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It's not a limousine if it's not from the Limousin region in France otherwise it's just long car

Help: My [1851W] dolls [21D, 28D, 30D, 25D] have unionized

unbothered. moisturized (with rye). happy. in his lane. focused. flourishing.

Out of context Well There's Your Problem podcast:

It used to be, like, hijacking was an exciting adventure to Cuba, and now it's a less exciting adventure to being smashed into a building.

this new RFC 9564 is comedy gold: "Faster Than Light Speed Protocol (FLIP)" - this uses LLMs to predict what packets <would> be sent, thus obviating the need to actually send them. The Acknowledgements section is just... <chef's kiss>. rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9564.htm #rfc9564

it's funny that multiple jobs have been like "nah you don't have enough experience for a java developer job, we'd only hire you for doing CI/devops"

when I've got a codebase here from when I worked for the government. it's all in java. I wrote 90% of this. it's 55,000 lines.

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Why is that? "Passively reading someone else's code just doesn't engage my brain in the same way. It's harder to do properly":

twitter.com/qntm/status/177378

There's a name for this phenomenon: "automation blindness." Humans are just not equipped for eternal vigilance. We get good at spotting patterns that occur frequently - so good that we miss the anomalies.

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That's the good kind of automation, and we all benefit from it. But it only takes a small twist to turn this good automation into a *nightmare*. I'm speaking here of the *reverse-centaur*: automation in which the computer is in charge, bossing a human around so it can get its job done.

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I like having an automated system that does the robotically perfect trick of never forgetting something important.

There's a name for this in automation circles: a "centaur." I'm the human head, and I've fused with a powerful robot body that supports me, doing things that humans are innately bad at.

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Here's a fun AI story: a security researcher noticed that large companies' AI-authored source-code repeatedly referenced a nonexistent library (an AI "hallucination"), so he created a (defanged) malicious library with that name and uploaded it, and thousands of developers automatically downloaded and incorporated it as they compiled the code:

theregister.com/2024/03/28/ai_

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