Programming isn’t a government desk job. The interface between programmer and company should be the output only, they can’t force a programmer to use w/e bs they think is good at the time
I wish Claude would just build a lovable-like experience into their desktop app so the codebase will sit on your local computer with easy transition to cloud code.
Bad naming from OP, but the meaning holds: totalitarianism has no political color, when your liberties are ignored the fact that it comes from left or right becomes irrelevant.
the question is: how does the prompt processing time on this compare to M3 Ultra because that one sucks at RAG even though it can technically handle huge models and long contexts...
I think this "backdoor" could be just a mistake as eclypsium disclosed it to framework and they fixed it as per the article. Does that still warrant them to be in your never buy list? I personally think it makes them reputable as they swiftly fix problems that arise. I do own a framework so im obviously biased as I've had a good experience with it. What is this far right alignment you mentioned?
Which is ironic, given all I really want from Siri is an advanced-voice-chat-level chat gpt experience - being able to carry on about 90% of a natural conversation with gpt, while Siri vacillates wildly between 1) simply not responding 2) misunderstanding and 3) understand but refusing to engage - feels awful.
That sounds more like an organizational problem. If you are an employee that doesn't care about maintainability of code, e.g. a freelancer working on a project you will never touch again after your contract is over, your incentive has always been to write crappy code as quickly as possible. Previously that took the form of copying cheap templates, copying and pasting code from StackOverflow as-is without adjustments, not caring about style, using tools to autogenerate bindings, and so on. I remember a long time ago I took over a web project that a freelancer had worked on, and when I opened it I saw one large file of mixed python and HTML. He literally just copied and pasted whole html pages into the render statements in the server code.
The same is true for people submitting PRs to OSS. They don't care about making real contributions, they just want to put something on their resume.
AI is probably making it more common, but it really isn't a new issue, and is not directly related to LLMs.
Despite the large video memory capacity, its video memory bandwidth is very low. I guess the model's decode speed will be very slow. Of course, this design is very well suited for the inference needs of MoE models.
> These are cheap, relatively fast, and not particularly good. While they sport impressive-sounding 12- and 16-bit readouts, the effective number of bits (ENOB) is usually around 8 or 9.
The edge case of the 1-bit conversion scheme used in SACD format is compelling from a few perspectives. The idea is to run the sampling rate in the megahertz region. SACD achieves 120dB of dynamic range with an extended frequency response up to ~100kHz. CD audio only achieves 96dB of range up to 20kHz with its 16-bit PCM scheme. From the analog hardware complexity standpoint, a bitstream converter is much simpler than a multi-bit converter. The 16-bit ADC might be cheaper due to the insane manufacturing volumes.
Trading bit depth for sample rate is a very compelling offer in many cases. The 3d graphics version of this is SSAA where you sample more pixels than your monitor needs in order to resolve higher frequency information.
The embargo refers to Google's update policy since a couple months ago, which means that for three months, updates are on-hold and only shared with "selected vendors" and not the public.
Essentially the dumping strategy of open source that Apple has been doing for years.
Read the LineageOS blog article for more details on why stripping history and publishing only a tarball might be seen as the most stupid development practice ever.
This is doing value speculation in software, using the branch predictor. The hardware of course does do that and instead uses different tables for deriving a predicted value, and misprediction will be detected and flushed in a slightly different way.
But the effect on the main sequence of instructions in the backend will be quite similar. In neither case is it a "prefetch" as such, it is actually executing the load with the predicted value and the result will be consumed by other instructions, decoupling address generation from dependency on previous load result.
Every time I try to tell people we didn't want to live in a dangerous suburb because drivers kill kids people think I'm crazy. But drivers are the leading killers of young children, so much so that we rightfully to teach our kids to be scared of drivers and stay away from them from toddlerhood.
I wish we treated this like the outright emergency it is.
Wow. $15 billion is an astronomical, nearly unfathomable amount of money in Cambodia. This must have been a huge operation. It's almost 1/3 of the country's entire GDP!
Well done DOJ. Hopefully the victims get their money back.
>I've worked with people using vim who wildly outproduce full teams using IDEs
This is not due to the editor. Vim is not a 20x productivity enhancer.
>forcing the vim person to use an IDE would lower their productivity
Temporarily, sure. But there productivity should actually go up after they are used to it. This idea of wanting to avoid such a setback and avoiding change is what keeps people on such an outdated workflow.