Conflict resolution for real time simultaneous updates, how do you resolve them? I use a CRDT for solving precisely this problem but seems like most multiplayer database services don't actually handle this correctly, using last write wins instead.
Not complaining about the particular presenter here, this is an interesting video with some decent content, I don't find the presentation style overly irritating, and it is documenting a lot of work that has obviously been done experimenting in order to get the end result (rather than just summarising someone else's work). Such a goofy elongated style, that is infuriating if you are looking for quick hard information, is practically required in order to drive wider interest in the channel.
But the “ask the LLM” thing is a sign of how off kilter information passing has become in the current world. A lot of stuff is packaged deliberately inefficiently because that is the way to monetise it, or sometimes just to game the searching & recommendation systems so it gets out to potentially interested people at all, then we are encouraged to use a computationally expensive process to summarise that to distil the information back out.
MS's documentation the large chunks of Azure is that way, but with even less excuse (they aren't a content creator needing to drive interest by being a quirky presenter as well as a potential information source). Instead of telling me to ask copilot to guess what I need to know, why not write some good documentation that you can reference directly (or that I can search through)? Heck, use copilot to draft that documentation if you want to (but please have humans review the result for hallucinations, missed parts, and other inaccuracies, before publishing).
> If you think like that why invest in software at all; the AI will do everything?
Correct, hence the "SaaSpocalypse" phenomenon in recent weeks. Investors are slowly becoming disinterested in investing in software anymore precisely because models are good enough now to replicate any SaaS pretty easily, which still requires effort but is less so than paying for a SaaS particularly in large organizations which are charged per seat.
Funny the replies you're getting here when already we see companies with engineers not having written a single line of code since late last year when models became good enough to go end to end.
We see companies running web apps on top of Oracle or not using any version control at all, let alone agentic coding; it doesn't mean it's a good idea because someone is crazy enough to do it.
I thought the consensus what that vibe coding is a bad idea and you're supposed to review whatever is machine-generated, however "good enough" you believe it to be.
HN is not a hive mind with a single opinion. You get the extreme opinions of both sides and every nuance in between. There are people here who despise VC and people who live for it and think it’s the greatest thing since sliced bread.
I used to make generative art around 15 years ago as well, seems not much has changed in this aspect (note that this is not generative AI art). A few years later I remember using Processing.js after reading The Nature Of Code by Dan Shiffman as well, fun times. How time flies.
Eh. I enjoyed it enormously and I do likewise recommend it, but its story isn't related to AI (either the concept of its moment or the technology of ours) even slightly, nor trying to be, or at least not in any way I saw. It was pretty open with its themes, so I would expect that one to have been pretty noticeable if it was present alongside the questions of reality, artifice, grief, and simulationism with which the miniseries does concern itself.
What's the difference between the idle imaginings of a god's mind and a universe scale simulation?
I always got advanced AI vibes from Devs, that it was a mind interfacing with reality in some sort of weird inception / simulation / manifestation way.
That can be a type of mind, though? It can also be a type of interface - a tap into a system not fully understood, controlling the perspective or view but not the process. The whole "mind of god" Deus/Devs, etc - I think it's left ambiguous on purpose for the hook but I always took it to be an AI flavored story at the core.
Maybe. The plot itself is based on a short story that Garland read, both the 2007 original [0] and its 2022 rewrite [1]. Qntm is great and their latest book, There Is No Antimemetics Division, recently was on HN as well [2].
I recently discovered Kanopy and was surprised by the amount of A-tier movies you can stream there for free with a library membership (SFPL in my case)!
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