That's exactly thing I'm trying to call out. AI coding has attracted a flood of people whose only goal is to make a quick buck out of shoddy work. They regard science and engineering as beneath them, and they're not shy about saying it, here and elsewhere.
Any serious professional in this field knows that software development is far from a solved problem. It wasn't before LLMs, and it isn't now. Responsible development takes discipline and respect for the hard-won lessons of past and present efforts.
But no, according to many here, being responsible makes you a "luddite." "Humans make mistakes too," that's what they'll say as they'll inevitably screw over people's lives with their reckless disregard for others. "It's not my issue to solve."
Seriously, haven't techbros already caused enough damage throughout society with "move fast and break things"? A lot of people are losing patience for this nonsense.
Arrays are not dynamically sized though (handling runtime sizes) and don’t have efficient append/concat. The point of the dependent types is that you can have the type system track that concat creates an M+N length vector, sort preserves length (and adds a sorted guarantee that slice preserves), etc.
Sure you can do a lot with templates, but that’s advanced templates not just “C++ arrays” in a throwaway “literally that” way.
This is why John Cage's 4'33" mentioned above is genius. If you listen to the composition with sincerity and seriousness, you get the full, unadulterated (non-silent) experience as opposed to an interpretation.
I dream of an e-reader which could have the qualities of a true e-ink technology (ability to read under any light conditions, especially sunny one), while allowing usage of dictionaries like the android Livio offline apps (English, French, etc. )
The actual risk is that US spooks can use these hardware features to infiltrate European clouds. It's not just a theoretical concern about hardware sovereignty.
Company I just left is reportedly now using Claude to analyse the metadata generated from the company MDM that tracks actual laptop use, and then pulling people up if they're not working "enough".
They're also reportedly now giving staff AI-related "homework" in an attempt to force staff to use AI more.
It does not have to be misdiagnosis. If kid has both autism and gut issues, the gut issues could make the autistic symptoms worse, by causing distress to the kid, which could make the interactions with caregivers harder for both in a quite formative period. Treating the gut issues could help this way without gut being directly related to autism and without it being a misdiagnosis. It is telling that they report quite high (0.7) correlations between improvement in gut and autistic symptoms.
However they say they also have an adult trial running that seems to show similar effects, so there might be something more into it.
Ahaha you are not serious yeah ? Are we talking that far back ? Okay. As opposed to a former colony that eradicated the native populace of the americans ?
In general, in Europe there is research infrastructure that I think could be used at a medium scale for important applications (but I am not a professional).
There is the NanoIC research line at imec (2nm), CEA-Leti incomming 7nm FD-SOI pilot lines, and in terms of full production lines, Global Foundries Dresden (12 nm), ESMC (12 nm, in construction), and the various FeRAM/FMC projects I can't keep track of (Neumonda for example).
I would be more worried about designs, because outside of ARM (and Imagination Tech, both in the UK), I don't know any competitive European designs. (about routers NXP already makes router chips with accelerators on top of ARM cores, used for example in the Mono Gateway, but they are fabbed on old TSMC nodes)
Many mammals have become nocturnal in order to avoid humans.
In Central Europe, most of the big game (boars, deer etc.), but also foxes and hares have become nocturnal. The great exception is the Exclusion Zone around Chernobyl, where they all have reverted to diurnal life and tourists will quite often encounter something like a fox walking right in the middle of a road, looking at them with curiosity.
Everywhere else, that would be sign of rabies, but there, it is the original normal behavior.
AI != slop. Just because I'm positive about AI doesn't mean I want to consume slop. I personally use AI for productive means, not to write and publish low-quality articles.
Openly supporting Hamas is supporting Hamas. The cars in St John’s Wood screaming “kill the Jews rape their daughters” came from your “Palestinian” event.
I've did plenty of shit stuff in school, always got polite requests to stop rather than getting the police called on me, except one time.
I think "kid did a hacking, adults called the cops" is less common than people think, it just doesn't usually make the news when that happens, only when the cops get involved the media get involved, so essentially survivor bias.
I read this book a few years ago and it was just chock full of interesting ideas. I think I didn't really "get" it, or enjoy the story that much but I definitely was impressed by the imagination. Every once in a while I think of random things in it. IIRC, it was this book where corporations become kind of important, central entities at some point, and that resonates more and more these days.
I work at a bigtech and we’re being measured on how many tokens we consume.
We know it’s totally stupid, but unfortunately tokenmaxxing is real. I know our management line isn’t that dumb, but this is what you get when the business is selling it.
I'm just waiting for my current company to have a Sev 1 CritSit so I can document the bejesus out of the root cause and expose our non-technical AI evangelist leadership as the sort of goons most of the senior development staff already suspect.
Only by walking us into some revenue or customer impacting failure - through inappropriately having junior devs doing senior level things - will some sense of sanity start to prevail again.
Couldn’t have chosen a more difficult (and ambiguous) name to pronounce, could you? It almost sounds like a curse that I often hear people say out in the bad streets of New York City.
As a European, enjoying the environmental quality of life our regulations provide, I'm ashamed to admit it might be impossible to make chips here, as it's probably a dirty industry that Europe prefers to keep offshore.
Yes, a replacement will cost money. But probably less than a year contract with Palantir.
Mistakes were made (I would argue intentionally because of local wallet minima with stakeholders), there is a sunk cost to using Palantir. The country can't even develop it further, because it's Palantir's. That's not an argument to keep using it.
The country needs to develop the ability, to develop critical national infrastructure (this includes software, obviously is not limited to it). I would also argue it already has the ability, we need to prevent it from withering away.
Palantir will do the same as local companies (building on top of open source) except it needs to make a large tech profit and with its monopolistic ability, It will capture the value for itself.
Procurement has a misaligned efficiency incentive. Procurement and governments want a single provider so it's less direct cost on them on managing projects. Sadly, they've actually unnaturally forced a monopoly, resulting in serious costs and inefficiencies in the long term. We need a way to encourage multiple providers for the same thing, and allow new companies to join in even when they're late. Just like B2B and B2C.
A lot of the friction for us wasn’t Kubernetes itself, but everything around local workflows — reconnecting services, switching environments, and keeping forwards stable during testing sessions.
Any serious professional in this field knows that software development is far from a solved problem. It wasn't before LLMs, and it isn't now. Responsible development takes discipline and respect for the hard-won lessons of past and present efforts.
But no, according to many here, being responsible makes you a "luddite." "Humans make mistakes too," that's what they'll say as they'll inevitably screw over people's lives with their reckless disregard for others. "It's not my issue to solve."
Seriously, haven't techbros already caused enough damage throughout society with "move fast and break things"? A lot of people are losing patience for this nonsense.