Not quite the same thing since it was a school official rather than police, but we had something similar in the US. Right down to confiscation of a juvenille sign.
I think the next star ai agent product this year will be in A2A area. If we do believe agents are not only tools anymore, we should prepare for that. Provide base tools for them.
The first thing we thought is IM tool. So we build one and open sourced it.
Author here. This is not a general argument against fsync; the design depends on SSD-only deployment, preallocated files, O_DIRECT, single-key atomicity, and device write guarantees.
15 YOE, here: Well, I just interviewed between October - Decemeber of last year, and since then, the company I joined has gone full vibe-coding and is changing to AI interviews. So...
I highly recommend looking into codemods for larger mechanical refactorings. I did things like converting large test suites from one testing library to another by having codex write a codemod to convert it as a first pass.
> I expected this to be a technological movement first with politics snuck in
Then you are naive. Everything that is concerned with how people organize themselves, where and how they allocate resources, how they are supposed to make decisions, what values they should uphold etc. is politics.
Looks like a typical machine learning paper to me. It cannot be understood unless you already kind of understand it. That is OK for communication with peers, but eventually I expect a "theory of" to be readable by anyone with a math degree.
I've had the unfortunate exercise of copying an API from pure android java to typescript because "they are similar". It goes against best practices and creates all kinds of weirdness resulting in a finished product which is almost the same but far enough away you could just as well have designed a better API in a few hours from scratch (the real complexity is in the backend of the code, not the interface fortunately). But requirements must be met.
Except they do. They control the Steam distribution network. It may not be physical but you still have to use it to reach a large portion of PC Gamers due to network effects and no one wanting to run multiple clients.
Currently you have to also make use of their other services like the Store, and pay for them with a large sales cut, in order to use the distribution network, no matter if you want those services or not.
There is a trust component for sure, but a business requires assessing the value of time against revenue. I can say for our org that using an off the shelf solution like Clerk saves us time and money and we believe the risk is very small relative to the savings. Maybe the cost for you is not large right now, but when you've got 20 enterprise customers all asking for specific OIDC integrations configured with Private Link, custom domains, and private clusters, an auth solution starts looking mighty fine.
Great article. Hits on many points that resonate with my experience.
The skin in the game one, in particular, is something I've been thinking about. People have been telling me LLMs are "more intelligent" than "average people". But it's easy to sound intelligent when you have no skin in the game. People have to stand by their word and suffer the consequences of their actions. It's not enough just to sound intelligent.
It seems appropriate also to share an anecdote of an incident that recently happened in my job. A colleague submitted some code for review, quite a lot of it. A second colleague reviewed and questioned a piece of code. Rather than answer the question with a justification, the question was taken rhetorically and the code was removed. The code then failed in production because the removed code was, in fact, necessary. The LLM obviously "knew" this, but neither colleague did. It's leading me to introduce a "no rhetorical questions in code review" rule. The submitter must be able to justify every line of code they submit.
No it isn't. There's basically no upper bound on the number of commits an LLM can generate. If the LLM takes 10,000 commits to do what a human would do in 10, then the comparison is meaningless.
I don't know anything about the code quality of OpenClaw, but telling me the number of commits tells me precisely nothing of use.
You could separate the storefront from the distribution platform / client. Valve's ~30% cut is often justified by the visibility being on the Store gives you but you can't opt out of that while still reaching the captured audience that definitely don't want yet another client software bloating up their system.
Of the big tech companies, Apple is definitely the one that has embraced America First the most. If you live outside the US, you get features later (if at all) and have to pay more for that privilege.
So the longest subway ride in NYC is 24km (15 miles) and 1h long? We have multiple underground lines farther than this in Berlin with the longest being 32km (20 miles). But don't get fooled, the issues are the same.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_v._Frederick