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bongodongobob commented on The highest quality codebase   gricha.dev/blog/the-highe... · Posted by u/Gricha
elzbardico · 3 days ago
Because there are not a lot of high quality examples of code edition on the training corpora other than maybe version control diffs.

Because editing/removing code requires that the model output tokens for tools calls to be intercepted by the coding agent.

Responses like the example below are not emergent behavior, they REQUIRE fine-tuning. Period.

  I need to fix this null pointer issue in the auth module.
  <|tool_call|>
  {"id": "call_abc123", "type": "function", "function": {"name": "edit_file",     "arguments": "{"path": "src/auth.py", "start_line": 12, "end_line": 14, "replacement": "def authenticate(user):\n    if user is None:\n        return   False\n    return verify(user.token)"}"}}
  <|end_tool_call|>

bongodongobob · 3 days ago
I'm not disagreeing with any of this. Feels kind of hostile.
bongodongobob commented on The highest quality codebase   gricha.dev/blog/the-highe... · Posted by u/Gricha
hackernewds · 3 days ago
> Writing code is the default behavior from pre-training

what does this even mean? could you expand on it

bongodongobob · 3 days ago
He means that it is heavily biased to write code, not remove, condense, refactor, etc. It wants to generate more stuff, not less.
bongodongobob commented on Things I want to say to my boss   ithoughtaboutthatalot.com... · Posted by u/casca
the_snooze · 3 days ago
It's toddler-level thinking. Replace the complexity of leadership, humanity, and values with "make line go up," because the latter is way easier to measure, especially when you ignore the costs that aren't yours.
bongodongobob · 3 days ago
It is. Our "security manager" has a dashboard that just literally counts the number of "security policies" we've put in place. Anything that isn't a box to tick is completely ignored as irrelevant. So we are essentially counting how many group policies we can implement and just disregarding the effectiveness of them for mitigating relevant threats and ignoring the added complexity and cost it incurs by making everyone's life more difficult. Systems password management/MFA? Who cares, can't make a graph out of it. It's the dumbest shit I've ever had to deal with.
bongodongobob commented on Qwen3-Omni-Flash-2025-12-01:a next-generation native multimodal large model   qwen.ai/blog?id=qwen3-omn... · Posted by u/pretext
dvh · 4 days ago
I asked: "How many resistors are used in fuzzhugger phantom octave guitar pedal?". It replied 29 resistors and provided a long list. Answer is 2 resistors: https://tagboardeffects.blogspot.com/2013/04/fuzzhugger-phan...
bongodongobob · 4 days ago
Lol I asked it how many rooms I have in my house and it got that wrong. Llms are useless amirite
bongodongobob commented on Australia begins enforcing world-first teen social media ban   reuters.com/legal/litigat... · Posted by u/chirau
delbronski · 4 days ago
Come on dude, you are on HN. You probably know that social media is no longer about free speech. It’s a targeted advertising machine that is extremely effective on kids and teenagers. It preys on them so, so efficiently. It’s a technical work of art. A young mind is extremely susceptible to the algorithms on those platforms. Much more than adults are, and adults are already really susceptible. This is what this ban is trying to shield kids from. Not from them talking to each other.

The Social media platforms of today are very clearly harmful to our youth. Just like alcohol and cigarettes are to a developing brain. Why can we ban those and not this?

bongodongobob · 4 days ago
It is a targeted advertising machine, that is one of its functions. I also don't think there is anything wrong with that. I don't think the government has any businesses banning speech either. I also don't believe they want to "save the children".
bongodongobob commented on Microsoft increases Office 365 and Microsoft 365 license prices   office365itpros.com/2025/... · Posted by u/taubek
boh · 6 days ago
If most companies had to for some reason revert to Windows XP and MS Office from 1998, they would barely be impacted. There is literally no benefit to this subscription model besides paying for what you already have and what you don't want. None of this stuff needs to be on the cloud even for bigger firms. For the I need/like X in Office 365, it's not worth it from a costs perspective.
bongodongobob · 6 days ago
Bullshit. Just from a document editing perspective, going back to a network share where only one person can edit a doc is not going to fly. I used to have to deal with this as IT/desktop support and it fucking sucked. Docs in the cloud give you better collab capabilities and remove the need to have fancy networking, VPNs, international security exclusion groups etc, domain controller bullshit, connecting all of the companies offices together. Connect to the Internet, and all your stuff is there no matter where you are. It sounds like you've never had to support the infra for office workers before. This is way better than it used to be. For a small company, sure, do whatever. But the bigger it gets, the harder all that shit becomes and requires a lot of work to keep it running.
bongodongobob commented on IBM to acquire Confluent   confluent.io/blog/ibm-to-... · Posted by u/abd12
askafriend · 6 days ago
Why didn't you ask to get the accounts provisioned?
bongodongobob · 6 days ago
I had a similar thing happen to me with a huge company as a contractor. I couldn't work for 3 weeks due to a combination of login issues and permissions settings. Couldn't file a ticket and no one was really sure who to call/ask. Finally a director caught wind of it and knew who to talk to.
bongodongobob commented on The "confident idiot" problem: Why AI needs hard rules, not vibe checks   steerlabs.substack.com/p/... · Posted by u/steerlabs
nickdothutton · 6 days ago
- Claude, please optimise the project for performance.

o Claude goes away for 15 minutes, doesn't profile anything, many code changes.

o Announces project now performs much better, saving 70% CPU.

- Claude, test the performance.

o Performance is 1% _slower_ than previous.

- Claude, can I have a refund for the $15 you just wasted?

o [Claude waffles], "no".

bongodongobob · 6 days ago
You need to let it actually benchmark. They are only as good as the tools you give them.
bongodongobob commented on Kids who ran away to 1960s San Francisco   fieldnotes.nautilus.quest... · Posted by u/zackoverflow
troglo-byte · 8 days ago
When was this? It's changed a lot (in both directions) over the years. For example, after Prop 64 legalized weed, the field in GGP by Haight and Stanyan that was previously staffed 24/7 by a morass of weed salespeople and their groupies (maybe 50-300 at any given time) emptied out overnight.

Then there's the fact that even the 18-20yo "Hippie Pilgrim" demo, which has held up pretty well for generations, is secretly stratified by the socioeconomic status of the parents. One's take on it depends on the specific cliques they're exposed to.

bongodongobob · 8 days ago
1969, he was prob about 30.
bongodongobob commented on Kids who ran away to 1960s San Francisco   fieldnotes.nautilus.quest... · Posted by u/zackoverflow
asveikau · 8 days ago
George Harrison went to the Haight with his then-wife Pattie Boyd, and walked around, eventually finding people recognized him and followed him around. He played guitar in the park. He wrote a large check to fund the Haight Ashbury Free Clinic.

IIRC he said he had expected some kind of alternate hippie-economy based on genuine values and having ownership of the neighborhood, and was disappointed that he didn't see any evidence of that. Just a bunch of idle people.

bongodongobob · 8 days ago
Yep, pretty much. Found it - https://youtu.be/_I-ThafU1e4?si=dwZfCpNkDtnz2onb

My uncle had the same description. Disappointed that it was just stoned people and not a lot of real substance.

u/bongodongobob

KarmaCake day2377November 14, 2023View Original