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polynomial commented on Why was Apache Kafka created?   bigdata.2minutestreaming.... · Posted by u/enether
polynomial · a day ago
Why was it named that is also a question.
polynomial commented on Waymo granted permit to begin testing in New York City   cnbc.com/2025/08/22/waymo... · Posted by u/achristmascarl
chrisshroba · 2 days 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.
polynomial · 2 days ago
New startup idea just dropped.
polynomial commented on Waymo granted permit to begin testing in New York City   cnbc.com/2025/08/22/waymo... · Posted by u/achristmascarl
setgree · 2 days 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…

polynomial · 2 days ago
We don't go after moving violations anymore (in NYC) because the driver might have a bad reaction. True story.
polynomial commented on Why LLMs can't really build software   zed.dev/blog/why-llms-can... · Posted by u/srid
TheRealDunkirk · 9 days ago
I was converting all the views in my Rails app from HAML to ERB. It was doing each one perfectly, so I told it to do the rest. It went through a few, then asked me if it could write a program, and run that. I thought, hey, cool, sure. I get it; it was trying to save tokens. Clever! However -- you know where this is going -- despite knowing all the rules, and demonstrating it could apply them, the program it wrote made a total dog's breakfast out of the rest of the files. Thankfully, I've learned to commit my working copy before big "AI" changes, and I just revert when it barfs. I forced Claude to do the rest "manually" at great token expense, but it did it correctly. I've asked it to write other scripts, which it has also mangled. So I haven't been impressed at Claude's "tool writing" capability yet, and I'm jealous of people who seem to have good luck.
polynomial · 9 days ago
Imagine if you had to do this with an actual team member.
polynomial commented on Lack of intent is what makes reading LLM-generated text exhausting   lambdaland.org/posts/2025... · Posted by u/ashton314
vouaobrasil · 19 days ago
> they have solved thorny problems.

Like what then? Let's hear some examples.

polynomial · 19 days ago
Apparently they have made HUGE breakthroughs in Online Bin Packing.

Extremely Bullish.

polynomial commented on Lack of intent is what makes reading LLM-generated text exhausting   lambdaland.org/posts/2025... · Posted by u/ashton314
goopypoop · 19 days ago
My butler is an excellent researcher but I think there's something wrong with him
polynomial · 19 days ago
He might be a murderer, many such cases.
polynomial commented on Meta's Vision for Superintelligence   meta.com/superintelligenc... · Posted by u/GlitchRider47
polynomial · 25 days ago
What phase of the AOL lifecycle is Meta currently in? (Seriously asking.)
polynomial commented on My 2.5 year old laptop can write Space Invaders in JavaScript now (GLM-4.5 Air)   simonwillison.net/2025/Ju... · Posted by u/simonw
polynomial · a month ago
At first I read this as "My 2.5 year old can write Space Invaders in JavaScript now"
polynomial commented on Facts don't change minds, structure does   vasily.cc/blog/facts-dont... · Posted by u/staph
joelg · a month ago
my understanding (which is definitely not exhaustive!) is that the case between Galileo and the church was way more nuanced than is popularly retold, and had nothing whatsoever to do with Biblical literalism like the passage in Joshua about making the sun stand still.

Paul Feyerabend has a book called Against Method in which he essentially argues that it was the Catholic Church who was following the classical "scientific method" of weighing evidence between theories, and Galileo's hypothesis was rationally judged to be inferior to the existing models. Very fun read.

polynomial · a month ago
Persevered through the article and comments in hopes someone would point this out.
polynomial commented on Death by AI   davebarry.substack.com/p/... · Posted by u/ano-ther
polynomial · a month ago
"There seems to be some confusion" could literally be Google AI's official slogan.

u/polynomial

KarmaCake day593October 4, 2009
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