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chrisshroba commented on Developers can now submit apps to ChatGPT   openai.com/index/develope... · Posted by u/tananaev
numlocked · a day ago
We do this at openrouter and many apps use exactly that pattern!
chrisshroba · a day ago
Do you have any repository of apps that support that? I’d love to browse them!
chrisshroba commented on The Lucas-Lehmer Prime Number Test   scientificamerican.com/ar... · Posted by u/beardyw
IsTom · a month ago
My favourite prime checking algorithm is that for n < 100 if it looks prime, it is prime.
chrisshroba · a month ago
Except 91
chrisshroba commented on New updates and more access to Google Earth AI   blog.google/technology/re... · Posted by u/diogenico
chrisshroba · 2 months ago
> Bellwether, a moonshot at Alphabet's X, is using Earth AI to provide hurricane predictions insights for global insurance broker McGill and Partners. This enables McGill's clients to pay claims faster so homeowners can start rebuilding sooner.

Hm, I'm quite skeptical about this claim.

chrisshroba commented on Claude Code 2.0   npmjs.com/package/@anthro... · Posted by u/polyrand
wrasee · 3 months ago
What’s CJK input? I’m guessing Chinese Japanese Korean?
chrisshroba · 3 months ago
chrisshroba commented on Ollama Web Search   ollama.com/blog/web-searc... · Posted by u/jmorgan
chrisshroba · 3 months ago
Are the rate limits documented somewhere?
chrisshroba commented on Waymo granted permit to begin testing in New York City   cnbc.com/2025/08/22/waymo... · Posted by u/achristmascarl
setgree · 4 months ago
Semi-related, but just once in my life, I want to hear a mayoral candidate say: “I endorse broken windows theory, but for drivers. You honk when there’s no emergency, block the box, roll through a stop sign — buddy that’s a ticket. Do it enough and we’ll impound your car.”

Who knows, maybe we’ll start taking our cues from our polite new robot driver friends…

chrisshroba · 4 months ago
This always astounds me about cities who have a reputation for people breaking certain traffic laws. In St. Louis, people run red lights for 5+ seconds after it turns red, and no one seems to care to solve it, but if they'd just station police at some worst-offender lights for a couple months to write tickets, people would catch on pretty quickly that it's not worth the risk. I have similar thoughts on people using their phones at red lights and people running stop signs.
chrisshroba commented on Sixteen bottles of wine riddle   chriskw.xyz/2025/08/11/Wi... · Posted by u/chriskw
chrisshroba · 4 months ago
I love riddles like this.

Has anyone found any good collections of these? Whenever I try to search for riddles online, I end up with mostly results containing wordplay riddles like "what has a mouth but doesn't eat, ..."

chrisshroba commented on GPT-4.1 in the API   openai.com/index/gpt-4-1/... · Posted by u/maheshrijal
throwup238 · 8 months ago
> - Deep Research (very powerful, but I have only 10 attempts per month, so I end up using roughly zero)

Same here, which is a real shame. I've switched to DeepResearch with Gemini 2.5 Pro over the last few days where paid users have a 20/day limit instead of 10/month and it's been great, especially since now Gemini seems to browse 10x more pages than OpenAI Deep Research (on the order of 200-400 pages versus 20-40).

The reports are too verbose but having it research random development ideas, or how to do something particularly complex with a specific library, or different approaches or architectures to a problem has been very productive without sliding into vibe coding territory.

chrisshroba · 8 months ago
I also like Perplexity’s 3/day limit! If I use them up (which I almost never do) I can just refresh the next day
chrisshroba commented on Tailscale has raised $160M   tailscale.com/blog/series... · Posted by u/louis-paul
chubot · 8 months ago
Hm OK well thinking out loud, $100M / 3 is $33M / year?

I don't know much about Tailscale, nor about how much it costs to run a company, but I thought it was mostly a software company?

I would imagine that salaries are the main cost, and revenue could cover salaries? (seems like they have a solid model - https://tailscale.com/pricing)

I'm sure they have some cloud fees, but I thought it was mostly "control plane" and not data plane, so it should be cheap?

I could be massively misunderstanding what Tailscale is ...

Did the product change a lot in the last 3 years?

chrisshroba · 8 months ago
>I'm sure they have some cloud fees, but I thought it was mostly "control plane" and not data plane

Don't they host the relay servers that are the fallback if NAT hole punching and their other bag of tricks doesn't work?

u/chrisshroba

KarmaCake day1552October 15, 2014View Original