such little vulnerabilities tbh. Would have expected more for such large codebase. But happy to hear it aint!
- I’m an occassional photo taker, mostly because i dont like the way i look and i suffer from mild and flaring depression at times.
However when i look back to the photos from the past im happy i took them because my memory fails me or sometimes skews things.
i am happy i have these photos.
- I wish you a great remainder of your day!
- That ís indeed ironic. I should have used other wording. For that please accept my apologies.
Your link is useful and turns both to this https://opensource.org/ai/open-source-ai-definition
and this discussion:
https://discuss.opensource.org/t/deepseek-r1-does-it-conform...
> Technically, R1 is “open” in that the model is permissively licensed, which means it can be deployed largely without restrictions. However, R1 isn’t “open source” by the widely accepted definition because some of the tools used to build it are shrouded in mystery. Like many high-flying AI companies, DeepSeek is loathe to reveal its secret sauce.
and
> You are right about the lack of data information for DeepSeek, which is a requirement from the OSAID.
- This has a poetic tone to it.
However, not sure what to think of it. So AI should help people on their job and their interview process, but also not? When it matters? What if you're super good ML/AI, but very bad at doing applications? Would you still have a chance?
Or do you get filtered out?