Readit News logoReadit News
lich_king commented on Are LLM merge rates not getting better?   entropicthoughts.com/no-s... · Posted by u/4diii
suttontom · 3 hours ago
This is unfair and dismissive of many roles. Coordination in a massive, technically complex company that has to adhere to laws and regulations is a critical role. I don't get why people shit on certain roles (I'm a SWE). Our PgMs reduce friction and help us be more productive and focused. Technical writers produce customer-facing content and code, and have nothing to do with supporting internal bureaucracy. There are arguments against this in Bullshit Jobs but do you think companies pay PgMs or HR employees hundreds of thousands of dollars a year out of the goodness of their own hearts? Or maybe they actually help the business?
lich_king · 3 hours ago
You realize that the reason you need to manage this organizational complexity is largely because the organization is so huge?...

The reality is that you could run LinkedIn with far, far fewer people. You probably need fewer than 100 for core engineering, and likely less than 1,000 overall if you include compliance, sales, and so on - especially since a lot of overseas compliance stuff is outsourced to consulting firms, it's not like you have a team of lawyers in every country in the world.

Before there was so much money in the system, we used to run companies that way. Two decades ago, I worked for a company that had tens of millions of users, maintained its own complex nationwide infra (no AWS back then), and had 400 full-time employees. That made coordination problems a lot easier too. We didn't need ten layers of people and project management because there just wasn't that many of us.

lich_king commented on Are LLM merge rates not getting better?   entropicthoughts.com/no-s... · Posted by u/4diii
curiouscube · 13 hours ago
There is a decent case for this thesis to hold true especially if we look at the shift in training regimes and benchmarking over the last 1-2 years. Frontier labs don't seem to really push pure size/capability anymore, it's an all in focus on agentic AI which is mainly complex post-training regimes.

There are good reasons why they don't or can't do simple param upscaling anymore, but still, it makes me bearish on AGI since it's a slow, but massive shift in goal setting.

In practice this still doesn't mean 50 % of white collar can't be automated though.

lich_king · 4 hours ago
> In practice this still doesn't mean 50 % of white collar can't be automated though.

Let me ask you this, though: if we wanted to, what percentage of white collar jobs could have been automated or eliminated prior to LLMs?

Meta has nearly 80k employees to basically run two websites and three mobile apps. There were 18k people working at LinkedIn! Many big tech companies are massive job programs with some product on the side. Administrative business partners, program managers, tech writers, "stewards", "champions", "advocates", 10-layer-deep reporting chains... engineers writing cafe menu apps and pet programming languages... a team working on in-house typefaces... the list goes on.

I can see AI producing shifts in the industry by reducing demand for meaningful work, but I doubt the outcome here is mass unemployment. There's an endless supply of bs jobs as long as the money is flowing.

lich_king commented on Avoiding Trigonometry (2013)   iquilezles.org/articles/n... · Posted by u/WithinReason
zzless · 11 hours ago
With all due respect, no, it isn't. His drivel against set theory shows that he didn't even read the basic axiomatic set theory texts. In one of his papers, he is ranting against the axiom of infinity saying that 'there exists an infinite set' is not a precise mathematical statement. However, the axiom of infinity does not say any such thing! It precisely states the existence of some object than can be thought of as infinite but does not assign any semantics to it. Ironically, if he looked deeper, he would realize that the most interesting set theoretic proofs (independence results) are really the results in basic arithmetic (although covered in a lot of abstractions) and thus no less 'constructive' than his rational trigonometry.
lich_king · 9 hours ago
Almost every critique of the axiom of infinity is philosophical. I don't think you can just say "the axiom is sound, so what's your point". And you don't even get to claim that because of Godel's incompleteness theorem.

The axioms were not handed to us from above. They were a product of a thought process anchored to intuition about the real world. The outcomes of that process can be argued about. This includes the belief that the outcomes are wrong even if we can't point to any obvious paradox.

lich_king commented on Kotlin creator's new language: talk to LLMs in specs, not English   codespeak.dev/... · Posted by u/souvlakee
lucasoshiro · 10 hours ago
Yeah. It's hard to express and understand nested structures in a natural language yet they are easy in high-level programming languages. E.g. "the dog of first son of my neighbour" vs "me.neighbour.sons[0].dog", "sunny and hot, or rainy but not cold" vs "(sunny && hot) || (rainy && !cold)".

In the past maths were expressed using natural language, the math language exists because natural language isn't clear enough.

lich_king · 10 hours ago
Did you mean AbstractNeighborDispatcherFactory?
lich_king commented on Kotlin creator's new language: talk to LLMs in specs, not English   codespeak.dev/... · Posted by u/souvlakee
lich_king · 11 hours ago
We built LLMs so that you can express your ideas in English and no longer need to code.

Also, English is really too verbose and imprecise for coding, so we developed a programming language you can use instead.

Now, this gives me a business idea: are you tired of using CodeSpeak? Just explain your idea to our product in English and we'll generate CodeSpeak for you.

lich_king commented on Show HN: I built an SDK that scrambles HTML so scrapers get garbage   obscrd.dev/... · Posted by u/larsmosr
lich_king · 12 hours ago
You break highlighting and copy-and-paste. If I want to share or comment on a piece of your website... I can't. I guess this can be a "feature" in some rare cases, but a major usability pain otherwise.

I'm not a fan of all the documentation and marketing content for this project evidently being AI-generated because I don't know which parts of it are the things you believe and designed for, and which are just LLM verbal diarrhea. For example, your GitHub threat model says this stops "AI training crawlers (GPTBot, ClaudeBot, CCBot, etc.)" - is this something you've actually confirmed, or just something that AI thinks is true? I don't know how their scrapers work; I'd assume they use headless browsers.

lich_king commented on Making WebAssembly a first-class language on the Web   hacks.mozilla.org/2026/02... · Posted by u/mikece
rishflab · a day ago
> The web is fascinating: we started with a seemingly insane proposition that we could let anyone run complex programs on your machine without causing profound security issues.

Isnt this what an OS is supposed to do? Mobile operating systems have done a pretty good job of this compared to the desktop OS.

lich_king · a day ago
Mobile OSes don't allow random people to run code on your device. They allow you to install software you want and sort-of trust, which is conceptually close to the desktop model. There are some safeguards on top of that, but the primary line of defense is that cheap-pillz.virus-basket.ru can't actually execute anything on your device.
lich_king commented on Don't post generated/AI-edited comments. HN is for conversation between humans   news.ycombinator.com/news... · Posted by u/usefulposter
Asmod4n · a day ago
you could sell physical items at any store where you have to show your ID and you get one for the age group you are.

that kills two birds with one stone, you can then show everywhere online you are human and how old you are without the services needing any personal information about you, and the sellers don't know what you use that id tag for.

lich_king · a day ago
People who are posting AI comments or setting up AI bots are... people. They can show their ID. If a website owner doesn't have a way to ban that specific human and the bad guy can always get another voucher, it's sort of meaningless.

In fact, even if you can ban the human for life, I'm not sure it solves anything. There are billions of people out there and there's money to be made by monetizing attention. AI-generated content is a way to do that, so there's plenty of takers who don't mind the risk of getting booted from some platform once in a blue moon if it makes them $5k/month without requiring any effort or skill.

lich_king commented on Making WebAssembly a first-class language on the Web   hacks.mozilla.org/2026/02... · Posted by u/mikece
Retr0id · a day ago
On one hand, yes, new attack surface is new attack surface. But WASM has been in browsers for almost a decade now.
lich_king · a day ago
Without the bindings this talks about, so it really couldn't do nearly as much.
lich_king commented on Making WebAssembly a first-class language on the Web   hacks.mozilla.org/2026/02... · Posted by u/mikece
JoshTriplett · a day ago
That would be more true if WebAssembly didn't share so much sandboxing infrastructure with JS. If anything, I'd argue that WebAssembly is a much smaller surface area than JavaScript, and I think that will still be true even when DOM is directly exposed to WebAssemly.
lich_king · a day ago
I don't think it's "much smaller" once you aim for feature parity (DOM). It might be more regular than an implementation of a higher-level language, but we're not getting rid of JS.

By the same token, was Java or Flash more dangerous than JS? On paper, no - all the same, just three virtual machines. But having all three in a browser made things fun back in the early 2000s.

u/lich_king

KarmaCake day553February 13, 2026View Original