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I read somewhere which I can't find now, that for the -reasoning- models they trained heavily to keep saying "wait" so they can keep reasoning and not return early.


Okay, I feel like there might've been a breakthrough here. After watching Karpathy's video [0], he mentioned how hard it is for LLMs to have humor and be funny but it seems like Claude 3.7 really nailed it this time?

Like, most of these posts are legit funny.

[0] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xTGNNLPyMI


Yeah, I thought that was a weird thing for Andrej to say. Ever since the Attenborough spoof (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOEz5xRLaRA) it's been clear that these things are very capable of making people laugh.

A lot of comedy involves punching down in a way that likely conflicts with the alignment efforts by mainstream model providers. So the comedic potential of LLMs is probably even greater than what we've seen.


If you want to go DIY route; I use MH-Z19 sensor along with an ESP-32 which has ESP-Home installed on it, works very well and I log the data on Home Assistant.


TLDR: They are planning to not to include the Apple logo stickers in the boxes.


and the author of the article has 23 years of unused stickers in an envelope in a drawer, illustrating why its good for the author that apple is stopping


And Apple Stores will have them available for those who want them.


thank you for that.


This video [0] was from 2010s, and seems like they had similar issues even back then. (never worked at Google)

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3t6L-FlfeaI


I enjoyed Zur Klappe when I visited Berlin pre-pandemic times. It's literally underground and used to be a public toilet.

And it's very close to the famous Mustafa's Gemuse Kebab, so you can try that afterwards.


> And it's very close to the famous Mustafa's Gemuse Kebab, so you can try that afterwards.

I'd skip the tourist queue and go to any other random places you find on the way instead.


Agree, Mustafa's queue is not worth it


Just don’t queue an hour at Mustafa's - it’s good Kebap, but it’s not that extraordinary. Rüya(m), Superhahn or Servet's make the same style of Gemüsekebap and are just as good.


Hey, my friend moved to Berlin 2 years ago and he takes everyone to Mustafa - is this a tourist attraction / internet one? I don't know why he does this, the kebap is original but nothing special tastewise.


Yep, it is definitely known as a tourist trap around here.


Why go to Germany to get a Turkish meal? Any kebab in Istanbul is going to be better than whatever is available in Berlin. Better get some Schweinshaxe mit Sauerkraut...


Okay I am German and I can tell you I don't know anyone who prefers Schweinshaxe to a good döner kebab. Which by the way, funnily enough, was invented in Germany by Kadir Nurman, a Berliner!

It's basically our national dish at this point and we're arguably better off for it. Our more traditional cuisine is... not so great.


IIRC Döner Kebab Was invented in Berlin...

> The modern sandwich variant of döner kebab originated and was popularized in 1970s West Berlin by Turkish immigrants.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doner_kebab


It's still the döner kebab one could buy earlier anywhere in Turkey or MEA just adapted to European city life with different customs and technology. When in Germany visitors should instead taste local dishes not available anywhere else even if they taste weird/bland.


As annoying as it is, I remember a channel I subscribed to once mentioned that they did a little AB experimentation and turns out “surprised face” thumbnails do actually attract more views.


Linus (of Linus Tech Tips) said pretty much that. They do the "OMG" face for a day or two, and then switch to a less annoying thumbnail.


I don't doubt that at all. But that's turned into way too many creators using it as the default expression in every thumbnail. I remember visiting a true crime channel and all their videos had the same face....


Understandable but unbearable: these aren’t mutually exclusive.


When you are able to log in, you then see who are related to you as well. I believe the news sites use those inflated numbers to make it more dramatic.


> use those inflated numbers to make it [clear how serious it actually was].


They already release the 7 million people's data - to the same extent the hackers got it - to anyone who manages to upload a sufficiently similar genome. There's no additional data privacy concern in releasing it to hackers or Equifax or the FBI or 4chan or the Washington Post. 23andMe limit access to it for commercial reasons, not privacy ones.


But you only have one genome, so you will only ever see a very small subset of that 7 million (I’m assuming that’s how it works, I’ve never used the service). Now you have access to 7 million records at the same time, which is much more powerful in terms of what you can do with that data.


More powerful, but mostly you can do good things, like genealogical research, not bad things, like identity fraud or credit card theft (which you could do if you compromised the 7 million accounts individually).

It's better for the world that that kind of aggregate data is public where anyone can use it, rather than exploited by 23andMe or sold only through data brokers.


Ah, but then it's not like you get all of the data, just the names that are often fake anyway no? I mean I don't know anyone who used 23 and me under their real name.


>Ah, but then it's not like you get all of the data, just the names that are often fake anyway no?

I would bet that an overwhelming majority of 23 and me users do so under their real names.

I would bet that an overwhelming majority of HN users who use 23 and me do not do so under their real names.


You might be right but even my non-technical 50 years old friend who decided to use 23 and me with her sister to see if they shared the same father, did it with a fake name.


From what I read, people got their credentials breached on some other websites. Hackers then somehow used those same credentials to log in to 23andMe.

I see that 23andMe could’ve forced MFA, or have a better brute force protection for sure but seems like 23andMe themselves didn’t breach any passwords at least.


Think about all the infinite numbers of glitches that happened in the past and prevented you to meet other possible wives :)


I tell my wife that she and I always end up together in every multiverse, including the one where our relationship somehow causes that universe to collapse on itself (also that’s the same one where Hacker News is implemented as ASP.Net app)


So a nerdy Everything Everywhere All At Once


What's wrong with ASP.NET? (MVC, not the travesty that is WebForms)


Nothing.

Just a markedly different technology than how it’s implemented in our universe.


What does that even mean?


Nothing. Just like nothing is wrong with Java or JavaScript...


Both power a large majority of the web.


Is that good or bad?


Obviously has a vote of confidence. The companies using it are making money. Just like those using PHP and WordPress.

You can run .NET MVC on Linux/Docker/K8S nowadays natively very easily as a first-class customer.


Nothing; he's just a hater.


If he wants to stay married to his current wife, I advise him not to think about that.


What if this is his latest lifechanging glitch he doesn't yet know about


What if meeting the wife was the glitch?


I think realistically that's what it was. The odds were definitely not in our favour to meet.


Surely he met them all in other universes so the balance is restored.


You posit as if future glitches are improbable ;)


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