For someone that doesn’t know about this, how does a CDN help? Don’t they still have to pay for all the data downloaded even if it’s hosted on a CDN. I thought the whole purpose of a CDN was just to make access quicker and had nothing to do with saving on bandwidth costs.
Lego is still the best toy, but man, I really miss the old style Technic sets where most of the pieces were very generic vs today's sets which are less versatile. 8480 and 8250 as examples (my two favorite sets growing up, though I didn't manage to get my hands on 8480 until I got my first job)
I collect Hot Wheels but have always found Lego to be annoying.
It's a pain in the ass to put together, pain in the ass to move, pain in the ass to collection. The costs are out of this world and most collectors don't even build their sets, they keep it in the box from 20 years ago. At least with Hot Wheels you can see the car inside even when still packaged.
Yeah that's a completely different approach, I buy lego to have access to more pieces so that when I dump them all on the floor and build whatever comes to mind I have more to play with.
What do you mean far behind? Far behind what? The new (actually the old one too) Qwen can give you bounding rectangular prisms around things in a scene, OCR text with ink spilled on it correctly, read graphs and understand spatial relationships, I think it's pretty impressive for something I'm running on like a 5 year old GPU.
yeah i know lol, that’s kind of my point. impressive that it runs on your gpu, but it still can’t tell you what happens if you tilt a glass. that’s what world models are working toward. but even then..so what? you get a perfect simulator. it knows the glass tips. it still doesn’t know why someone tipped it, or what happens if they don’t. A four year old can do this and we’re just barely on step one and a half.
> Please don't comment on whether someone read an article. "Did you even read the article?
I get that it's frustrating - that's what open source allows though. I used to run a blog. I ran a few websites, open sourced, that were similar in a general way (users can make stuff on the site and share it others). I found the site duplicated. In fact it's still duplicated to this day. Oh well.
It being an "acquired taste" is part of the appeal. A lot of high-end stuff is ass-ugly on purpose. If everyone liked it because it simply looked nice, you couldn't tell who's "in the club" of other rich people. Brands will attach elaborate stories and histories to objects to make people feel cultured that they have invested time in acquiring the knowledge, but really it comes down to in-group object recognition.
My least favorite of that eras Gerald Genta designs. The original Royal Oak is comparatively far more attractive. Both are outdone by the 222 (different designer though), but it's all subjective.
Ads for Patek Philippe on the back of The Economist get more and more annoying over time. (e.g. the president writes "How Happy I am to be a Nepo Baby")
These things are shibboleths. It doesn't really matter what they look like or whether they are actually any good for their ostensible purpose so long as they signal that you are a member of the correct group.
NTA but almost certainly, the advantage is that Qwen3.5 is extremely generic already so adapting it to a specific task is way easier than training a NN from scratch. It's probably akin to how OCR is now just something I use Qwen for even though I have access to dedicated OCR tools, Qwen is good enough and it's already in my vram. Modern VLLMs are pretty great at answering basic questions about an image by default and I'm guessing finetuning takes them from "pretty good" to "good enough to use in production".
OCR as a use case for LLMs cracks me up because traditional NN OCR is probably more accurate, but significantly more efficient. I figured people would chain it with LLMs to fix misscans.
This, I was really impressed recently when I met a C# dev who was also a programmer (as opposed to your standard C# SaaS dev who just copy pasted from the framework docs and stack overflow and was fully automated by Claude in 2025) and he showed me how nice the language has gotten since I last used it over a decade ago when it was just Microslop Java. They've really put in work and it has a lot of great functional constructs now.
Cube 2: Sauerbraten too! Definitely spent some evenings playing that with my roomies back in the day before we invariably went back to Q3. What an insane resume.
I have fond memories of porting Cube, Sauerbraten and AssaultCube to the Mac back in the day. Given what i've seen from Wouter back in the day i am not surprised he is still on it full steam…
reply