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But as inexperienced coders started turning up in greater numbers, it also started to poison the training data.

I think all general AI agents are running into that problem - as AI becomes more prevalent and people accept and propagate wrong answers, the AI agents are trained to believe those wrong answers.

It feels that lately, Google's AI search summaries are getting worse - they have a kernel of truth, but combines it with an incorrect answer.


Does anyone know what the server is? I don't see it on their site.

I'm curious why supply chain issues got in the way and why they couldn't just configure a Dell Poweredge and get delivery in a couple weeks.

I'm assuming they have some special requirements that weren't met by an off-the-shelf server, so I'm just curious what those requirements are.


Yeah, so many places ask for phone number that don't really need it that I assume the phone number is a unique identifier used to combine individual's data across websites.

Most of the time I use a made-up 555 number or if it needs to send an SMS to verify, I'll use a free SMS numbers.


>What's the benefit of working remote from your team but next to random, noisy people?

People have been asking that since companies started phasing out WFH after the pandemic.

I left my last company when they made me go to the office when I worked for a dispersed team, I was the only one in this office and the rest of the team was dispersed across multiple timezones. Every team meeting was literally a zoom meeting, and conference rooms were scarce so everyone just did zoom calls at their desk.

When I was WFH I didn't mind getting up in time for a 7:30am meeting to meet with the overseas team before they went home for the day, but I wasn't willing to leave the house at 6:30 to get to the office in time for that meeting, and I wasn't going to join a 7:30am meeting at home, then head to work after already putting in an hour of work.

My boss agreed it made no sense, but there were no exceptions to the rule -- I left before it became mandatory 5 days a week in the office.

The CEO made a big deal of going to the office every day so everyone should do it, but it didn't escape notice that the company literally opened an office just for the finance and executive team that happened to be in the same wealthy suburb that he and most of the other top execs lived. That would have turned a 45 - 60 minute commute into a 10 minute commute for him.


That timezone thing really threw one of my client's management for a loop. During covid they expanded some of their India and Philippians office presence and depending on what you're working on, you need to have regular communication with some of those folks. When they did full RTO they were trying to "make" some of the staff (engineering and management) come in at 5am so they could meet with the offshore staff before they went home but everyone bucked, as you'd expect. When folks were WFH they just went with it. Eventually executive staff just said "you guys figure it out". So they ended up changing the meetings from twice a week to once a month and now projects keep slipping deadlines, including one that went from approx on time to 2mo behind, and it's costing them serious revenue since they cant sell it yet.


You really love to see it. Its a wild waste but someone is going to eat crow eventually. You know I would like to see one of these trend followers literally eat a crow, wings and feathers all of it.


I think there's an impossibly thin line between making glass that's easy to break through on purpose, but hard for a high speed head to break through in an accident.


I'm fairly sure that the two lines are way past each other, on the wrong side. The force with which you'll be flung against the glass is much higher than what you can punch.


This isn’t about punching, it’s about using one of those handheld devices with a pointed metal tip.


It's worse than impossibly thin. It's a massive gray area of acceptable solutions where no matter where in the area you choose some bike shedding jerk will be able to construe it as though you chose wrong.


Most tempered glass does it just fine and has for decades.


A ceramic glass breaker isn't going to be any better than the metal tools on laminated glass, breaking the glass is only half the battle, you've still got to get through the intact glass pane held in place by the plastic laminate.

>Nothing wrong with keeping a box of spark plugs in your center console though

But then you've got to keep a tool to break the spark plug to give you a sharp ceramic shard to get through the glass.


Exactly. It’s the plastic middle layer that screws you.


Does a knife help there?


Sure, it’ll probably be pretty slow though. Ideally you’d have a serrated blade


It doesn't matter. You barely have to throw a speck of it harder than you'd throw a dog toy for it to shatter laminated glass.


>For me, that means topping up with a supplement. The UK government advises everyone in the country to take a 10-microgram vitamin D supplement over autumn and winter

My last blood test showed I was slightly deficient in vitamin D - my doctor recommended a 50 microgram (2000 IU) supplement. My next test to see how well it' working isn't for a few more months.


Get a metabolic test as well to check your calcium levels since D can increase serum calcium if you have genetics like mine.


It's frequently suggested that you take vitamin K2 with vitamin D, which helps direct calcium to the bones.


Yes, Salmon is also high in K2, but for me the calcitonin was more important. My D levels and calcium levels are great now.


Oh I remember those days. In our case, it was because we had so much website data that we couldn't keep it all in cache, so when the site became busy enough, performance fell off a cliff as we became disk I/O bound. We had maxed out our main server with 512MB of RAM.

We couldn't afford the new Sun Ultra 2's that would have given us a spacious 2GB of RAM, so we ended up coding a front-end to shard requests across the 2 web servers and used a Sparcstation 5 to run that front-end.

Eventually we rearchitected the entire site to move the static HTML websites into an Oracle database. (by then we had upgraded to a Sun Ultra Enterprise 3000, which could handle up to 6GB of memory, more than we could ever use)


>On route, train operators punch the code into a control panel at the back of the display, and the LCD blocks light on specific segments of the grid to build each letter

I always thought those were mechanical displays with little mechanical shutters that moved to display the segments... like these:

https://youtu.be/Gj_mTp6Ypzk

Never knew they were LCD.


I thought that's why it's a good analogy - DDoS protection doesn't apply retroactively to prior attacks (or even current attacks, it's hard to apply DDoS protection while your site is down due to DDoS). If you want protection from DDoS, you need it before the DDoS. If you want to insure your car in case of accident, you need to insure it before the accident.


>or even current attacks, it's hard to apply DDoS protection while your site is down due to DDoS

Why? with cloudflare it's very easy, just put your site behind a reverse proxy, change the dns and disable direct access. Am I missing something?


If the incident lasts for more than a few hours you could still set up ddos protection and rotate ips though.


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