- kookamamie parentI know. Typically I'd let CC know with "I reverted these changes."
- Yes, reverting outside. This can happen often when one is not happy with CC's output - Esc + revert.
- CC absolutely does not read the context again during each run. For example, if you ask it to do something, then revert its changes, it will think the changes are still there leading to bad times.
- Yes, the syntax makes no intuitive sense, whatsoever.
- NUMA is satan. Source: Working in real-time computer vision.
- Because it is easier to keep adding stuff than to remove it.
- Agreed, the roles seem more cerenonial than anything else.
- I'm curious - was it two and a half lines of code you contributed?
- Makes sense. How have you found C++20 modules?
- Looks great. I did pick up pretty strong NIH vibes, though. As an example, would CMake or Meson not work as a build system?
- You have a patent for alpha in videos? Curious to hear more about this - the application you describe sounds eerily familiar to me.
- > Why This Challenge Will Make You Question Everything
This kind of headlines make an article an annoying read.
- At the same time Time selected Henna Virkkunen on their AI 200 list: https://time.com/collections/time100-ai-2025/7305860/henna-v... - they are one of the architects of this AI Act nonsense.
- Voxel space? I only saw planar objects flying in 3D space.
- Fully agreed. The modules are an afterthought, and inevitably lead to a mess where we have both modules and includes all over the place.
- > You have to feel it.
The corporate machine does not feel it.
It can't be bargained with. It can't be reasoned with. It doesn't feel pity, or remorse, or fear. And it absolutely will not stop... ever, until you are dead.
- "Like dude, a JVM for AIs!" - it reads like that.
- No, they do not need one. The article paints VM as a very broad definition, mostly revolving around permissions for accessing things or executing actions.
- > We are still figuring out how to use LLMs, and it will be some time before we have a decent idea of how to use them well
As per typical, Martin is so late to the party that he projects his own lack of understanding of the subject to be the general state of matters.
People are, and have been for a while, using LLMs as very effective accelerators or augmentations of themselves.
Claude Code, is a great example of something that can easily one-shot most trivial-to-average programming tasks.
While some wait for the "bubble to burst", a lot of people are gaining significant benefits from using LLMs to boost their speed in software development.
It's not a good idea to muddy the expectations for AI by mixing AGI and LLMs into the same bucket. LLMs are already useful for many purposes, even if they didn't lead to AGI, whatever the definition is.
- > Serverless
uses someone else's network for signaling
- Assuming core count to be even seems pretty oblivious to me.
- A windowing library, not a GUI library.
- Cute, but all of the example emojis look pretty poor, murky if you will.
- > The solution relies on ffmpeg to do the heavy lifting and is roughly 300 lines of code
Checked the source and it seems to make a lot of assumptions on the output format, codec and quality.
- Exactly. I never saw SourceForge as some sort of inspiration name-wise.
- It is not a term of art. A veteran programmer here and I also cringed when saw it used in this context.
- Ok, so the author thought it's a great idea to embed a little mini-game onto the page - in case two squares shot by the things in each bottom corner ever collide, your mouse cursor vanishes. Brilliant - tab closed.
PS. fix the origin of the projectile shooters - right now they are shooting from the "side" and it looks sloppy.
- We're working on HPC / graphics / computer-vision software and noticed a particularly nasty issue with VBS enabled just last week. Although, have to be mentioned it was on Win10 Pro.
- Indeed. This is throwing pennies in virtue-signaling openness.
- Windows suffers from similar effects when Virtualization-Based Security is active.