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OtherShrezzing commented on Why Startups Die   techfounderstack.com/p/wh... · Posted by u/makle
OtherShrezzing · 5 days ago
I think this article is "why startups died pre-2020", rather than "why startups die [now]".

Lots of this article relates to the reasons startups died when cash was freely available - both from VCs and from the markets you were trying to find product in. For example, if you started an online learning company in March 2020, you'd have hit product right away (along with a thousand competitors), and been lathered with cash from every direction. But three years later, all of those startups were struggling, and I don't know of _any_ that survived. That's not a case of the business owners in 1000 discrete companies giving up. That's the entire world economy reverting back to in-person learning, and the disappearance of the ultra-low interest rates for the company to fall back on while it pivots.

In 2025, founders need to be acutely aware of exogenous factors, as they can be business-obliterating events without the social safety net of 0-1% IR.

OtherShrezzing commented on Cloudflare was down   cloudflare.com/... · Posted by u/mektrik
OtherShrezzing · 11 days ago
The site is back up, but it feels fairly silly that a platform that has inserted itself as a single point of failure has an architecture that's got single points of failure.

The other companies working at that scale have all sensibly split off into geographical regions & product verticals with redundancy & it's rare that "absolutely all of AWS everywhere is offline". This is two total global outages in as many weeks from Cloudflare, and a third "mostly global outage" the week before.

OtherShrezzing commented on Reverse engineering a $1B Legal AI tool exposed 100k+ confidential files   alexschapiro.com/security... · Posted by u/bearsyankees
theodorejb · 13 days ago
According to the timeline it took more than a week just for Filevine to respond saying they would review and fix the vulnerability. It was 24 days after initial disclosure when he confirmed the fix was in place.
OtherShrezzing · 13 days ago
Given that the author describes the company as prompt, communicative and professional, I think it’s fair to assume there was more contact than the four events in the top of the article.
OtherShrezzing commented on AI CEO – Replace your boss before they replace you   replaceyourboss.ai/... · Posted by u/_tk_
ruined · 19 days ago
i don't think you could find a single economist that believes humans know how and where to be economically productive
OtherShrezzing · 18 days ago
It’s a fundamental principle of modern economics that humans are assumed to act in their own economic interests - for which they need to know how and where to be economically productive.
OtherShrezzing commented on AI CEO – Replace your boss before they replace you   replaceyourboss.ai/... · Posted by u/_tk_
georgehotz · 19 days ago
Who's giving you that paycheck? Why don't they just hire that AI agent themselves and cut out the middle man?
OtherShrezzing · 19 days ago
The AI agents don’t appear to know how & where to be economically productive. That still appears to be a uniquely human domain of expertise.

So the human is there to decide which job is economically productive to take on. The AI is there to execute the day-to-day tasks involved in the job.

It’s symbiotic. The human doesn’t labour unnecessarily. The AI has some avenue of productive output & revenue generating opportunity for OpenAI/Anthropic/whoever.

OtherShrezzing commented on Trillions spent and big software projects are still failing   spectrum.ieee.org/it-mana... · Posted by u/pseudolus
rossdavidh · 21 days ago
It's a great article, until the end where they say what the solution would be. I'm afraid that the solution is: build something small, and use it in production before you add more features. If you need to make a national payroll, you have to use it for a small town with a payroll of 50 people first, get the bugs worked out, then try it with a larger town, then a small city, then a large city, then a province, and then and only then are you ready to try it at a national level. There is no software development process which reliably produces software that works at scale without doing it small, and medium sized, first, and fixing what goes wrong before you go big.
OtherShrezzing · 21 days ago
While I think this is good advice in general, I don’t think your statement that “there is no process to create scalable software” holds true.

The uk gov development service reliably implements huge systems over and over again, and those systems go out to tens of millions from day 1. As a rule of thumb, the parts of the uk govt digital suite that suck are the parts the development service haven’t been assigned to yet.

The Swift banking org launches reliable features to hundreds of millions of users.

There’s honestly loads of instances of organisations reliably implementing robust and scalable software without starting with tens of users.

OtherShrezzing commented on Interactive World History Atlas Since 3000 BC   geacron.com/home-en/... · Posted by u/not_knuth
OtherShrezzing · a month ago
I’d always wanted the World War 2 channel on YouTube to do something like this. They’ve produced incredibly actuate moving borders of every day of WWII for their videos. They’d be a useful historical tool if they were published as an interactive map.
OtherShrezzing commented on Nano Banana Pro   blog.google/technology/ai... · Posted by u/meetpateltech
bn-l · a month ago
Is the infographic accurate in terms of the way datasette wprks?
OtherShrezzing · a month ago
It’s subtly incorrect. R/w permissions for example are described incorrectly on some nodes.
OtherShrezzing commented on Google Antigravity   antigravity.google/... · Posted by u/Fysi
bradfa · a month ago
They have a capacity to "learn", it's just WAY MORE INVOLVED than how humans learn.

With a human, you give them feedback or advice and generally by the 2nd or 3rd time the same kind of thing happens they can figure it out and improve. With an LLM, you have to specifically setup a convoluted (and potentially financially and electrical power expensive) system in order to provide MANY MORE examples of how to improve via fine tuning or other training actions.

OtherShrezzing · a month ago
I think it’s reasonable to say that different approaches to learning is some kind of spectrum, but that contemporary fine tuning isn’t on that spectrum at all.
OtherShrezzing commented on I implemented an ISO 42001-certified AI Governance program in 6 months   beabytes.com/iso42001-cer... · Posted by u/azhenley
Alex2037 · a month ago
>Or can we follow the decades of experiences built when developing new technologies like planes, trains, and automobiles? Indeed, we can.

do we regulate any software the way we regulate planes?

operating systems? compilers? web browsers? text/image/video/audio/3D editors? video games?

OtherShrezzing · a month ago
Well for starters, the software that runs on planes.

u/OtherShrezzing

KarmaCake day2111June 26, 2023View Original