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GitHub mirror of the sourceforge repo: https://github.com/Win32-WTL/WTL

WTL delivers very small and efficient code, very close in size and speed to SDK programs, while presenting a more logical, object oriented model to a programmer.


You can go local now with qwen 3.5 9B Q4 powering hermes agent at 35 to 50 tok/s with 99 percent tool call success rate on a used RTX 3060 for the price of two months of ChatGPT Pro and never bother. https://xcancel.com/sudoingX/status/2033020823846674546#m

This is the worst local AI will ever be. It only gets better from here. https://xcancel.com/sudoingX/status/2033959603944493192#m


Nope, if nobody trains the models on new data you have at some point an outdated model.

Imagine Qwen 3.5 created in the 1990s and then use it for today web or desktop development.

And is the problem solved that training AI with AI code makes the AI worse? If not the "it only gets better" claim is questionable.


> Nope, if nobody trains the models on new data you have at some point an outdated model.

As people train the models on new data they'll be increasingly training on AI output including hallucinations and slop. More garbage in means even more garbage out and the cycle will continue as "updated" models decline in quality.


His latest project is https://radicalpie.com/

A Professional Equation Editor for Windows 10/11 for 60$ that uses Slug for rendering. Presumably he‘s using it to write his great FGED books.


25 years ago I would have loved that. But I don't actually know many people still doing any of this sort of work on Windows.

(I get it. It's an awesome replacement for MathType. It uses OLE so that it embeds in Microsoft Word nicely. Still...)


> But I don't actually know many people still doing any of this sort of work on Windows.

Most primary, secondary, and pre-university school teachers without an institutional understanding of LaTeX, which admittedly has an extremely high (technical, not financial) barrier to entry compared to Microsoft Word + MathType. This is what my secondary school teachers used, for instance. They're given bog-standard laptops with Windows to work with.

Also exam setters and writers in places like Cambridge University Press and Assessment. If you took a GCSE, O-level, or A-level exam administered by them, it had pretty high quality typesetting for maths, physics diagrams, chemistry skeletal diagrams and reaction pathways... But almost none of it was done with LaTeX, and instead probably all add-ons to Microsoft Word or Adobe InDesign.


I agree that it's a bit late but I don't think the issue is use of Windows (or Word, if that's what you're implying).

> It's an awesome replacement for MathType. It uses OLE so that it embeds in Microsoft Word nicely.

But that's the rub - OLE doesn't embed particularly nicely. I haven't used it in over a decade (maybe two?). It's sort of very softly deprecated.

The new equation editor in Word which isn't based on MathType, and doesn't use OLE, works much more smoothly than the old one, even if it doesn't support everything. ("New"? I just checked and it was introduced in 2007!) I think a typical user would have to be really desperate for extra functionality to abandon that level of integration, at which point you'd probably switch away from Word altogether.


Depressingly I don't actually know many people still doing any of this sort of work, on any platform.

What stack are those people using?

He has a post up: https://terathon.com/blog/radical-pie.html

I'm pretty confident the "stack" is C++ on Win32, with a bunch of hand-rolled libraries and no stdlib.


Hmmm ... the GP says

> I don't actually know many people still doing any of this sort of work on Windows.


I think they meant writing complex equations on windows

Or doing work that regularly involves writing complex equations, which is what I was asking about - what field and what do they use?

LaTeX or its variants on your favorite OS, which is increasingly not Windows.

Most journals don’t want submissions in Word (there are notable exceptions, e.g. Nature), and conferences without massive editorial budgets want their submissions in a format that makes it easy for them to produce proceedings (again, not Word).

I don’t know to what extent Typst is taking off recently.

I personally wrote my thesis in LuaTeX with figures in TikZ. I have no great love for the TeX language [0] or TikZ, but there are three great properties of this stack that Word lacks:

1. It plays well with version control.

2. The output quality can be very high.

3. You can script the generation of figures, including text and equations that match the formatting of the containing document, in a real programming language, without absurd levels of complexity like scripting Word. So I had little Python programs that printed out TikZ.

No, I do not expect the average high school teacher to do this.

[0] In fact, I think both the language and the tooling are miserable to work with.


Hard agree about TeX the language and tooling.

Overleaf has done a pretty good job of removing the tooling pain points, but honestly Typst can't take over soon enough.

> The output quality can be very high.

It can also be very low


Will probably run great in Proton.

> We’re on 26.3.1

I'm still on macOS Sonoma 14 and iOS 18


Re: Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs:

A critical footnote got lost in the shuffle. In his later writings, especially notes compiled in The Farther Reaches of Human Nature from 1971, Maslow added a sixth level above self-actualization:

Self-transcendence

It means going beyond the self—seeking connection with something greater, such as service to others, nature, art, or the divine.

Why is it important? Well, for one thing, as Tony Robbins put it at an event long ago: “‘I, I, I, me, me, me’ gets to be a really fucking boring song.” But it’s not just a boring song; it’s dangerous to your health. Self-help [can be] dangerous precisely because it easily becomes self-fixation.


>> If I fix the things that aren’t OK, all will be well. If I improve myself enough, if I only work hard enough, I can finally eliminate my suffering.

>I hate to inform you, but this doesn’t work. I’m also thrilled to inform you that this doesn’t work. You can stop picking up a lot of boulders.

Really reminds me of Oliver Burkeman. Take https://www.oliverburkeman.com/never for a start:

I might be stuck with certain inner disturbances forever [...] It turns out my really big problem was thinking I might one day get rid of all my problems, when the truth is that there's no escaping the mucky, malodorous compost-heap of this reality. Which is OK, actually. Compost is the stuff that helps things grow.


"The purpose of psychotherapy is to turn neurotic anguish into ordinary suffering", or something to that effect.


Until you hit 'Search' at the bottom right it shows you a preview result set - that can differ completely from the one you get then. Because two are not enough, they added a third with 'Siri suggestions' as top row. Which is not in the Search settings but in the ones for Siri. The iOS docs[1] misname it as 'Suggest App' when it is called 'Suggest Apps Before Searching' which only the iPadOS docs [2] get right. Did I mention they cut useful info from the iOSv26 version[3] and changed the URL?

[1]: https://support.apple.com/guide/iphone/about-siri-suggestion...

[2]: https://support.apple.com/guide/ipad/about-siri-suggestions-...

[3]: https://support.apple.com/guide/iphone/turn-siri-suggestions...


The silver lining if ai takes all of our jobs will hopefully be that the people responsible for all of this become destitute as well


woah


You must be a school or business with DUNS number and rigorous, manual verification through Apple to set up shared iPads with managed Apple IDs in the School or Business Manager Portal.


> iPads powerful enough to skip a MacBook

This is about software



Thank you for the links/resources! I've come across these in my research and they book look interesting. I've contemplated contributing to Timelinize but ultimately decided I want to create my own thing, also for educational purposes.


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