twitter: @jakesimon email: jacob.anthony.simon@gmail.com
- jacobsimon parentCurious, let me know if you find anything about it! That does sort of explain why the brain areas would be locally flipped, but maybe doesn’t explain the global flip (right body -> left brain) that the original article is talking about.
- Fair enough - so in reality they _are_ being pressured directly to remove the content and it has nothing to do with selling the products. A slippery slope indeed!
- Maybe a silly idea, but here’s a solution to prevent financial censorship: make the game free. Or monetize via another way—ads, subscriptions, credits. There’s actually a lot of options for Steam if they aren’t being pressured directly to remove the content.
- Had the same initial reaction - have we come full circle to Bootstrap 20 years later?
But after playing around with their theme builder[1], I think there's real value here - you can quickly spin up a custom-ish set of Tailwind components. I'd rather it output an actual component library though more like shadcn.
- Nice work! I really like how simple it was to get started. I know this would make it a bit harder to signup, but I think you should consider creating a Chrome Extension that allows you to get the real mouse coordinates, if possible. I think the animations feel a bit rougher compared to ScreenStudio, so maybe having the real coordinates would help. But maybe that's fixable with more smoothing or easing.
- Quality has improved so much too, I tried it a few months ago at Demo Day and I’m blown away by how good it is now.
- Seems to work fine on iOS Safari and Chrome
- Honestly, I think Apple played their cards perfectly. They didn’t try to be first to market with R&D, but they’ve launched just enough features to excite customers about new phones, while appeasing investors and subduing potential competitors like OpenAI who are rumored to be working on hardware devices, too.
- Hah I’ve been having the same issue as the author with those scammy “package delay” texts getting summarized in my notifications.
Didn’t realize how widespread that type of spam was until now. Why hasn’t someone implemented better spam detection at Apple like we have for email? It would be nice if they could classify texts as spam, promotions, etc and organize them the way Gmail does.
- There’s nothing grammatically offensive about this. It’s like saying, “Cars come in all colors. Mine is red.”
- I’d be surprised if they’re not using AI or some sort of rule-based generator at this point.
- Well one key difference is that Google and Amazon are cloud operators, they will still benefit from selling the compute that open source models run on.
- Oh great to hear, thanks for the kind words :)
- I think the implication of the top comment is that cloud providers are buying revenue. When we say that cloud provider revenue is "up due to AI", a large part of that growth may be their own money coming back to them through these investments. Nvidia has been doing the same thing, by loaning data centers money to buy their chips. Essentially these companies are loaning each other huge sums of money and representing the resulting income as revenue rather than loan repayments.
To be clear, it's not to say that AI itself is a scam, but that the finance departments are kind of misrepresenting the revenue on their balance sheets and that may be security fraud.
- So cool! I was just wondering the other day if it would be possible to build this! For front facing mode, I wonder if you could add a brief “calibration” step to help it learn the correct scale and adjust angles, e.g. give users a few targets to hit on the screen
- Just bought two. Nice work!
- … It somehow just dawned on me that firm is between “hard” and “soft”
- I think you’re missing the broader point, which is that there is a lot to computer science outside of the purely mathematical formalism.
For example, distributed systems and networking are more like a physical science because they seek to make generalized learnings and theorems about real world systems.
The author’s last point around complexity theory also resonates because it demonstrates the value of designing experiments with real-world conditions like computing hardware speed and input sizes.
- My unprofessional take: The SEC is concerned primarily with protecting investors. If anything, changing to a normal for-profit structure and removing the cap on returns would be viewed as more investor/market-friendly than their current structure, which is partly to blame for what unfolded last year.
- This is the way
- Was thinking about this recently. The author misses the importance of timing in the unity of perception. It would be rather easy to conduct an experiment and ask people, “did X and Y happen at the same time?” where X and Y are different stimuli. You could test over a variety of different senses and time differences to determine if people are integrating their experiences or not.
The other important element is attention and awareness. You can certainly be focused on one thing more than another—this can be a useful kind of disunity
- 1 point
- One thing I noticed going through school is that math concepts are usually taught first before physics and other subjects —- precisely because the math is viewed as a prerequisite for the other material. But this always seemed entirely backward to me, because much of the math was invented for and motivated by people trying to solve actual problems in these other disciplines. I think we should teach people in the same order of operations, rather than treating math as an abstraction to be learned by itself.
- I know it’s not a completely fair comparison, but to me this question is kind of missing the point. It’s like asking “Why take a cab if you know where you want to go?”
- The paper linked here starts off by asking whether LLMs can “solve complex problems in ways that resemble human thinking.” Why would we try to answer that question without discussing how humans think?
- For starters, the naming is much less confusing. But the behavior also appears to be enforced/validated at some layer (hopefully?), which function calling did not seem to be. I was experimenting with it a couple weeks ago and it would work like 75% of the time but would often give me invalid results for schemas with relatively simple nested objects.
- 2 points
- Oh wow didn't know that existed. You should try cmd-p too! If you hold down Cmd and press P repeatedly, it acts like ctrl-tab, but you also have the option to search files at the top. I suppose you could remap it to ctrl-tab and then you'd get it for free.
- This is cool - I haven’t really thought much about the spatial organization of my IDE before. Reflecting on it now, I realize I don’t even use the tabs in VS Code anymore because I have way too many files open. I just look at one file at a time, and when I need to switch I use Cmd-P to search or jump between recent files. Works well but requires me to keep the names of files/directories in my head all the time.