Is that just a fusor? Because it looks a lot like the one in my garage, but shinier.
I agree that this could be helpful for finally getting to that natural language programming paradigm that people have been hoping for. But there’s going to have to be something capable of logically implementing the low level code and that has to be more than just a statistical model of how people write code, as trained on a big collection of random repositories. (I’m open to being proved wrong about that!)
The 90% accuracy could just arise from the fact that the tests are against trivial or commonly solved tasks, so that the exact solutions to them exist in the training set. Anything novel will exist outside the training set and outside of the model.
Performing procedural tasks using a statistical model of our language will never be reliable. There’s a reason why we use logical and proscriptive syntax when we want deterministic outcomes.
Germany learned that everything else they did was fine and ok, except that Jewish people are off limits.
That sounds amazing
A beautiful sight. The tech corps joined the wrong side of this afraid of their own free will. It should cost them at least a little.
Because the LLMs are now being used to vibe code themselves.
Like yeah, I’m not clicking on some random video without any context. Especially when it could usually be replaced with one well written paragraph.
I think the lesson to be learned is that everything works in the demo (except when it doesn’t), but when it’s deployed to thousands of sites by the cheapest contractors, operated by untrained and unmotivated personnel, and not calibrated or maintained over its lifetime… the reliability goes down a bit.
I’ve been happy with Fastmail.
The cost isn’t too bad at $5/mo per user.
The wildcard email thing is cool. You can use addresses like [email protected] to hand out to companies on the fly.
I may go back to hosting my own, but I have no complaints with Fastmail at all.
Upvote just for sharing the same twisted path as me.
Instead of four hours, this could have taken half an hour by properly exploring the problem and mapping out a solution first. Everyone seems to shit on drawing up an architecture first and wants to immediately start coding, but taking a little time up front to think through the problem pays huge dividends in the long run.
Onions sautéing in butter is the absolutely most fantastic smell ever.
Alyx was fantastic and is the best VR game ever made, also. You’ll enjoy it when you play it
Anybody care to sum this up for people who can’t watch videos?
I see what you mean about Jesse. It’s been a while since I played it, but I remember her being cast as an unwilling and unlikely hero, which can be a hard role to write well. Also, the acting was a bit stilted at first. I think she got better as it went (both the character and the voice acting).
During the court proceedings, the defense attorney had to explicitly ask him out for her.