@glyph Did you quote post something?
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@genehack the whole LNP access control thing is objectively a great security feature, but in terms of completeness and manageability, it has, shall we say, "big Wayland energy" https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/762917?answerId=802046022#802046022
@glyph every time I get one of those dialogs, I have to suppress the reflex to hit “no”, and think about what it means. Hitting “yes” still feels like intentionally failing the phishing exercise probe email from ITSec training.
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@glyph I’ve been avoiding this ever since discovering elpy doesn’t work on Python >3.9 (IIRC)
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@glyph every time I get one of those dialogs, I have to suppress the reflex to hit “no”, and think about what it means. Hitting “yes” still feels like intentionally failing the phishing exercise probe email from ITSec training.
@genehack okay good news / silly news:
good: I reset a bunch of sticky / broken network state, all the dialogs came back, setting my VPN back up worked fine; nothing seems broken
silly: uh, apparently I forgot about this customization:
'(gnutls-trustfiles '("/Users/glyph/Library/Python/2.7/lib/python/site-packages/certifi/cacert.pem"))
And the distinction between "batch" and "GUI" was "did init.el load" not "bundle ID hooey"
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@genehack okay good news / silly news:
good: I reset a bunch of sticky / broken network state, all the dialogs came back, setting my VPN back up worked fine; nothing seems broken
silly: uh, apparently I forgot about this customization:
'(gnutls-trustfiles '("/Users/glyph/Library/Python/2.7/lib/python/site-packages/certifi/cacert.pem"))
And the distinction between "batch" and "GUI" was "did init.el load" not "bundle ID hooey"
@genehack re: phishing exercise, a huge amount of the benefit of LNP is the fact that the dialog pops up if malware tries to do something noninteractively in the background. if it's happening at app launch it's prooobably legit
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@glyph LLM as Dave the Barbarian's megaphone
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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 what’s the context here. Feels like I missed some news
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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 Chef kiss. No notes. Bravo.
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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 won't you also need 300 underpaid workers from kenya?
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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 and it might even work! As long as you don't plan to update it or do anything too complex with it....
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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 fact it produced something working at all, even after that month of spare time IS truly amazing.
(Fuck, is THIS where the so-called "Magnificent 7" 's standards are these days? -_- )
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@glyph what’s the context here. Feels like I missed some news
@volkersfreunde @glyph It's easy to find, but someone published a html5 parser in Python. Someone else converted that to javascript using llm. Both by very experienced developers.
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> As models have gotten better, I've seen steady increases in test coverage.
These are not the words of an engineer.
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@stuartl @glyph Power is measured as watts, or joules ÷ time.
Energy is measured as Joules, or slightly obscurely, as Power × time, as in Watt-hours.
So a megawatt-hour is a measurement of energy. It's the amount of every required to run a Megawatt of power for 1 hour (or 1 watt for 1 million hours, etc)
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@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
@RichiH @bornach @GroupNebula563 @glyph so basically they're transferring as much GPU heat into the (evaporated) water as possible, and don't wanna do the hard work of cooling it down again, since it's easier to just pump in new water from the existing tap water infrastructure?
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@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 @RichiH @GroupNebula563 @glyph Using seawater as your heat dump would actually work pretty well. Except there isn't any nearby. Coastal land is at a price premium, and data centers are built where land is cheap, usually on the outskirts of towns or cities. Even if you built one near the coast, tapping large quantities of seawater and returning it warmer would mean environmental review and permitting, and in the rush to ride the bandwagon there is no time to wait for such things.
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@RichiH @bornach @GroupNebula563 @glyph so basically they're transferring as much GPU heat into the (evaporated) water as possible, and don't wanna do the hard work of cooling it down again, since it's easier to just pump in new water from the existing tap water infrastructure?
@riverpunk @RichiH @bornach @GroupNebula563 @glyph Pretty much. You could run it without evaporation, but that would mean higher energy use. Evaporating water is just the most cost-effective means of cooling in warmer climate, unless you have a convenient river next door.
It's exactly the same equipment as in a power station cooling tower. Just scaled down.
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@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 @RichiH @GroupNebula563 @glyph
Aside from social aspects, there's also a technical one:
Sea water is aggressive to metal tubes, especially when heated up.
Additionally, the minerals it contains remain as solids when the water is evaporated. -
@skjeggtroll @feorwine @glyph
I immediately thought of this too XD -
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 Well. when you say it like that, it's hard to not be ..... impressed :D
