Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | more never_inline's commentslogin

Someone tell the AI labs to stop training on tutorial code.


I was about to try it out, having heard good things.

But this leaves a very bad taste.

Guess I will stick to aider and copy-pasting.


dhee (https://dhee.apratiratha.in, https://github.com/mahesh-hegde/dhee).

An application to read Rigveda Samhita, and potentially other old indic texts in future. Inspired by University of Cologne's vedaweb.


To play devil's advocate: all the people using AI are not being significantly more productive on brownfield applications. If GP manages to find a Big Co (tech or non tech) which doesn't precisely bother about AI usage and just delivering features, and the bottleneck is not software dev (as is the case in majority of old school companies), he/she would be fine.


If your bottleneck is not typing speed, you'll be fine.


There's certainly an overlap between the crowd working on AI (since it's the current hype) and the crowd finding this sort of hyped up advertisement speak impressive.

It's pretty obvious that embeddings are not enough (and you need hybrid search or similar) for people who understand how they work. And yet there had been a flood of chat UIs in 2024 which are basically embed + cosine similarity, all having 10k+ stars. Now it seems to have slowed down.

All is because the taste for careermaxxing outweighs the taste for rigor in our industry. It's very sad.


The only AI bloggers who don't have something to sell seems to be simonw, the flask guy, and this redis guy. Any other blog recommendations from HN?


tbh I think it is just a question about time before flask guy has something to sell: https://earendil.com/


I can't for the life of me tell what it's about.


> A great poem is “about” a specific person or moment embedded in a particular culture, composed in such a way that it reaches across time and distance to resonate with readers outside that culture.

Why is this a criteria?

The following piece of metrical poetry from the Rig Veda, is of high importance to me, a bunch of vedic revivalists and connoisseurs scattered across the descendant cultures, perhaps to Indo-europeanists and comparative mythologists who study this in academic manner, even when translated into English. But I don't think most people outside this culture would ever relate to this.

    Now, verily, will I declare the exploits
    mighty and true, of him the True and Mighty.
    In the Trikadrukas he drank the Soma
    then in its rapture Indra slew the Dragon.
Now perhaps the LLMs can produce something which sounds lot like this, probably even in old Indic if they're trained enough on it.

But it will never have the allure of the old indic hymns, because there's no riddle to solve, no real riddle that the machine has hidden in the words. When reading the above hymn, whether in sanskrit or English, whether it's me or an indologist like Jamison or Watkins (who wrote "How to Kill a Dragon" on Indo-European poetics), we are trying to imagine the same thing the original writer had imagined.

In case of LLM, it's just a sequence of words that sounds cool. It may have no meaning.


>Why is this a criteria?

Because defining "good" as "made by a human from the human society" is the easiest way to be able to go on and "prove" that "LLM poetry is not good" (these are scare quotes). She says she used this definition in "over thirty years of reading, teaching, and writing poetry" (this is an actual quote) but I highly doubt she would've found it necessary 30 years ago to define "good" as "made by a human" with this level of explicitness.

Edit: having read the whole FA, the closing sentence makes much more sense (and is also completely at odds with the definition of greatness given earlier):

"Operationally, greatness is measured when tastemakers put them in anthologies so that generations of readers can read them, tear out the ones that resonate, and tape them to their refrigerators."


Can you suggest a best place to learn CSS in-depth, from first principles? (as opposed to, say, simple tutorials)


https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS

While CSS Zen Garden will likely not accept new submissions, there are many good designs on showcase: https://csszengarden.com/pages/alldesigns/


Josh Comeau's CSS course is excellent: https://css-for-js.dev/


Didn't know about starship and need to check it out.

Shameless plug: I wrote a detailed git prompt in C which is similar to posh-git on Powershell: https://github.com/mahesh-hegde/promptsynth


An LLM could never write this.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: