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dkdcwashere commented on A hackable AI assistant using a single SQLite table and a handful of cron jobs   geoffreylitt.com/2025/04/... · Posted by u/stevekrouse
mbil · a year ago
I’ve been thinking lately that email is a good interface for certain modes of AI assistant interaction, namely “research” tasks that are asynchronous and take a relatively long time. Email is universal, asynchronous, uses open standards, supports structured metadata, etc.
dkdcwashere · a year ago
yep went down a rabbit hole trying to build a company around this. it’s the perfect UI

text + attachments into the system, text + attachments out

dkdcwashere commented on Isaac Asimov describes how AI will liberate humans and their creativity (1992)   openculture.com/2025/04/i... · Posted by u/bookofjoe
renewiltord · a year ago
It is an interesting time for LLMs to burst on the scene. Most online forums have already turned people into text replicators. Most HN commenters can be prompted into “write a comment about slop violating copyright” / “write a comment about Google violating privacy” / “write a comment about managers not understanding remote work”. All you have to do is state the opposite.

A perfect time for LLMs to show up and do the same. The subreddit simulators were hilarious because of the unusual ways they would perform but a modern LLM is a near perfect approximation of the average HN commenter.

I would have assumed that making LLMs indistinguishable from these humans would make those kinds of comments less interesting to interact with but there’s a base level of conversation that hooks people.

On Twitter, LLM-equipped Indians cosplay as right wing white supremacists and amass large followings (also bots, perhaps?) revealed only when they have to participate in synchronous conversation.

And yet, they are still popular. Even the “Texas has warm water ports” Texan is still around and has a following (many of whom seem non-bot though who can tell?).

Even though we have a literal drone, humans still engage in drone behaviour and other humans still engage them. Fascinating. I wonder whether the truth is that the inherent past-replication of low-temperature LLMs is likely to fix us to our present state than to raise us to a new equilibrium.

Experiments in Musical Intelligence is now over 40 years old and I thought it was going to revolutionize things: unknown melodies discovered by machine married to mind. Maybe LLMs aren’t going to move us forward only because this point is already a strong attractor. I’m optimistic in the power of boredom, though!

dkdcwashere · a year ago
> I would have assumed that making LLMs indistinguishable from these humans would make those kinds of comments less interesting to interact with but there’s a base level of conversation that hooks people.

I think it is heading in this direction, just takes a very long time. 50% of people are dumber than average

dkdcwashere commented on Foreign visits into the U.S. fell off a cliff in March   axios.com/2025/04/04/fore... · Posted by u/timvdalen
ttoinou · a year ago
Or use 28 days ? If we need to average both weekly and monthly trends
dkdcwashere · a year ago
yep typically rolling 28 days is used for “monthly” metrics for this reason
dkdcwashere commented on AI 2027   ai-2027.com/... · Posted by u/Tenoke
beklein · a year ago
Older and related article from one of the authors titled "What 2026 looks like", that is holding up very well against time. Written in mid 2021 (pre ChatGPT)

https://www.alignmentforum.org/posts/6Xgy6CAf2jqHhynHL/what-...

//edit: remove the referral tags from URL

dkdcwashere · a year ago
> The alignment community now starts another research agenda, to interrogate AIs about AI-safety-related topics. For example, they literally ask the models “so, are you aligned? If we made bigger versions of you, would they kill us? Why or why not?” (In Diplomacy, you can actually collect data on the analogue of this question, i.e. “will you betray me?” Alas, the models often lie about that. But it’s Diplomacy, they are literally trained to lie, so no one cares.)

…yeah?

dkdcwashere commented on How to Use Em Dashes (–), En Dashes (–), and Hyphens (-)   merriam-webster.com/gramm... · Posted by u/Stratoscope
awestley · a year ago
Yes! It's a tell-tale sign something is written by AI.
dkdcwashere · a year ago
it is not
dkdcwashere commented on How to Use Em Dashes (–), En Dashes (–), and Hyphens (-)   merriam-webster.com/gramm... · Posted by u/Stratoscope
pavlov · a year ago
It’s largely the Baader-Meinhof phenomenon. You’ve started noticing it because you just learned about it.
dkdcwashere · a year ago
yep. been using them for years. others have too. it’s not weird

same thing happened with “delve” — these are just words and grammar, people use them

there is no accurate way to tell whether text came out of a neural network or not

dkdcwashere commented on AI will change the world but not in the way you think   thomashunter.name/posts/2... · Posted by u/tlhunter
dkdcwashere · a year ago
the author ironically uses a lot of words to say very little, though I agree with the conclusion. it’s already annoying to have someone use a lot of words to say very little (especially in a business context). now it’s free and easily accessible for anyone, whereas before it at least took some social stamina

so people will do it, people will be annoyed by it, people will prioritize to more efficient communicators

dkdcwashere commented on Show HN: Agents.json – OpenAPI Specification for LLMs   github.com/wild-card-ai/a... · Posted by u/yompal
yompal · a year ago
We think the main opportunity is to charge API providers, to get white-gloved onto this standard.
dkdcwashere · a year ago
can’t an AI just take an OpenAPI spec and throw it into this standard?

if it’s an open source standard, who’s paying for that?

dkdcwashere commented on DeepSeek's smallpond: Bringing Distributed Computing to DuckDB   mehdio.substack.com/p/duc... · Posted by u/xkgt
OutOfHere · a year ago
Deepseek is the real "open<something>" that the world needed. Via these three projects, Deepseek has addressed not only efficient AI but also distributed computing:

1. smallpond: https://github.com/deepseek-ai/smallpond

2. 3fs: https://github.com/deepseek-ai/3FS

3. deepep: https://github.com/deepseek-ai/DeepEP

dkdcwashere · a year ago
thank goodness, we’ve had nothing open to do efficient distributed computing with for years!
dkdcwashere commented on GPT-4.5   openai.com/index/introduc... · Posted by u/meetpateltech
entropi · a year ago
> will nonetheless make people's lives better

While I mostly agree with your assessment, I am still not convinced of this part. Right now, it may be making our lives marginally better. But once the enshittification starts to set in, I think it has the potential to make things a lot worse.

E.g. I think the advertisement industry will just love the idea of product placements and whatnots into the AI assistant conversations.

dkdcwashere · a year ago
*good*. the answer to this is legislation —- legally, stop allowing shitty ads everywhere all the time. I hope these problems we already have are exacerbated by the ease of generating content with LLMs and people actually have to think for themselves again

u/dkdcwashere

KarmaCake day46February 28, 2025View Original