@glyph Did you quote post something?
-
@GroupNebula563 @glyph that's how cooling works, yes
That’s probably why they wrote it
-
That’s probably why they wrote it
@AlsoCrowie it is indeed
-
it's truly amazing what LLMs can achieve. we now know it's possible to produce an html5 parsing library with nothing but the full source code of an existing html5 parsing library, all the source code of all other open source libraries ever, a meticulously maintained and extremely comprehensive test suite written by somebody else, 5 different models, a megawatt-hour of energy, a swimming pool full of water, and a month of spare time of an extremely senior engineer
@glyph part of me is still genuinely impressed that LLMs can do that. it's just not what's advertised or worth the staggering societal costs to roll them out at scale.
-
-
it's truly amazing what LLMs can achieve. we now know it's possible to produce an html5 parsing library with nothing but the full source code of an existing html5 parsing library, all the source code of all other open source libraries ever, a meticulously maintained and extremely comprehensive test suite written by somebody else, 5 different models, a megawatt-hour of energy, a swimming pool full of water, and a month of spare time of an extremely senior engineer
@glyph thanks for putting my intuition into coherent words. I read the post yesterday and thought that it must have been just a case of the LLM doing an “infinite number of monkeys” until the result compiled and passed the tests
-
it's truly amazing what LLMs can achieve. we now know it's possible to produce an html5 parsing library with nothing but the full source code of an existing html5 parsing library, all the source code of all other open source libraries ever, a meticulously maintained and extremely comprehensive test suite written by somebody else, 5 different models, a megawatt-hour of energy, a swimming pool full of water, and a month of spare time of an extremely senior engineer
@glyph
The grug agile rant but about LLMs. -
it's truly amazing what LLMs can achieve. we now know it's possible to produce an html5 parsing library with nothing but the full source code of an existing html5 parsing library, all the source code of all other open source libraries ever, a meticulously maintained and extremely comprehensive test suite written by somebody else, 5 different models, a megawatt-hour of energy, a swimming pool full of water, and a month of spare time of an extremely senior engineer
@glyph 👏👏👏
-
@glyph ugh, this will be painful to set up so it performs well. Good luck, mate.
-
it's truly amazing what LLMs can achieve. we now know it's possible to produce an html5 parsing library with nothing but the full source code of an existing html5 parsing library, all the source code of all other open source libraries ever, a meticulously maintained and extremely comprehensive test suite written by somebody else, 5 different models, a megawatt-hour of energy, a swimming pool full of water, and a month of spare time of an extremely senior engineer
@glyph
Oh, come on
The existing html5 parsing library has been inconsistently maintained.(Now we have two inconsistently maintained html5 parsing libraries 😬)
-
it's truly amazing what LLMs can achieve. we now know it's possible to produce an html5 parsing library with nothing but the full source code of an existing html5 parsing library, all the source code of all other open source libraries ever, a meticulously maintained and extremely comprehensive test suite written by somebody else, 5 different models, a megawatt-hour of energy, a swimming pool full of water, and a month of spare time of an extremely senior engineer
@glyph hey, but you didn't have to put the effort to search for the original parsing library. How big a time-saver this is...
-
@glyph the future is okay, actually. Holler if you hit problems, maybe I can help.
-
-
@glyph the future is okay, actually. Holler if you hit problems, maybe I can help.
@genehack problem 1 seems to be that emacs can no longer open sockets on macOS Tahoe at all, which makes installing the relevant packages a fun challenge
-
@GroupNebula563 @glyph that's how cooling works, yes
@RichiH @GroupNebula563 @glyph
Why can't they do that with sea water then recondense that evaporated water as desalinated rain to provide drinking water to a community or irrigate a desert or something? -
@RichiH @GroupNebula563 @glyph
Why can't they do that with sea water then recondense that evaporated water as desalinated rain to provide drinking water to a community or irrigate a desert or something? -
@AlsoCrowie it is indeed
@GroupNebula563 @AlsoCrowie my point was that only any drained or evaporated water is actually used up. Anything in a cooling pipe is constant and stable for years
-
@RichiH @GroupNebula563 @glyph
Why can't they do that with sea water then recondense that evaporated water as desalinated rain to provide drinking water to a community or irrigate a desert or something?@bornach @GroupNebula563 @glyph because of delta t
The higher your temperature difference going in and the lower your temperature difference going out, the cheaper it is to get rid of heat
-
@genehack problem 1 seems to be that emacs can no longer open sockets on macOS Tahoe at all, which makes installing the relevant packages a fun challenge
@glyph woof, I haven’t made the jump on any laptops, that sounds …incredibly bad.
-
@glyph woof, I haven’t made the jump on any laptops, that sounds …incredibly bad.
@genehack I have been reluctant to make this leap https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/local-network-access-nightmare.2448144/page-2 but I think it might be time
-
@GroupNebula563 @AlsoCrowie my point was that only any drained or evaporated water is actually used up. Anything in a cooling pipe is constant and stable for years
@RichiH @AlsoCrowie correct. however, my reply was a joke and should be taken at face value only /nm
