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It happened to me earlier today too. The response the machine gave me was completely different, as if it was a different codebase and a completely different task. It also had a few paths to some files and the username used for the `$HOME` directory was not mine. Local mode, not cloud or anything like that, and Auto mode.

Couple of "what the heck are you talking about"s, but because the attitude continued, I switched to Sonnet 4.5 and tried again, and this fixed the issue for me. I forgot to document it, and when I tried to export the original conversation for analysis it was gone.

But yeah, very confusing.


The Slopware paradox: I don't know if the error message is the actual website and this is just post-AI nihilism, or if it's a configuration error because if your website is not even a serverless edge function then `bro do you even scale`.

AIstor. They just slap the word AI anywhere these days.


In French the adjective follows the name so AI is actually IA.

On AWS S3, you have a storage level called "Infrequent Access", shortened IA everywhere.

A few weeks ago I had to spend way too much time explaining to a customer that, no, we weren't planning on feeding their data to an AI when, on my reports, I was talking about relying on S3 IA to reduce costs...


Is that an I (indigo) or l (lama)? I though it was L, lol


Just give me the prompt, I'll seek the information by myself.


RELAX.md is odd, but I am even more concerned about SABAW1.md and SABAW2.md.


I think talking to AI in XML is very promising! It is kind of like moving from a 1d semantic plane to a 2d semantic plane.

I think it could be a cool way to work around some of the limitations of GAN for text as a training technique.


> The need to hate on Grokipedia is weird to me. It’s another site on the web.

Now let's replace in this sentence the word Grokipedia with Wikipedia and ask the same question to Musk and to his followers: The need to hate on Wikipedia is weird to me. It's another site on the web.



Hi, author of Jacqueline here. I read HN almost daily so it caught me off guard to see my stuff here.

It's been a long time since I did this (2019). It was a prototype just to see if a standard PC boot loader could hand-off into something that's not C (or Rust). And yes you can, as long as the programming language has a way to control how symbol names are exported, and then to link the object code with the rest of the boot loader.

You won't have a runtime unless you implement one, so for most languages there is no stdlib, no exception handling, no garbage collector... But it is fun anyway. As I said, this was a prototype and once it could say Hello World I considered it complete.

Happy to see it here though, and I'll be happy to answer any questions about what I remember, or what is like to write code in Pascal, or OS development or i386 in general.


This is totally happening with other models too, at least with Spanish. Many transcriptions will end with something that roughly translates to "Thanks for watching!" even if it's never present in the original audio.


For anyone who liked Tom Scott videos, YouTube has been recently recommending to me (and to many others, it seems) an emerging channel from a creator called Chris Spargo [1], who seems to capture the essence of Tom Scott videos, even with the same schedule so far. A small video of a couple of minutes that explains a concept or talks about the history of something, and is recorded in different places.

[1]: https://www.youtube.com/@ChrisSpargo


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