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America is a fascist country. The violence is the message.

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Spyware maker Paragon confirms U.S. government is a customer (20 points, 1 month ago) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42938665

Italian journalist targeted by Paragon spyware (3 points, 1 month ago) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42929075

Paragon Graphite is a Pegasus spyware clone used in the US (173 points, 2 years ago, 61 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36135241

Paragon (YC W20) raises $13M Series A to build Plaid for SaaS (8 points, 3 years ago) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32251456


what you're missing is that the demand curve for housing is basically a vertical line. most people will never buy/rent more or less than one unit of housing, and they will pay literally anything to keep it from being less. therefore even if there is a surplus of supply there isn't a competitive market.

Usually if you’re using it, it’s because you’re forced to.

In my experience, the best strategy is to minimize your use of it — call out to binaries or shell scripts and minimize your dependence on any of the GHA world. Makes it easier to test locally too.


Ha ha I wrote that. Many years ago.

Though really it’s just Nick Gammon answering questions so actually he wrote it.

GPascal is an amazing feat of programming and if Nick had been more commercially driven it might have been the basis of a big company.


I do see one example at the bottom of https://www.usenix.org/publications/loginonline/evolution-sr.... But I'm not sure it's particularly compelling?

I'd guess Canada given latitude and the fact that both formats were given.

https://thephd.dev/_vendor/future_cxx/technical%20specificat...

Right, there's a demonstration of GP's question (or a variation) on page 10 of the draft technical specification.


> "there is a lot of racial prejudice when folks criticize the “poor craftsman” of modern construction workers compared to those of past generations, as they more often tend to be Latino workers these days."

This is nonsense. The reason people say nearly all modern construction and manufacturing sucks is because the primary focus is on reducing costs and increasing production efficiency/speed. Something that needs to be replaced sooner is also seen as a benefit rather than a problem - planned obsolescence.


There are various results that suggest that LLMs do internally have everything they'd need to know that they're hallucinating/wrong:

https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.09733

https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.18248

https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2024-06-20-major-research-hallucin...

So I don't think it's that they have no concept of correctness, they do, but it's not strong enough. We're probably just not training them in ways that optimize for that over other desirable qualities, at least aggressively enough.

It's also clear to anyone who has used many different models over the years that the amount of hallucination goes down as the models get better, even without any special attention being (apparently) paid to that problem. GPT 3.5 was REALLY bad about this stuff, but 4o and o1 are at least mediocre. So it may be that it's just one of the tougher things for a model to figure out, even if it's possible with massive capacity and compute. But I'd say it's very clear that we're not in the world Gary Marcus wishes we were in, where there's some hard and fundamental limitation that keeps a transformer network from having the capability to be more truthful as a it gets better; rather, like all aspects, we just aren't as far along as we'd prefer.


Looking at some packages that I maintain, I think the sizes might be off, but I'll have to dig in more later.

I wonder if it's handing export conditions properly? We have browser, node, developer, and types exports. Are the files behind quadruple counted?


>RISC-V spec says that they decided to not add overflow trapping because it is "easy" to do in 3 or 4 existing instructions.

It is not just "easy" to do, but actually easy to do, without quotes.

And much, much easier than as an exception/trap.


And thus unusable for most things 3D models and scenes would be used for today.

Expensive

I think that all of these tools need LSP support- like the author mentions at the very end, but they also need DAP support.

I still almost never see anyone using breakpoints / expression evaluation with LLMs. Feels critical to me.

Really excited about the evolution of these tools. I think LSP + DAP will be huge.


That will return 1. The defered code is executed after the return value is computed. This lets you do things like:

  char *str = foo();
  defer { free(str); }
  return strlen(str);

This administration’s response makes them seem terrified of one woman who participated in athletics at this school?


Glad I’m not the only one. GitLab runners just make sense to me. A container you run scripts in.

I have some GitHub actions for some side projects and it just seems so much more confusing to setup for some reason.


This is peak corporate drivel—bloated storytelling, buzzwords everywhere, and a desperate attempt to make an old idea sound revolutionary.

The article spends paragraphs on some childhood radio repair story before awkwardly linking it to STPA, a safety analysis method that’s been around for decades. Google didn’t invent it, but they act like adapting it for software is a major breakthrough.

Most of the piece is just filler about feedback loops and control structures—basic engineering concepts—framed as deep insights. The actual message? "We made an internal training program because existing STPA examples didn’t click with Googlers." That’s it. But instead of just saying that, they pad it out with corporate storytelling, self-congratulation, and hand-wringing over how hard it is to teach people things.

The ending is especially cringe: You can’t afford NOT to use this! Classic corporate play—take something mundane, slap on some urgency, and act like ignoring it is a reckless gamble.

TL;DR: Google is training engineers in STPA. That’s the whole story.


It's always wild to me that anyone actually uses reddit by looking at the front page or r/all or whatever. For years when I would go to reddit.com I was like "why is this even a thing". It's only once I found a few small subreddits that I found anything useful there. Most of it is a firehose of garbage.

What kind of binary do you run Kokoro with for audio output

Unless I’m missing something, that’s quintiles of absolute wealth. I’d be curious how the data shakes out for the lowest quintile calculated relative to costs of living.

>Jews don’t consider themselves evil

For the record I'm not saying that Jews are evil, but if they happened to do any wrongdoings or evil deeds, for example worshipping other fake god in the form of false deity/human/cow/idols/etc beside their one true God they'll be punished accordingly whether in this world or hereafter, or both. This fact is mentioned in Jewish own holy books including Torah and the Bible namely Old and New Testaments (Jesus is a Jews speaking Aramaic - an Arabic like language spoken around Jerusalem during Roman time). This universal God's rule is also applies to Muslim and everyone else as far as Muslim are concerned.


Why downvote me because there is discourse?

Could we not usually say most software could be documented better. I do not think GitHub Actions ranks near the bottom in terms of documentation and user experience overall. I do understand your point though.


... So where's the training or examples of application?

I wonder if the complexity of fixing trivial code mistakes in CI is worth it compared to catching them in a pre-commit hook.

Unrelated tangent, but $300 for non-commercial use with limited features... wow!

I can relate to this pain. Isn't gitlab CI better at this especially the documentation and simplicity of it?

This would have been a lot more compelling had they provided a single real-world example of STPA actually solving a reliability issue at Google.

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