

that’s a great point but wouldn’t the output for a solved problem like “make a working C compiler in rust” work better if the temperature/randomness were zero? or am i fundamentally misunderstanding?


that’s a great point but wouldn’t the output for a solved problem like “make a working C compiler in rust” work better if the temperature/randomness were zero? or am i fundamentally misunderstanding?


they don’t care. they expect to be able to say “our AI agent made a C compiler that passed 99% of our tests”


any llm must have several C compilers in its training data, so it would be a reasonably competent almost-clone of gcc/clang/msvc anyway, right?
is what i would have said if you didn’t put that last part


i hear rumors that as many person-hours are spent cleaning up the messes left by LLMs as are saved having them write the code. has anyone found that to be true or am i just talking out of my ass?
i guess you’re living about 30 years in the future
i see. does that meaningfully reduce the amount you use nat64? i ask because for me, most things go through dns anyway
you gotta get clatd on your computer


it was pretty clear when israel kept killing people the day the ceasefire was called
have you tried giving them tiny ant-sized balls
are there quintillions of states
you’ll never believe this
i don’t use ubiquiti, but the only thing you need to do with your firewall to get better-than-NAT security is allow only outgoing connections/disallow incoming connections. usually on consumer routers that’s the default setting anyway or there’s a checkbox to that effect.
i’ve done both ipv4 and v6, but never embedded. from my perspective, ipv6 addresses can be easier to remember and use, with a little clever arrangement of zeros and especially because they’re hexadecimal. that’s in addition to the way more elegant way the protocol itself handles various things. obviously not worth upgrading systems that don’t even need dhcp, but that applies to a lot of things in that field
you can if you make it mostly zero
is a /56 not enough address space for your home network


for some reason
to increase employee productivity, we are now using computer vision (CV) and machine learning (ML) to measure the flow rate of your piss and shit, which will allow us to better synergize with our employees by helping them manage their restroom breaks more efficiently.
yeah, like where the “any” key is on their keyboard