LLMs make it easier to build every single little feature customers ask for, but maybe the thing that makes your product stand out is resisting the urge to do that.
Release a new model: you win
Have the model taken down because it's "too good": you win
The Cursor website has 8 RSS feeds and _none of them work_. I get `Unable to parse this feed: parser: unable to detect feed format.` on every single one.
Ted Chiang’s writing is very thought provoking
www.theatlantic.com/philosophy/2...
Oooh, fancy preview with "View publication" button, what's this!? Learned about @standard.site the other day and had to try it out for myself. Shared the steps and code required to do it in #ElixirLang
jola.dev/posts/publis...
Finished HIVE by Dan Abnett today and it's probably my favorite Warhammer 40K book. For the genre it has diverse characters, great world building, story lines I cared about. Finished it in a couple of sittings.
www.goodreads.com/en/book/show...
“all you really need to know is that everything is totally working and everyone is making a lot of money, and you should just stop asking questions, luddite”
www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/ai-...
In my continuing struggle to find a way to use LLMs while staying firmly engaged in the design of the code, here's a blog post about using LLMs like dynamic programming books. It suggests code, you type it out
jola.dev/posts/treati...
Taken to its logical conclusion, this line of thinking is absurd—and damning.