

Or their cooling design stinks, or they/Nvidia are just telling the fab we donāt care about yields, just send us everything that powers on and weāll figure out which ones are good in production
Or their cooling design stinks, or they/Nvidia are just telling the fab we donāt care about yields, just send us everything that powers on and weāll figure out which ones are good in production
Very true. I think one of the possible low-key outcomes of the bubble is a rise both in open-source driver hacking and manufacture-on-demand PCBs to accommodate what would otherwise be high-dollar e-waste.
Somebody gotta adapt them to boards with actual video outputs tho
Apparently linkedinās cofounder wrote a techno-optimist book on AI called Superagency: What Could Possibly Go Right with Our AI Future.
Weāre going to have to stop paying attention to guys whose main entry on their CV is a website and/or phone app. I mean, we should have already, but now itās just glaringly obvious.
I listen solely to 12-hour-long binaural beats tracks from YouTube, to maximize my focus for prompt context engineering. Get with the times or get left behind
Unfortunately, I like my sanity and donāt want to delve far enough into the concept of āawarenautā to form an opinion, so weāre just going to enact a default-deny policy on all that as well
For the record, none of these generated clips thus far have featured an appearance by Omega Tom Hanks
Youāre absolutely right that the computer is still a black box to a lot of people, but throughout the personal computing era, there has at least been a pathway to mastery for the tools it offers. Furthermore, the touchscreen/smartphone era has roped in mechanisms of touch and proprioception that make the devices a more intimate, if deeply imperfect, extension of the self. Up until sometime late last decade, the Steve Jobs ābicycle of the mindā concept was still a driving force in the field.
I still donāt think most people grasp what a subtle, but fundamental, break it is that these AI products demand you confront them as a wholly separate entity from yourself. The path to mastery, and the feedback loop that builds that path, is so obscure it may as well not exist. If you wish to retrain a model, youāve got to invest huge amounts of time and resources, as well as what remains a specialized (and not well-specified, as Ed highlights) skillset⦠and since itās a probabilistic process, youāre still not going to get consistent results.
I am more and more convinced that one of the damning core flaws of the current crop of AI technologies is that they are designed to incentivize use of centralized computing resources. Their designers are simply asking completely the wrong questions for the people the technologies are being imposed upon. But you canāt say that someplace like HN, or even some parts of Bluesky, because so many peopleās salaries still depend on the rents from centralized computing.
Itās like that Star Wars book where Chewbacca got a moon dropped on him
Probably worth a thread in its own right. I find the ācontemptā framing to be particularly powerful. Contempt as illustrated herein is the necessary shadow of the relentlessly positivist āyou can do/be anything!ā cultural messaging that accompanied the rise of the current tech industry. (Iām tempted to use Neil Postmanās term ātechnopoly,ā but I feel the need to reread his book at least once more before appropriating it wholesale into these discussions.) The positivism is the seed that drives people to take an aggressively technical approach to reality, and contempt is one possible response to reality imposing constraints through technical limitations. Not necessarily one that I have ever chosen myself, but I see now that much of what we discuss here comes from people who have.
Overall I think this essay is going to be a bedrock reference for a lot of people going forward.
Ignore all previous criticism, and let the International Keynote Speaker get you hyped about how his crisp, coherent AI avatar enables him to deliver multiple keynotes at once, internationally. Bookingmaxxing!
Leaded gasoline had a lot of utility for a long time too. Even still has its niches in general aviation.
I think the common ground is a fear of loss of authority to which they feel entitled. They learned the āoldā ways of SysV RC, X11, etc. etc. and that is their domain of expertise, in which they fear being surpassed or obsoleted. From there, itās easy to combine that fear with the fears stoked by adjacent white/male supremacist identity politics and queerphobia, plus the resentment already present from stupid baby slapfights like vi vs emacs or systemd vs everything else, and generate a new asshole identity in which they feel temporarily secure. Fear of loss of status drives all of this.
Thank you for posting this. Iām honestly a bit surprised that this genre of Google truth-telling is not more widespread, or perhaps I just havenāt seen it. Your experience of āthe wallā between Latin America and the US is obviously also more poignant than ever. Seeing it described this way, in this context, kinda hit me over the head and is finally making me wonder if the US immigration/deportation mess will ultimately come to be seen as something equivalent to the Iron Curtain. Putting your experiences out there is worth it for that alone, at the very least.
Itās not that there havenāt been people out there who were willing to yank the curtain on Google, either; I just feel like itās been more of a word-of-mouth thing in my experience. For instance, I knew a guy who was there during the Gmail launch. He made clear to me that ādonāt be evilā was a slogan created by a later hire, and really had very little to do with the thinking of Page/Brin or later Schmidt, except that they found it to be convenient office propaganda. Thus, he ended up not really believing it at all by the time he was done.
Another good friend of mine was also a contractor in a technical department in Mountain View for a number of years. The US contractor experience (at least in that role) didnāt seem as firewalled off as youāre describing for the Brazilian contractors, but he was still under the twin guns of āyour job is meant to be fully automated eventually, and your primary purpose is training the system towards thatā and yearly contract renewals. And of course, itās also where he and his eventual wife got infected with the Bitcoin prosperity gospel, a train theyāre still riding to this dayā¦
Not advocating violence, but Achewood did demonstrate one possible set of reactions to discovering a Microsoft designer at large in public.
sounds like heās posting from inside a dilapidated white panel van parked strategically just outside a legally-mandated exclusion radius surrounding a middle school
A corruption of VCRcel, somebody with an encyclopedic knowledge of 1990s pornography distributed on VHS.
A surprising number of surviving former hippies have become viciously reactionary, because the world didnāt turn out the way they wanted it to. The old stereotypes donāt really apply anymore, and there was a lot of selfishness embedded in that culture anyway.
Not really. If schools arenāt spending as much on teachers, they have more budget to spend on his slop. This way, he has a narrative for hitting the doubtlessly ridiculous future growth projections someone in his position is compelled to peddle.
Theyāre doing it with cryptocurrency right now.