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timmytokyo commented on Supreme Court hears case that could trigger big crackdown on Internet piracy   arstechnica.com/tech-poli... · Posted by u/fizl
timmytokyo · 17 days ago
From the article:

'Clement said that hotels limit speeds to restrict peer-to-peer downloading, and suggested that universities do the same. “I don’t think it would be the end of the world if universities provided service at a speed that was sufficient for most other purposes but didn’t allow the students to take full advantage of BitTorrent,” he said. “I could live in that world."'

Insane. So Sony's lawyer is arguing that every university student should have sub-broadband internet speeds simply because a small fraction of the students infringes copyright.

timmytokyo commented on Americans no longer see four-year college degrees as worth the cost   nbcnews.com/politics/poli... · Posted by u/jnord
rayiner · 19 days ago
The U.S. was already the richest country in the world per capita by 1880–even at the peak of the British Empire. Most of its military achievements during the war—building up the world’s largest Navy and airforce from almost nothing within a couple of years—was a product of the industrial economy that already existed before the war.

America’s preference for common wisdom over book learning is a strength, not a weakness. Formal education filters for risk averse, process and credential-oriented people. And you need some of those people, but you don’t want your society to be like India where you worship credentials and degrees like religion.

The GI bill isn’t a counterpoint. GI’s still had to gain admissions at a time when colleges were far more selective than today: https://www.realclearscience.com/blog/2024/01/23/why_college... (undergraduate IQs fell from 119 in 1939 to just 102 in 2022). So you created a filter that was extremely rigorous. It supported college education for people who were both significantly smarter than average, and also had served in the military—the Marcus Aurelius type.

timmytokyo · 19 days ago
I see very little evidence for this abundance of American "common wisdom". If anything, America has always had a deeply anti-intellectual vein running through it, whether it was the Scopes monkey trial, the Know Nothing Party or what you see in the present political scene. Higher education, especially the affordable kind at public universities, has been a bulwark against the paranoid delusions that often dominate societies that revere superstition and "common sense" over reason, empiricism and humanism.
timmytokyo commented on Why the push for Agentic when models can barely follow a simple instruction?   forum.cursor.com/t/why-th... · Posted by u/fork-bomber
bccdee · 2 months ago
> Yes it advanced extremely quickly

The things that impress me about gpt-5 are basically the same ones that impressed me about gpt-3. For all the talk about exponential growth, I feel like we experienced one big technical leap forward and have spent the past 5 years fine-tuning the result—as if fiddling with it long enough will turn it into something it is not.

timmytokyo · 2 months ago
When building their LLMs, the model makers consumed the entire internet. This allowed the models to improve exponentially fast. But there's no more internet to consume. Yes, new data is being generated, but not at anywhere near the rate the models were growing in capability just a year ago. That's why we're seeing diminishing returns when comparing, say, GPT-5 to GPT-4.

The AI marketers, accelerationists and doomers may seem to be different from one another, but the one thing they have in common is their adherence to an extrapolationist fallacy. They've been treating the explosion of LLM capabilities as a promise of future growth and capability, when in fact it's all an illusion. Nothing achieves indefinite exponential growth. Everything hits a wall.

timmytokyo commented on After the AI boom: what might we be left with?   blog.robbowley.net/2025/1... · Posted by u/imasl42
WalterSear · 2 months ago
Anthropic said their inference is cash positive. I would be very surprised if this isn't the norm.
timmytokyo · 2 months ago
As if inference exists in a bubble. Driving a car from point A to point B costs $0, as long as you exclude the cost of the car or the fuel you purchased before you were at point A.
timmytokyo commented on Devpush – Open-source and self-hostable alternative to Vercel, Render, Netlify   github.com/hunvreus/devpu... · Posted by u/el_hacker
jasoncartwright · 2 months ago
Political posts are often squashed from the homepage quite quickly (and for good reason)
timmytokyo · 2 months ago
Heaven forbid that anyone discover the horrible things our tech overlords are doing in the world.
timmytokyo commented on Linus Torvalds and the Supposedly "Garbage Code"   giodicanio.com/2025/08/27... · Posted by u/todsacerdoti
amadeuspagel · 3 months ago
I'm always weirded out by how much attention Torvald's rants get. It seems a bit like the joy people get from watching a talent show and listening to the host insult the singers.
timmytokyo · 3 months ago
I think it's because most software developers have experience working with assholes. Commenting on someone famous who's being an asshole is a natural way to vent.
timmytokyo commented on Linus Torvalds and the Supposedly "Garbage Code"   giodicanio.com/2025/08/27... · Posted by u/todsacerdoti
detaro · 3 months ago
In what way would rejecting the code with different wording be "capitulating" exactly?
timmytokyo · 3 months ago
If you've worked in SWE for long enough, you'll run into this kind of socially maladjusted petty tyrant many times in your career. It's fascinating to see so many of these tyrants exposing themselves in this thread, though.
timmytokyo commented on Failing to Understand the Exponential, Again   julian.ac/blog/2025/09/27... · Posted by u/lairv
FrustratedMonky · 3 months ago
Exponentials exist in their environment. Didn't Covid stop because we ran out of people to infect. Of course it can't keep going exponential, because there aren't exponential people to infect.

What is this limit on AI? It is technology, energy, something. All these things can be over-come, to keep the exponential going.

And of course, systems also break at the exponential. Maybe AI is stopped by the world economy collapsing. AI advancement would be stopped, but that is cold comfort to the humans.

timmytokyo · 3 months ago
>What is this limit on AI?

Data. Think of our LLMs like bacteria in a Petri dish. When first introduced, they achieve exponential growth by rapidly consuming the dish's growth medium. Once the medium is consumed, growth slows and then stops.

The corpus of information on the Internet, produced over several decades, is the LLM's growth medium. And we're not producing new growth medium at an exponential rate.

timmytokyo commented on Ebola outbreak in DR Congo rages, with 61% death rate and funding running dry   arstechnica.com/health/20... · Posted by u/bikenaga
fithisux · 3 months ago
They said in the past the issue was solved. Solved means solved.
timmytokyo · 3 months ago
There is no better tell than use of the anonymous "they".

u/timmytokyo

KarmaCake day2425April 21, 2014View Original