Yesterday: “it only takes 6000 examples of bad code to turn an AI Evil”
Today: EA releases a big pile of raw unfiltered 90s game developer code on Github
coincidence??
Yesterday: “it only takes 6000 examples of bad code to turn an AI Evil”
Today: EA releases a big pile of raw unfiltered 90s game developer code on Github
coincidence??
First, a land acknowledgment—this large language model is built on stolen content. Now let’s delve in—
@skinnylatte or San Jose’s “this is where Chinatown was before we burned it down and killed everyone” plaque
@jrose actually, as perl teaches us, there are three function colors: scalar, array, and hash. but at least you can make the same function do different things depending on what color you call it as
@inthehands i felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out "still love the car", and were suddenly silenced
“Canadiano” is a good bit but if i were canadian, then “espresso diluted with water” is something i would let the US take the blame for
2025: Denmark buys California
2026: 85% of Denmark's citizens unable to reliably remember whether they are "Danish" or "Dutch"
@eramdam still can’t believe they called the low level virtual machine WASM and the weird assembler LLVM
@inthehands the Constitution, our Maginot Line
in these trying times, it's refreshing to see someone willing to speak the truth
@inthehands whenever I see someone post that guys posts I can only think about jwz’s anecdotes about him leaving the Netscape bathrooms uninhabitable every time he used them, and how thats what my timeline feels like after seeing his posts
@vitaut the most sensible default for binary floats is clearly hexadecimal float notation
@steve @cr1901 @pkhuong and even with that, compilers will often sever the dependency explicitly by doing an xor or movsx/xx to the destination at the start of an operation chain
the other thing that makes 16 bit operations slow on some uarches iirc is a penalty for the operand size prefix byte
@steve @cr1901 @pkhuong nonetheless it is absolutely the right thing for a contemporary ISA to not have unnecessary partial register updates in the first place, to cr1901’s point about risc-v. luckily AMD at least figured that out by the time they designed x86-64
so anyway, I enrolled, and before i knew it, two years had passed. and that's how i got my dissociate's degree
¡buenos días! es un otro “martes martes martes” martes
https://owo.cafe/@dias_bot/113825473727264573
@mcc French is such an elegant language
It’s not just you—there *are* more disturbances in the Force lately. It’s called ensithification
incredible. blues singers knew about vi a full two decades before the first Unix distribution
@emily it's longstanding intel tradition. the 8085 had the 8-bit registers A, B, C, D; the 8086 made them 16-bit AX "A extended" etc.; then the 80386 made them 32-bit EAX "extended A extended"
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